A blogger I follow wrote this: "Not everyone should have children, but I'd venture to guess that you don't really know yourself until you have them. However you come by them, naturally, adopted, foster, surrogate or otherwise, they will show you the best and the worst parts of yourself."
This is the hard parenting truth that makes life so difficult much of the time. The part where you become familiar with your own limits of patience, exhaustion, and selflessness. Those days you wish you weren't anyone's parent at all and could go back to living your life just for yourself again. Just one, tiny day of solitary living. When you are filled with self-hatred for the monster you've released from your most hidden underbelly.
But then, my blogger reminds me, there are the good days too. The days I see myself at my finest. When I am the personification of empathy. When my words are slower and more deliberate, and I can see a glimpse of deep recognition in my daughters' eyes. When I take the time, and I enjoy it.When I am Mommy with a capital M and I can feel the joy of that realization creep through my veins.
Those latter days, unfortunately, are fewer in number than the days when I am not too proud of myself. But they do exist. And the fact remains that nothing is more of a mirror into our own souls than our children, than the very personal path we take as we accompany them through their lives. How we react, the words we say, how we (really) feel about it all...it all becomes crystal clear the second they hand that baby over to you. And the rest of the world, well, doesn't quite melt away but refocuses. And what we're left with at the focal point, left to battle with and re-align, is our own most authentic, individual human nature.
Monday, June 16, 2014
Tuesday, June 10, 2014
Buon Compleanno, Andrea!
Today is my favorite person in the world's birthday...
He is generous to a fault, a beyond-devoted father, friend and partner, sacrificing his own needs without question to make certain the rest of us are content.
When you see him, he is usually clad with children - his own and others - nurturing them, carrying them, feeding them, running after them...tirelessly (well, nearly)...
He is deliberate and exceptional, aware of the world around him and priveleged with the gift of boundless curiosity.
He puts up with a lot, but never gives up on us.
He is the calmer of souls, the provider of energy, the benchmark and point of reference for everyone in his life.
He is the sturdiest person I've ever known, with the most massive heart, the most courageous soul and the softest yet most protective spirit.
Happy birthday, Andrea.
“It is easy in the world to live after the world's opinions; it is easy
in solitude to live after your own; but the great man is he who in the
midst of the crowd keeps with perfect sweetness the independence of
solitude."
- Ralph Waldo Emerson
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