Last week, a bleary eyed, exhausted me pulled my miserably sick daughter into my room after hours of tossing and turning, after sitting up worrying about why she was crying and if her pain would subside enough to find sleep. I gave up; I gave up and I pulled her into my bed around 2:30 in the morning. Both of us were deliriously tired; she wrapped her arms around me and asked me to hold her tighter. We laid together until I felt her breathing ease and I thought she’d finally drifted off. Once I knew her Motrin had kicked in, once I knew she was comfortable and sound, then I could find sleep myself.
Because that, the sleepless nights, the worry, the never ending cycle children in my bed…that is motherhood.
As I drifted off, I felt her little hand on my tummy. She rubbed my stomach, much like I rub hers when she’s tired or sad to calm her, and I smiled with the realization that she’d been waiting for me to sleep, too. Her fingers fell into the deep grooves of the stretch marks 27 months of pregnancy have left on me and she paused. She backtracked slightly. She took the tip of her finger and began tracing the marks, the lines marking the roads on the map of our lives together. At that moment I realized something I’d not honestly grasped in 11 years of parenting; that I am hers. I am this thing, this pile of bones and skin that belongs to her. To them. That I am not just a 30 something girl with big hips covered in silvering tracks; I am an extension of three people, and I belong to them completely.
And that, the giving over of myself to someone else, well…that is motherhood.
If you asked me what motherhood was, I could give you the obvious answer. I could tell you it’s 9 months of puking and 18 years of mumbling to yourself. It’s hardly having enough time and never having enough for yourself. It’s diapers and bottles and boo boos. It’s dishes and laundry and grocery bills and college tuition. And I’d be lying to you with every word.
Motherhood is none of those things. Those are merely the minute details of life. If I didn’t have these children I’d still have grocery bills and bank accounts and I’d probably have some career that required much of my time. I’d have work to bring home and deadlines to meet and maybe a dog to feed and walk. I’d be busy, I’d be frazzled and I’d be distracted. None of that changes with or without having my children, just how it plays out does.
So I take all of that out of the equation and what I’m left is what happens on the sidelines. I’m left with falling into bed and knowing that my daughter is so intertwined in my soul that she could dare trace the lines of my body while she thought I slept simply because she wanted to, which is something I’d never had dared do with my own mother. That is motherhood.
I brought a basket of clothes to my boys’ room the other day and when I opened my oldest son’s top drawer to put his socks and boxers away, I realized that he’d unfolded all of his boxers and re-folded them differently. He’d moved his socks from the right to the left, the t-shirts to the back and laid his boxers out like I’d never think to. I stood for a little too long staring at that drawer, smiling, realizing that my son had taken an idea I’d given him and made it into something uniquely his own. That he was moving away from me and he knew which direction he was heading and he didn’t need to ask for my permission or my seek my validation anymore.. That is motherhood.
I cook dinner at night and my middle son helps, no matter what we’re making. He does a really crappy job of chopping the parsley and he over-salts the sauce and he sets the table all wrong and we laugh our asses off the whole time we’re getting ready to eat. We talk about Pokemon or skateboarding or the new video game and I listen to his stories, his tales, his experiences that have nothing to do with me and I learn something about that little boy who does still need me to validate him, who wants to be in the kitchen with me because I love to cook and he wants to be a part of what I love. I listen to his silly stories, I nod at the things I honestly don’t understand, because he loves those things and I want to know about the thing he loves. That is motherhood.
My daughter climbs into the pile of dirty laundry that is now taller than she is. She burrows into it until she finds the buried basket and she makes us all find her. Sometimes she lunges out at us, sometimes she just peeks an eye out and whispers, “boo.” Then she leaps out and we run around the living room, tripping over piles of clothes, through the kitchen, jumping over bags of groceries still not put away, playing tag and laughing until it hurts. That is motherhood.
Motherhood is a tide, ebbing and flowing in my life. It is a push and a pull, a give and a take. It’s me giving all I have to these people and me taking everything I can from them while I have them. It’s them holding on to me while they push me away. It’s watching them learn and grow, it’s mourning the loss of their dependence and celebrating the independent people they are becoming. It’s getting flustered because the dust is piling up and the floors are a mess but me not being able to bring myself to windex the little handprints off the windows because I want to savour them for as long as I can. It’s that it’s been so long since I’ve had a minute, a day, a week to myself that I can hardly remember what that’s like and it’s the way 11 years just blew past me right then when I blinked and the next 15 are going to be over before I can blink again. It’s running on three hours of sleep, grieving for the loss of a child not my own and at the exact same moment finding a fleeting moment of pure peace in the eyes of another child.
It’s who I have become to my core. It’s the space in between the mistakes I make, between what isn’t getting done in my day or my life, it’s the touch and the sight and the sound of something bigger than me and better than me unfolding before my eyes. It is a gift, being able to look at a child and see more than a short human; being able to see the roads that connect you to her to me to them. It’s living less in fear and more in the moment. It’s how I realize slightly more with every day that passes exactly how wrong, how tragically horrifying my own childhood was and realizing more with every day that passes that it doesn’t matter anymore, that I am not that child, and neither are my children, and neither are anyone else’s. That I can learn from it and let it go. That I don’t have to forgive or forget or understand, but I am ready to accept it and leave it behind. That I have the power to give it meaning, to make it right, to cancel the whole thing out.
It has nothing to do with what I’m doing, and everything to do with what I’m becoming.
David and Catharine are hosting Around the World in 80 Clicks: 80 stories of motherhood from around the globe. Ree asked me, Kelley asked Ree, Tanis asked Kelley, Catharine asked Tanis and I’d like to ask X Box. Who isn’t a mother, but who’s quest to become a parent is as inspirational as it is heartbreaking. If you’d like to contribute, please let Catharine know about your post so she and David can add it to the “itinerary.”









ms. changes pants while driving
Thursday, 9 April, 2009 at 16:27especially the part about the parents and the childhood and it’s over and not yours and not your kids’.
Ree
Thursday, 9 April, 2009 at 16:42Thanks darlin. You did a beautiful job.
Habbala
Thursday, 9 April, 2009 at 17:05Just wanted to tell you that you post was ABSOLUTELY beautiful. I am not a mother, but it made me want to be one. And I forwarded it to all the mothers in my life.
flickrlovr
Thursday, 9 April, 2009 at 19:08If that’s motherhood…I cannot wait. You articulate things I don’t even know of myself, things I don’t yet understand, and so beautifully. Makes me feel like I have felt those little hands before. Seen what you’ve seen. You have a gift, Shan. You ARE the gift.
Jill B
Thursday, 9 April, 2009 at 19:13Wow. Thank you for sharing this. It is so great.
Eva Robertson
Thursday, 9 April, 2009 at 19:21Great stuff. Yes, we with the yucky childhoods can move on and be happy and make others happy. Cheers to that. And thanks for your words of support in The Basement.
Angela
Thursday, 9 April, 2009 at 19:50Loved it and thank you! You really make it was it IS into words. GREAT!
Angela
Thursday, 9 April, 2009 at 19:51Meant to say you really make it “what” it IS into words…see obviously I can’t do that.
Cara
Thursday, 9 April, 2009 at 21:12Beautiful. Describes so much of what I’m just learning.
Expat Mom
Thursday, 9 April, 2009 at 21:36That was definitely one of your best posts. I wrote for the 80 Clicks as well, but it didn`t come out nearly as nice. :)
The whole belonging to your kids is so true. I`m reminded of it constantly when my sons lift my shirt to poke my belly fat (which is only 50% their fault, 50% is because I sit at the computer working all day!) or climb into my lap and twirl my hair in their fingers or stick their fingers into my ears, nose or mouth, just because they can and because they think my body is as much theirs as their own. I love it.
Fawn
Thursday, 9 April, 2009 at 22:06*sigh* I am lost in admiration, truly. I’ve gotta get me down to Vancouver soon and finally meet you for real.
EarnestGirl
Thursday, 9 April, 2009 at 22:50Well. As all 56 before me have told you – what a gorgeous post. Perfectly, beautifully, honestly the truth.
Also? Wise – because you love then enough to let then re-fold their underwear and you know to nod quietly when you don’t understand but love them enough that you don’t have to. Wise because you get that they are ours for now, but mostly they are themselves. That our job is to get them to the place where they can walk away from us. More or less intact. Wise also for knowing that the broken parts you carry around from your own childhood can be put down whenever we choose.
Thank you for the reminder, because every now and then we all need to hear the truth spoken so eloquently aloud above the din of daily life. Well done.
TheExpatresse
Thursday, 9 April, 2009 at 23:03Oh, thank you.
I have been in a piss poor mood since yesterday. Last night, while cooking dinner, I even thought to myself (is there any other way?) “maybe I shouldn’t have had children.” Not because I don’t love them and am happy to have them in my life, but because yesterday, and today until I read this, I was wondering if I hadn’t somehow cheated myself out of a more interesting life.
A horrible thing to think, I know.
I couldn’t really discuss this and my general grumpiness with The Spouse because he would either try to fix it (this is what men do) or feel guilty he had contributed to my unhappiness.
A girlfriend would know the right balance of sympathy and bitch-slap to get me out of it.
Your essay today was the right mix.
Thank you again.
Leslie Dillinger
Friday, 10 April, 2009 at 1:37You kill me, as usual. I love you.
Type A Mommy
Friday, 10 April, 2009 at 7:42This was easily the most awesome post I’ve read on motherhood in a long time.
** Applause **
You totally rocked my socks.
Momo Fali
Friday, 10 April, 2009 at 8:06Only you could make me cry talking about stretch marks.
But, what I mostly take away from this post is the realization that you have a boy who refolds clothing and I have a daughter who couldn’t fold a paper towel if she tried.
Miss Britt
Friday, 10 April, 2009 at 10:06Beautiful.
And dead on.
And perfect.
Gabbi
Friday, 10 April, 2009 at 10:45I love where you say it is the moments between the mistakes we make. I love that.
Thank you!
Gabbi
shawna
Friday, 10 April, 2009 at 12:50once upon a time there was a baby handprint on the inside of a car window that a mother did not allow a father to wash away for almost three years. and then a brother in law thought in his wonderful childless way that giving our car a good cleaning inside and out would be a nice gesture. i cried. and you reminded me why, thanks.
Cynthia
Friday, 10 April, 2009 at 13:22Now I’m crying at work.
That was beautiful….
Country-Fried Mama
Friday, 10 April, 2009 at 14:16I so needed to read this today. That was lovely.
monstergirlee
Friday, 10 April, 2009 at 22:13fuck that was a good post. you’re a freakin’ awesome writer. (among other things)
hubs
Saturday, 11 April, 2009 at 16:32You know EXACTLY how lucky you are. Great post. But who is the baby you are holding?
I couldn’t get the xbox link in the footnotes to work. Is it just me?
Audubon Ron
Sunday, 12 April, 2009 at 7:21:)
Debbie
Sunday, 12 April, 2009 at 15:55I came here from Five Star Friday, and I agree, a very touching Five Stars!
ame i.
Sunday, 12 April, 2009 at 19:53Beautiful!
I had a wonderful childhood and am so lucky to have my great parents living 5 minutes away. I’ve often been afraid I wouldn’t be as good a parent as mine, thought if I was half as good a mother as mine my daughters would be lucky. I swell with happiness when my mom tells me that I’m a great Mama.
I’ve always loved, cherished, and enjoyed my girls and do so more every day. They are 9 & 11. I’m a little sad when I drop them off at school (2 different schools, younger in public, older in private, so they have different Spring & Fall break schedules) and love seeing them walk out of the school doors in the afternoons.
I am so looking forward to summer vacation!
ame i.
Sunday, 12 April, 2009 at 19:59Ha, I shouldn’t admit that when packing away baby clothes a couple of years ago I came across a “baby bag” (zippered sleeper without legs and held it up to my face. I must not have washed it after the last time it was worn by daughter the 2nd because it smelled like BABY and powder & baby shampoo, even had a hint of sour breastmilk smell. Sounds gross, but I brought it back downstairs and put it in my hope chest. The newborn-sized diaper I kept only has a hint of diaper-smell, but I’ll always keep it.
Courtney
Monday, 13 April, 2009 at 1:36I don’t really have anything to say, but I felt like I couldn’t go without adding that I really thought that was a beautiful beautiful post. Motherhood is something else, that’s for sure. I still don’t have it all figured out. Not even close and you really made me smile and remember how grateful I am, even through all this hell that is teething.
Trenches of Mommyhood
Monday, 13 April, 2009 at 9:22You’ve now got me in tears. Right on.
jessica
Monday, 13 April, 2009 at 9:28Wow, this was so beautiful and profound. thank you. I never realized until I read your post, that my daughter considers me “hers” but it’s so true. I, also, was never so intimate with my own mother as my child is with me. My kid is so bold as to want to unbutton my jammas to “see your boobies mama!”
BusyDad
Monday, 13 April, 2009 at 15:07I think that was one of the best things I have ever read. And I’m not even a mom.
tiff
Tuesday, 14 April, 2009 at 1:41This is the third time I’ve read this and I still don’t know what to say.
Beautiful and true.
It just doesn’t seem enough for such a gorgeous post.
Secret Agent Mama
Tuesday, 14 April, 2009 at 8:15I need to read it a few more times b/c honestly it feels like i’m losing touch with all of this, this life, this reason for being a mom. I honestly don’t know what’s wrong with me, but you struck a chord.
Love you, ma.
auntie
Tuesday, 14 April, 2009 at 23:16what an amazingly beautiful post. i’ve been relatively certain for quite awhile that i don’t want to have children, but this? reading this is the kind of thing that would make me seriously reconsider.
TeacherMommy
Wednesday, 15 April, 2009 at 11:07Thank you so much for the beauty of your words. I love that David and Catherine began this journey, as it is opening a connection between so many mothers struggling with and yet loving motherhood all over the world. I dove into a post of my own wholeheartedly, and I’m now loving reading others’, like yours.
Thank you for sharing.
And I would love to join you for a bit of that whiskey sometime, though maybe I could ask for a shot of sweet and sour if it isn’t too much trouble?
Tracy
Wednesday, 15 April, 2009 at 12:49Yes, that was a beautiful post. But that last part … I think you’ve got it, to ‘leave it behind’ to ‘cancel the whole thing out’. I think you just helped me more than 10 years of therapy.
janethesane
Wednesday, 15 April, 2009 at 20:12I love you Shannon.
val
Saturday, 18 April, 2009 at 11:53“sniff sniff” This brought Tears to my eyes…Mothers and daughters have such an eternal bond…Spending time with my daughter is a real stress buster….
December
Sunday, 19 April, 2009 at 8:53I am so glad there is another mom out there that isnt afraid to make mistakes and call it like you see it.
SUBSCRIBED.
Lisa Stone
Monday, 20 April, 2009 at 14:23Thank you for this slice of fabulous writing, Mr. Lady. I’ve been looking for a perennial “Mother’s Day” post. This is the one, and as a small token of our esteem, Elisa, Jory and I decided it makes you BlogHer of the Week.
Cynthia
Tuesday, 21 April, 2009 at 23:03Huh…all of a sudden the past 2 months of super-ill-children HELL just faded into something lovely! Thank you!
Jenny
Thursday, 23 April, 2009 at 5:04This post made me smile and bawl at the same time. I’ve posted a link back to this post on my site, because it hit me “right here” (pointing to my heart!). Thank you for making me step back and really reflect on why I’m here. =)