There are
days when you think you are actually doing pretty well at this parenting gig. Days
when your children seem almost content. Almost
happy. Days when you are in the zone—the parenting zone. You all know what I
mean, right? Days when you look at your children and you think maybe—just maybe—their financial futures will
not be riddled with the pock marks of extensive therapy debt. Days when you see
nothing in their future but promise and success and roaring accolades. Days when their little souls seem at peace and
their little psyches intact. All because you are one fucking badass mother.
Then there
are days like today.
Days when
you forget to dress your children in green because, as a forty-one-year old
mother of three who barely remembers to pee most days, you are incapable of
remembering a holiday that is synonymous with drunken abandon. You have no time for green beer. Days when you
pick up your eleven-year-old son from school grasping his bicep and wincing in
pain. Days when he declares today the worst day. Ever. In the history of days. Days
when he says to you, “There is apparently some thing in middle school where
people are allowed to punch you if you don’t wear green. Mom, why didn’t you
tell me to wear green?” You don’t know how to respond, so you only say, “I’m
sorry, son.” Because “I forgot to dress you in green because, frankly, I simply
do not have even an infinitesimal bit of available space left in my brain at
the moment because I am too busy trying to figure out how we are going to pay
for the $7,000 in dental work you are getting next week” seems a bit too harsh.
There are
days when your youngest son gets a new video game he ordered in the mail. A video
game for a game system you do not own. A Nintendo GameCube video game that he
was dying to have and insisted on spending his $30 on despite your warnings
that there was no way a GameCube game would play on his Nintendo Wii system no
matter what the idiot hacker on YouTube said. His little heart leaps for joy as
he tears open the manila packaging. And when it does not play in his Wii system—just
as mommy had warned him—he falls into a deep, deep depression. He assumes the
fetal position on the couch and refuses to speak for an hour or so until he
falls asleep. When you wake him for dinner, he refuses to eat. When you put him
in the tub for bath time, he once again assumes the fetal position—under water
this time—taking on the appearance of a disturbingly large, scrawny fetus. Now
he is in bed. Moaning. That his eye hurts. And his leg hurts. And his penis
hurts. You discover, to your utter disappointment that the apple does not fall
far from the tree. He is an emotional hypochondriac in much the same way his
momma is an emotional eater.
There are
days when you say the unthinkable to your daughter. Days when (after enduring a
visit from your homeowner’s insurance adjustor, and a couple of long calls with
your banker, and a pamphlet in the mail about your 20th—TWENTIETH!!—college
reunion) you look your beautiful, happy, enthusiastic daughter in the eye at
ten minutes to eight o’clock and you actually say, “Please, Sophie. Please, for the love of GOD, find
something to do for the next ten minutes that does not involve being right in my face.” There are days when
your daughter calls you mean. And slams her door. And refuses to kiss you
goodnight. And flings her skinny little body on her bed with the force of F5 tornadic
winds. There are days when you know you
are a shitty parent. You just know it in your gut the same way you know that
you need to put down the fucking Oreos and eat something green.
But now that
everyone in the house is mad at you—with the exception of the dog, but she’s
not very bright—you are going to bed and putting this horrible day to rest.
Tomorrow is
a new day.
God help us
all.
2 comments:
Read A terrible no good awful day to your kids by Judith Viorst. One of my all time favorite books. Not much above is about your parenting schools. It is kids not listening to all their friends that say wear green tomorrow and don't buy a video that won't fit into your player. All first world problems. Tell them that and it should make them yell and go to their rooms and then you can relax and go to sleep until they come into your bed tonight. :) Love your stories and love those kids.
Aww, the joys of parenthood.
I love your short stories. They bring such insight and hope for us all.
There is always tomorrow .
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