One Year Ago Today…

Azita laughed for the first time.

It’s hard to believe that only one year has passed since this video was taken. On the other hand, I can’t believe an entire year has passed since this video was taken. At the time I thought I’d never be able to keep Azita alive. When she laughed for the first time I started to believe I could do this raising a child thing. One year later I have so much more confidence as a mother, and Azita can do so much more than laugh. She walks and climbs and runs and even talks a little. But it’s still her laugh that fills me with wonder and gives me the boost of confidence I need to make it through another day.

I love her. Plain and simple.

The Right Shade of Green

A few weekends ago I was browsing the produce section of our local grocery store with Azita on board, snuggling close to me in her sling. As I walked through the aisles, I did the mom thing that annoys everyone who isn’t a parent — I pointed out every fruit and vegetable and told her the name, described the shape and color and basically tried to turn this chore into a teaching moment. As she tends to do, Azita smiled and made googly eyes at just about everyone who passed by. This is probably why it no longer surprises me when I notice people staring when I walk about town with her. She is staring at everyone else after all. After a while though I noticed the produce manager staring for a really long time, so I turned my attention and looked him in the eyes. And there I saw something unmistakable.

He had the look. The look of a parent at work, missing their child and seeing their baby in just about any child they see. I knew this even before he spoke up to talk about his 4 month old daughter at home. I know this look well, because I can feel myself giving it to parents I see whenever I venture outside of my office during the day.

I participate in a lot of parenting discussion boards, and one of the topics that seems to crop up frequently is the full-time mother vs. working-out-of-the-home mother struggle. We all struggle with it in different ways. Fathers do also, but maybe it’s the fact that our children are physically a part of us for 10 months that makes the struggle so much more of a struggle for mothers. No matter what situation you’re in, it’s hard to not feel guilt and longing.

I can understand every point of view, but maybe it’s my desire to stay home with Azita that clouds my thinking a little on the topic. I once read a post written by a full-time mother who stated that she felt like a loser when she sat at Starbucks with her children on a weekday, watching all the women in their suits, carrying their briefcases, rushing to get a coffee on their way to a glamorous day at the office — all this while she  sat at a table in her yoga pants and hoodie, trying to get her children to drink their milk and eat just a little bit of a muffin.

I’ve been the woman at Starbucks. The one rushing to get to an office. If I had more time before work, I would be that woman more often. And, as I read that mother’s post, the glimpse she provided into her innermost thoughts, I was actually kind of shocked. I was shocked, because when I see a mother at Starbucks with her children in the middle of a workday I envy her. I look at her the way the grocer looked at me and Azita, browsing for produce. The word “loser” never even crosses my mind. The word “lucky” does.

It kind of puts things in perspective sometimes to remember this. To remember that no matter what your position in life, there is almost always someone looking at you from the outside thinking your grass is greener. And, maybe remembering this will even remind you just how green your grass is, even if it isn’t the shade you want.

Giving a Better Life

Recently I was reunited with one of my sisters, with whom I’ve been somewhat estranged in one form or another for  much of my life.  The past couple of years have been maybe the most desolate in the wide expanse of arid land that is our relationship. We had no contact during this time, and I’m not even sure she knew I was pregnant and had a daughter. Well, a few weeks ago she reached out to me, and I reciprocated. We met up, and I got to talk and play and snuggle with her beautiful kids once again.

The most interesting part of our reunification though was that we actually talked for the first time in our lives. Really, I can’t remember a single time when we’ve had an actual conversation, where we not only exchanged words but the words actually sunk in. In the process I discovered that yes we are indeed very different people, but we have a lot more in common than I knew. We suffer a lot of the same issues, and we have some of the same feelings about how things went down in our lives. My sisters and I, no matter whether we are talking or not, will always have that bond.

While we walked about my neighborhood in the bone-chilling dusk air, I relayed some of the things that I guess I had tried to keep from her for my whole life. Being five years older than her and having an enormously different relationship with my mother than she did and currently does, my life and upbringing were different than hers. We didn’t get into details, but my sister acknowledged this and then she countered with THE thing — that thing that hangs in the air between us sisters and thickens our words. The thing that is always unsaid. Our mother was only doing what she knew. Her childhood wasn’t that great either. I don’t think any of us know the details, but we do know that her past was not so rosy no matter what the color of the glasses you wear when you examine it.

And that was that, at least for the night. What can I say to that really? I mean, you can’t blame someone for actions that are driven by someone else’s mistreatment of them, right?

Then I was working out. And I was feeling angry. Maybe it was because I was kickboxing, or maybe it was because it was only with the clarity of mind that comes during a workout that I could actually mull over my recent conversation and to think about it in the context of the rest of my life.

I remember growing up how my mother frequently talked about her impoverished childhood — the single pair of shoes per year. Only having bread for some meals. No warm coat of her own. And so on. When she had children of her own she wanted to give them a better life. She would always end by letting us know that if she had to scrub toilets to give us more, she would gladly do it.

Here’s the thing. Giving your children better and more doesn’t only apply to the tangible things in life. I was far from spoiled, but my life was a far cry from my mother’s hungry upbringing. We had enough money to be comfortable, but what my mother neglected to realize was that it was within her power to also give us a better emotional life than the one she was dealt. I can attest to the magnitude of the task she would have faced. I know how difficult it would have been for her. After all, I now have a child and I can definitely say that it is a daily struggle for me to fight my child-rearing instincts, which have clearly been twisted over years of abusive treatment.

I also know, however, that I will do anything in my power to give my daughter something different and better. I will make sure  she never knows what I know and that she never suffers the consequences. If I have to embrace a little humility and get professional help to do this, I will. And that’s the core issue here. Humility.

In the end, my mother’s pride took precedence over the needs of her children. She was unable to kick it to the curb and get the professional help she needed to break the cycle. To give us a better life. So while I can feel compassion for her, I don’t think I can ever truly forgive her. After all, I have to live with the consequences of her actions for the rest of my life. On the plus side, it is this fact of my life that will keep me committed every day to do better for Azita, and I guess that’s something to be thankful for.

Taking the Test of My Life

Azita had her 1-year well baby visit last Thursday. It went pretty well. She’s finally gaining some weight. Her hemoglobin count is slowly rising. She’s blazing past all the walking and talking milestones. She’s up-to-date on vaccines. She’s moving on to big girl foods and appropriately learning how to feed herself and eat and drink using big girl utensils. I left the doctor’s office feeling a sense of relief that seemed somewhat familiar but strangely out of context all at once. In fact, the whole week leading up to this visit I had a similarly strange out of context feeling. I couldn’t put my finger on it until this morning as I reminisced about my college days.

I remember each semester as midterms or finals would draw near — that gnawing feeling that I just wasn’t prepared. No matter how long and hard I studied or worked on a paper, I just couldn’t shake the feeling that I was going to fail. Then I would leave the exam or turn in the paper and suddenly my perspective would take on a different hue. I’d realize that I had sufficiently prepared, or that I had placed too much importance on the grade in the first place. Everyone knows the old adage about hindsight.

When I finally finished my formal education I thought I had put all of those feelings behind me. Of course I expect to feel a little nervous before a big work deadline or presentation and a little relieved when it’s done, but that is so very different. Only in school are we ever tested so granularly. In real life, we’re evaluated more generally. Our work life for the past year is evaluated for overall success, and you provide specific examples that illustrate your achievements. If an individual project or piece of a project doesn’t turn out perfect, it doesn’t really matter as long as you have achieved or surpassed your more general goals. In a way I think that’s what keeps people sane. I can’t imagine maintaining the emotional intensity of being continuously tested for much longer than the four to 12 years people attend college.

That is, I couldn’t imagine it, until I realized that part of what makes motherhood so stressful at times is that you are constantly being tested in much the same way you are tested in school. Any of my readers who are mothers probably know exactly what I’m talking about. What happens when you attend a family function with your baby? Everyone examines how you dress and feed your baby, how you change your baby’s diaper, how your baby is transported to and fro…I can’t even begin to list the petty feedback I’ve heard over the past year in which I’ve been a mother. That’s not even the worst of it.

From the minute your baby is first born, it can often feel as if your worthiness as a mother is determined solely by your child’s progression along a series of charts. Is her weight, height and head circumference moving along an appropriate curve? Does she achieve certain milestones during the correct month of life plus or minus a standard deviation? And you are tested so frequently in the first couple years. First you visit weekly then monthly then bi-monthly then tri-monthly. Each time it’s the same. The week of the next visit you start obsessing over the little things. Why did your baby choose this week of all weeks to go on hunger strike and get a raging diaper rash? You convince yourself that she will lose weight, falling below the curve on which they say she should be progressing. You convince yourself that your doctor will accuse you of neglect because your daughter has a rash that won’t go away.

In other words, you start second guessing whether you are ready for your next test. Because that’s exactly what is happening here — or at least, that’s what it feels like. As mothers, we are tested so regularly and formerly in much the same way we are tested when we’re in school. And once we leave the doctor’s office, we either leave with that feeling of elation — I passed!  — or we leave with that sinking, gray feeling — I think I failed.

I can’t say I’m 100% sure why this is the case, and maybe it’s only the case for me. But I feel sure it isn’t. I participate in a number of discussion boards for mothers, and I hear others say the same thing. “My child is off the charts in weight. What did I do wrong?”  Even worse, “My doctor says he will have to initiate a CPS investigation if my child doesn’t start gaining any weight.” (Really, I swear that I’ve read that and not just once.) We blame ourselves, because frequently we are blamed by the world when things don’t go exactly as planned or expected. Hell, we are frequently blamed by the world when things are not progressing better than planned. Somehow we’ve failed the test, even if we do everything exactly how we are supposed to (although who really knows what that is — it seems to change every month).

I’m lucky to have found such a wonderful pediatrician. She is reassuring and helpful all at once. She has the best advice not just for how to help your child thrive but also how to handle the ups and downs that parenthood causes in the rest of your life –your career and your marriage. I still remember when I entered her office for the first time a few days after Azita was born. I felt so overwhelmed and scared, and I left feeling so much better that all I could think was “I love that woman.” I frequently feel this when I leave her office. But she says the same thing every time as I’m re-dressing Azita and she’s leaving the exam room, “You’re doing a good job.” It feels so great when she says it. My insides are so warm and fuzzy they glow. But somewhere in the back of my mind is the realization that she’s saying I passed a test, and that means that there is always the possibility I could fail the next one.

The difference is that so much of this test is out of my control. It’s a hard row to hoe for a type A personality like myself. Like so many other mothers I meet, either in person or virtually, however, it’s just the lesson in humility I need. I can provide the best I can for my daughter, but in the end she is a person with free will. I cannot make her eat. I cannot make her sleep. I cannot make her walk or talk or do anything else. I can try my hardest to get her to do all of the above and hope that she ends up healthy and happy when all is said and done.

Most of all, I can focus on my day-to-day experiences and my larger goals that are not as testable. After all, what really matters more — my daughter’s weight at her 6-month checkup or whether she is a happy, well-adjusted, and independent young woman in 20 years? When I became a mother, I was not making a choice to go back to school, but somehow I regressed to that mindset. What I’ve finally realized internally is that motherhood is a career, and I need to start treating it like one.

All Grown Up

Azita is growing up way too fast these past few weeks. It seems like the first half of her first year moved in slow motion, and I liked it just fine that way. She was so tiny and so fragile and still so much a part of me. When she curled up on my chest to sleep the lines between us blurred, and we melded into a single person. My cousin recently announced his shock that she was a person. Not that she wasn’t a person before. But now she had a personality. She was more real.

I know what he means.

Two seconds ago, she was still very much an extension of me, and then she started walking.

AzitaWalking

Then she is drinking from a big girl cup…

AzitaSippyCup

and refusing to let me feed her. She not only wants to feed herself, but she wants to use a fork to do so, just like the big kids.

What’s next? Cutting her own food up into little pieces with a knife? Cooking dinner for the family? Running? Pole vaulting? Pumping iron?

Pumping Iron

Pumping Iron

I can feel her flying the coop already, and I can hardly stand it. Then night comes along and she snuggles tightly against me as she falls asleep. And there’s something about the feeling of her warm, milk-scented breath on my face that assures me that she will be a part of me forever.

Inheriting the Fun-damentals

When I was a kid the whole “Reading is Fun-damental” campaign was pretty much unnecessary for me, as were the summer reading programs where kids could earn a pizza or some other treat for reading a certain number of books. Or any of the other incentives adults came up with to teach children to make reading a habit. I loved to read. I still do. By the time I was in high school I would sometimes read up to 2 or 3 books a day. Yes. I meant “per day.” I’m not exaggerating.  One of my coworkers insisted that I must be lying about this statement. I’m not. I know you’re doing the math right now — how many pages per hour?

Well, I can read pretty fast. I actually read slower now than I did in high school and college. But I read so much because I quite simply couldn’t put books down. Once I started a book I had to finish it immediately. This means that I was frequently walking around with my nose in a book, and it wasn’t uncommon for me to stay up in bed reading only to discover that the sun was once again rising. Luckily, I have  always been able to survive on very little sleep (a trait that has been very handy to me as a mother).

One of my sisters also loves to read as much as I do. We both still read constantly, and many of our conversations revolve around what we’ve read recently. My other sister is so very different from us, however. She does not enjoy reading. In fact, she’s not really very good at reading and was nearly illiterate for most of elementary school. It is this fact that breeds internal conflict in me.

See, I love reading so much that this is the one trait of mine I deeply hope Azita will inherit. If she has no interest in science and math, I won’t care. I won’t mind if she does not inherit my musical ear or artistic capabilities. I could care less if she looks like me. I want her to be a reader, and I want her to love it. I want her to be intensely curious about the world around her and to want to read everything there is to know about it. It is this trait of mine that has not only made it just about impossible for me to ever get bored, but it has made it possible for me to learn quickly and adapt to almost any situation.

I once had a professor who professed admiration for the fact that I learned new things by throwing myself into the deep end and learning as I did. It is true that I do this, and the only reason I am able to do this is because I feel confident that whatever I don’t know (and I don’t know a lot) I can learn from what someone else has written. I lack confidence in myself so frequently, but it is my confidence in learning that holds me together and brings me any success I may have in life. I want Azita to always feel secure in this way. To know that the great unknown is not so scary, because it is learnable.

I desire this so much that I obsess about it. I watch her every action around books. How can I tell if she will love reading as my sister and I do, and not dislike it as our youngest sister does? I mean, we all grew up in the same  household, and yet we are so very different in this aspect. How much of the love of reading and learning is nurture?

I frequently talk to my sister about my fear that Azita will not love books. Considering that Roger and I both love to read, it may seem irrational. But until very recently Azita would not let me read to her. Books were things to rip up and throw and chew on. On rare occasions I could make it through a couple pages of Goodnight Moon or Olivia before she would lose interest, but those occasions were very rare. My sister assured me that my worrying was for naught. “Just exposing your daughter to books will teach her to love to read,” she said. I had my doubts.

Then, this morning as I was feeding Azita her breakfast, she leaned over the side of her booster chair and pulled her “Colors” book over so she could flip the pages as she ate her mangoes and waffles. She was actually eating with her nose in a book. Just like I did at the dinner table when I was a child. Maybe all is not lost after all. We may yet be a family that reads together.

TMI

Being a mother means that you are constantly a purveyor of TMI. Get two mothers in the same room, and it won’t be long before they are discussing the color and texture of the mucus they aspirated from their baby’s nose, the degree of their tears from labor and delivery or the ins and outs of their placenta. It’s true. When someone finds out you have a baby, they want to know how old the baby is and that leads to a discussion of how they sleep and how many diapers they go through in a day. Next thing you know, you’ve divulged that your baby’s last poop was green and was dotted with what appeared to be chunks of spinach and carrot.

This happens to every mother. I guarantee it. I am an extremely private person generally, but even I have fallen prey to this phenomenon. Maybe this is due to the fact that being a mother means you are completely responsible for taking care of another human being’s body. Maybe people who take care of ill and/or aging parents exhibit the same behavior. I can’t really say why this is the case, but I do know that I spent a good half hour last night at holiday party discussing with a woman I just met the position and length of umbilical cords in our pregnancies and the number of times we each vomited when giving birth to our children. And I am afraid this might happen again.

I don’t do this. I talk about music and politics and history and art and science and technology and other intellectual topics. I swear. But now there’s some woman out there who believes that I know nothing about anything outside of bowel movements and the physiology of a pregnant uterus. Next time I go to a party I’m sitting in the corner with the latest issues of the New Yorker and Scientific American and a copy of Atlas Shrugged, and I will only talk about their contents. I’m a smart and cultured woman, damn it. Hear me roar!

Say "Bye-Bye"

Every weekday since I first dropped Azita off at daycare I have the same drop-off routine. First I get her out of her carseat. Roger opens his window and waves goodbye and blows kisses at Azita. Then I carry her into daycare. I talk to her daycare provider for a few minutes — tell her whether she ate breakfast, slept the night before, and basically anything else that might help her gauge Azita’s mood and behavior for the day. Then I hand Azita over and try to get her attention. “Bye-bye, Azita. Bye-bye. Can you say bye-bye to mommy? Say bye-bye. Please. Pleeeease. Say bye-bye. Can mommy have a goodbye kiss?”

Usually all of the other kids there say “bye-bye” to me about 20 times while I stand there making an ass out of myself. Azita never says bye-bye. She knows how to say bye-bye and hello even. She says it to her dad, and continues waving to him as I walk up to the door. She waves hello to Miss. Gail, her favorite caretaker at daycare. She waves bye-bye to Miss Gail when she is leaving daycare. She waves hello and bye-bye to guests visiting our home and to people whose homes we are visiting. She waves hello and bye-bye to perfect strangers on the street. She’ll even say “bye-bye” or “hi”, or at least her cute little baby version of the words. She basically says it to everyone but me.

It’s a little disheartening, but then I remember that her face lights up for me more than it does for anyone else. So, who cares if she won’t wave to me or give me even a little hello or goodbye? Not I.

Then there’s this morning. She waved goodbye to Roger as usual and even said “bye-bye” this morning. She waved hello to Miss Gail when we walked in and gave her a winning smile. Then she turned around and looked at me before I’d even removed her hat and coat and started to wave. “Bye-bye bye-bye bye-bye bye-bye…,” she said. Before I’d even really dropped her off.

She’s not even a year old and she already doesn’t want me hanging around. I know I asked for it, but does she have to be so enthusiastic about sending me off? I tell you, motherhood is one harsh blow after another.

And I love every minute of it.

Ending the Cycle

Lately I’ve returned to my pre-pregnancy early morning workout routine. While it may suck to wake up at 5:30am and it definitely sucks to be physically active at that time, it is great to be able maximize my time with Azita in the evenings. This means that I have been able to go for walks with Roger and Azita in the evening after Roger is done with his run.

Tonight, we combined our casual evening walk with a chore and walked to the supermarket to pick up some items that were missing for dinner. It was a pleasant walk. The weather was beautiful and not too cold or hot. All of the street lights were working, so we could actually see where we were walking. Azita was in a good mood. Then the night turned sour.

We heard a child scream and start crying. When we looked towards the racket we saw a man with a little boy, and something in his behavior was clearly not kosher. He was just a little too rough with the child and his tone of voice was just a little too malicious. Both Roger and I had the same thought. We needed to keep an eye on this situation. And, I was glad that we did, because not two minutes later when we had gotten about halfway down the block, the man smacked the child on the head. Not just once, but a few times. The child’s crying just agitated him more and culminated in him yanking the boy by the arm so hard that the boy fell forward onto the ground.

That was the last straw for us. Roger was already calling 911 before I could even ask him to get his phone out. Luckily another good citizen — a man biking home from work — noticed the distressed child and also stopped. He talked calmy to the man and explained that we were concerned about the child and just wanted him to wait until the police could talk to him and clear things up.

Long story short, the police came. They explained to the man, who said that this was how you handled children in his native Honduras, that this was not acceptable treatment of a child in the state of Virginia — “You can spank a child, but you cannot hit a child.”

It wasn’t long before we were back home just a block away from the incident, feeding Azita dinner and drawing her bath. Yet, even after an evening of cuddling and playing with Azita and relaxing conversation with Roger, I am still shaken by the whole ordeal. I mean really shaken. As in, my insides feel like they are being rattled about in a rock polisher.

It is an upsetting situation and one that hits close to home. See, when I was growing up, I was the kid who sometimes prompted people to say something to my mother, but I was usually the kid that people tried to ignore rather than cause a scene. In hindsight looking back on things as an adult, I know that somebody should have stopped and paid attention and done the right thing.

I say this as a person who can understand both sides. Because as much as I still feel the shame and hurt of being the recipient of this kind of treatment, I don’t think my mother is an evil person. And I really don’t think the villain of tonight’s saga is really an evil person either. Some of this behavior may be cultural — different levels of physical violence are accepted forms of discipline in many countries — and some of it is borne of the frustrations of being a stranger in a strange country with very little to your name and a life of very hard work ahead of you. Much harder work than I will ever know. And, I will never really know how hard it is to make it in that situation, because my parents took that on themselves for our sake. I have empathy for them and their situation in life.

Still, sometimes all it takes for someone to realize the very real ramifications of their actions is for someone else to give them a little wakeup call. I hope that tonight we were the wakeup call this man needed.  I hope that I was able to do for that boy what no one did for me or my sister.

Because I really just can’t bear to think otherwise.

Wondering About the Wonder Years

Years ago I clicked through on an email from Classmates.com and out of curiosity I signed up for an account. Since then I receive an email just about every day with updates on my former classmates. They write notes, they upload pictures, they post new events, they update their bios. They do lots of things, and I get emails letting me know that I can login to Classmates.com and see what’s going on.  Here’s the thing. I have no idea who most of these people are.

I was not exactly a popular person in high school, and it went beyond being a member of the freaks and geeks. I was so beyond freak or geek that even they didn’t really accept me into their crew. As a very young child I was painfully shy, and I wasn’t much better as a teenager. So I hung out alone, and I phoned it in. I really just wanted to get out of high school and get started with college already, so much so that I registered for the summer session and got started with my first couple college classes a good month before I graduated from high school. You can’t be more eager to leave a place than that.

I’m not saying I had no friends. I just had very few, and I’m not in touch with any of them now. But hey, life goes on, and I can’t say I have any deep regrets over my high school experience. In spite of this I can’t help sometimes seeing these emails and wondering what my life would be like if I was popular or if I did make friends that I’m still friendly with today. If I wasn’t such a geeky loner, maybe I’d know how to work the system a little better now and make more money. And maybe I’d have more friends as an adult. On the other hand, I probably would be so…well let’s just say I probably wouldn’t be such an “individual.” After so many years I’ve kind of grown to like my “individuality.”

Really, no regrets, but I was always a sucker for those Choose Your Own Adventure books and I do have a very geeky obsession with the time-space continuum. So I wonder almost obsessively at times how the different decisions and actions we make in our lives ultimately affect the outcome.

I think what I mostly wonder about however is what Azita’s high school experience will turn out to be. I know she’s not even a year old, and I’m already thinking about her teenage years. This is the point where Roger usually rolls his eyes at me, but I swear I’m not worrying or being compulsive in any way. I’m just being curious. Will she be a nerd like me? A cool kid like her baba? A jock? A theater geek? Maybe she will defy categorization.

I don’t know, and I don’t know if I wish for any of the above. When I think about Azita in high school, I hope she has a different experience than mine. I hope she’s well-liked, but doesn’t feel or give in to the pressure to be popular. I hope she can enjoy high school and make some life-long friends but continues to form lasting friendships afterwards. I hope that those years are just the launching point for a wonderful life and not the high point. I hope that she learns to love learning but that she also picks up the skills to be comfortable in social situations. I hope so many things, but most of all I hope that when she reaches the ripe old age of her maman she can look back on her youth with fondness but so very glad to be exactly where she is.