On Motherhood and Separation


The past few days I've managed to catch up with some of my buddies. On Monday T came over with her baby #3 and boy, was she cute. I have this thing that I try to do with babies: Ignore them. I do this because I don't want to get bit by that baby bug--if there is one mantra that has proven to be correct, it has been, "one is enough!" The main reason for that is financial. If I had the extra dough, trust me, I would have had baby number two by now. But focusing on what I do have, Kai my lovely little baby rocks my boat enough not to go there--that is focusing on what I don't got! But anyway, this tactic of ignoring babies never do work, cause by the end of the visit I'm completely in the palm of this baby's little hand. She was smiling and chilling and looking at me like, "You can't resist me!" And she was right. T and I caught up on some things, ate lentil soup with dumplings and chilled. She and I were pregnant together and she mentioned how depressed we were after giving birth. I had to disagree: I think it's easy to mistake the focus that is entirely outside of yourself as depression. When you are a new mother it simply is not about you anymore--especially if you are breastfeeding. You are there to take care of this totally helpless little being and that relationship can be beautiful yet complicated. I'm not saying everyone's introduction into motherhood is like that--I have friends who from day one started taking their babies to concerts and what not, but for me, and T, being in a foreign country as new mothers was, in short, enough to send us off on a bit of a spin. And with that in mind, we did damn well. It's especially difficult when you don't have anyone to talk to--and T and I had that.
Ben, Kai's father said something to me once and it really resonates. He said, "Haven't you ever noticed that the hardest times in your life are always the moments you look back on as being among the best?" Now, I'm not saying that I'll happily go back there to being a new mother: That one was really difficult for me. I enjoyed it for sure, but the level of loneliness I felt was overwhelming. It strengthened me and I would not be the woman I am today--but again, for me, it was a tough boot camp. Not everyone responds to motherhood in this way, however.
Ids came over with her little man the day after T's visit. Her little guy is just 8 months old and boy was he cute! He looks just like her and much to her credit, she seems to have adjusted to motherhood really well. And what does that mean? It certainly doesn't mean that I think she doesn't go through moments of doubting herself, of confusion, of exasperation (hell no, then it wouldn't be motherhood!) but she seems to have accepted the basic tenet of motherhood which is, "surrender." You really have to just give yourself over to it otherwise you will be miserable trying to salvage a bit of your old life while being there for the offspring. Yikes! And when you surrender: You are surrounded by a bubble of zen. This doesn't mean you're not going to be cranky by lack of sleep or you won't be arguing with your partner about whose turn it is to go get the crying offspring--but this is now your focus. And that is what T and I had, when we sat in my old cold-water flat with our little ones, or took them out for walks and attempted to salvage some support from the other. And we were able to give each other that. Again, no small feat for two foreign mothers.
Then S came over while Ids was here and she and her guy just reunited. She really loves him, I can see that, and very happy with the reunion. I am too, cause S is one of the coolest women I have met here in Denmark. We used to work together at another International School and bonded over the fact that we both lived in Hawaii. When I realized that S was as loud as I was, I fell in love. She, like Ids, was a big support for me when Ben and I first split.
Breaking up isn't easy --especially when you got kids. I remember when Ben and I first split and someone saying how easy it was to give up on a marriage. That person didn't know what they were talking about. How can it be easy to admit, "I can't do it." It would be one thing if it was just you had to live with the decision, but try at least two other people now! And add one more person per child if you got more! Breaking up my family and home is the worst thing I have had to in my life. It's a difficult decision I have to live with every day of my life as I wonder with sadness how much I would have loved to have offered my son a family under one roof, with no moving back and forth. So walking away from a marriage, is anything but friggin easy.
But then you realize the other opportunities. The opportunity for your child to see you happy, to see his father happy. The opportunity for your child to see that a relationship doesn't mean emotional distance. And maybe one day you will be able to have a healthy, functioning relationship not only for your child's sake, but most importantly for your sake.
And in the end, although separation and divorce may not have positive connotations, you realize that saying no can be a very healthy thing.
You also can't help but feel a bit of happiness for all your friends who are in the midst of relationships and family and persevering--Because you know that when it's right, it's wonderful. And not wonderful in that fake plastic way, but wonderful in that messy, sometimes you don't know if you can do it kind of way--and when you do do it, you're happy that you did.
And that, dear folks, is the some basic truths 'bout motherhood and separation.

Comments

Vakker Kvinne said…
Thanks for this killer post. I've been dealing a lot with step-mommy issues, why aren;t I married yet issues and why do i want to get married and be a mommy issues as of late. I'm sick of taking advice on any of these subjects for now, so I'm just thinking and FEELING how i want to feel about it.

I am partnered with someone who is a divorcee and who has a kid, and I often wonder what must be going through his mind about not being able to give his son the typical "mom and dad" thing. I've also bene wondering how he manages with all the pooppy parenting stuff people have to deal with, that I am SO not ready to deal with yet. All the crap us non-kid having people just say "I aint got no kids, aint my problem" about. I wonder what that's like for him.

Also, I wonder what it must be like for him and his son knowing what it used to be like or how it used to be "when we were all together"-meaning with his ex/his mom. Sometimes it makes me sad that they miss how it was, but then again, I realize that it is only natural to miss the thing that you cherished and is now gone.Hell, I miss Tucson like crazy and when I lived there, I completely took 100% of it for granted.

Relationships are difficult and so is marriage (!) so anyone who tells/told you that it was/is "so easy to let go" is a liar. it isn't easy-nothing in this world is easy. Especially after you have kids. And why is it that people who 1)aren't married or who have never been married or 2)people with no kids are always telling you how to be married or be a parent? They don't know crap, and don't you be forgetting that they dont know crap.

I don't know crap, so I try to fall back and let the people who do know crap, work their magic. It works, sometimes.

Tucson stand up.
One of favorite quotes is from the Jazz musician Art Blakey--if you make a mistake, make it loud! Basically, we gotta be brave to live our lives the only way in which we know--our way: "Mistakes" and all. It's funny how we teach our children not be afraid to make mistakes, that that is the way to learn, yet as we grow older we try to hide what we perceive as "mistakes"--broken marriages and so on. Thanks for your response to this and great to hear from you!
Hugs,
the lab
well said, and so true, im a single parent of two kids, but they must come first....enjoy mars hon
I agree--and the irony is that sometimes, putting them first means ending the marriage! Who'd a thunk it?!?
Anonymous said…
Thank you, Lesley-Ann. This post is so on point. I related so much to the part about mistaking the focus outside ourselves for depression, and "surrendering" to motherhood and finding that "bubble of Zen." Here's to hoping I'm two for two and that I can find my way back to me afterward for the good of myself, my children, and my family overall!

Love you, girl.
LAD
I've been thinking about you! Reading Junot Diaz's new book: Girl, he is hilarious! I LOVE it! Let's talk soon,
love,
lab

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