Monday, September 8, 2014

Courage



I knew this was the year.  I knew it and was dreading it and truth be told, avoided it because I knew it was the year.  The year that my daughter had reached the coveted 48” mark, meaning she was now tall enough for the water-slides at Sandcastle, our local water park.


We stood, looking up, and I wanted to be sick as she asked, “Please Mommy.”





She had been on a water slide once, when she was 3 or 4, when a lone slide had a height restriction of a mere 36”.  It was a tube slide, she was required to have an adult, and we would ride in a double inner tube. 


Over ten years of being an “adult” (i.e. not going to amusement parks), I had long lost my sea legs for the thill of height and speed.  As we climbed the stairs that year, I was full of anxiety, repeatedly telling her things like, “You cannot let go, even if you get water on your face or in your eyes.” 


At the top, my stomach turned as I realized her little bottom was too small to sit in the front hole of our double inner tub and she was instructed to sit in the center of its figure 8 shape.


Settling my own bottom in the back hole, I repeated my instructions to not let go, locking my feet under her armpits, terrified she would somehow slide off the wet plastic and get caught under it.  (I have a very descriptive imagination, which I will spare you the output of.)


Shortly after our tube started it’s mad rush through the water, I realized that my daughter could feel my tension and hear my grunts of fear as we were buffeted back and forth inside of the tube slide.  I made an effort to call out a cheerful  “whoo hoo” every few moments, not wanting her to be as scared as I was.  But I hated every second of it.


We hit the pool at the bottom and she did slip and fall, with only my feet keeping her from falling fully through the hole.  The shocked lifeguard exclaimed “Good catch!” and had to be prodded to rescue my dangling daughter so I could get out of the tube and the way of the next rider.


Later that year, I read an article in our local paper, describing how a child had been hurt on the same model slide at another park.  As a result, on the advice of the manufacturer, Sandcastle would be raising the height limit of all its slides to the current 48” mark.



For two years, I have been relieved to honestly tell her, “Sorry honey, you aren’t quite tall enough yet.”

 

Not this year.  And while I have cited the crappy Pittsburgh summer and our crazy busy schedules, if I am to be brutally honest, whenever we had the chance for summer fun, I ranked Sandcastle at the bottom.  I was so anxious about it, I was willing to let our expensive season passes go to waste.


Until two Sundays ago, when I declared that we needed to do something fun, outside and summery to celebrate the last day of summer break.  I suggested a picnic at a favorite park with her grandparents.  My daughter suggested Sandcastle.


With my mom in tow, I tried to steel myself for the day.   What if my strong little swimmer hit the bottom and couldn’t get to the edge?   (What’s three years of private swim lessons against the fear of a mom?)  What if she got hurt on the way down? 


Besides, I  really didn’t want to go down the slide myself.  But I couldn’t let her go up with all those big kids alone.  Maybe I could go up, get her on the slide and come back down the steps, and mom can collect her at the bottom. 


One look at the last weekend of the summer crowds let me know that wasn’t possible.


It was with great relief that she wanted to start at Wet Willie's, the park’s kid’s area.  We enjoyed lunch, and relaxed on the lazy river.  In a lame attempt at self-delusion, I even commented to my mom that I didn’t think she really wanted to ride the big slides, because she hadn’t really asked to, beyond verifying she was tall enough.  





But as we floated in the summer sun, my parental guilt hit full force. 


The thing is, I want to keep her safe.  Safe from physical harm.  Safe from disappointment.  Safe from fear.


But I want her to be brave.  I want her to try new things and not always be held back my fear.  I want her to have adventures and be adventurous.  I want that just as much as I want to keep her safe and protected.  I know first-hand that keeping her safe and protected now will make her a more fearful adult.  And so nothing makes me feel so ashamed as holding her back because of my fear.


So with a tight chest and a stomach in knots, I suggested we get in line for the slides before it was too late and the park closed.  She agreed, and while there were no words, I could sense her emotion.  She hadn’t asked because she could tell I didn’t want her to go on them.  Calling all shame gremlins!


Needing start off “small”, we started on a level 3 (out of 4) tube slide.  She didn’t want to be inside a tunnel like we were when she was smaller, so we picked an open one.  It wound back and forth, and with its gradual decent, I was pleasantly surprised at how easy it felt.  I was ready to go again.


But then she looked up, staring at the yellow and orange chutes and said it, “Please, Mommy.  Please can I go on the yellow and orange slides?”  And I knew this was the moment. 


The moment when I could fill her with all my fears or let her take her own on head first.


I remembered my one and only run down the center yellow slide.  I was barely out of my teens, a young pup of 5’2” and all of about 115 lbs.  The slide is a free fall, and I remember the pain radiating from tailbone to neck when the chute caught me at the bottom.   I couldn’t imagine what it would do to my little girl.


Then I looked down into her pleading eyes, her toothless grin, and saw that apprehension.   That look she gets when she knows that I am going to say no.  That looks she only gets when I say no because I am afraid.  That look that is always followed by sad resignation and an amazing tolerance for her dysfunctional mom.  The look that brings me to my knees at the altar of shame, every time.


I took a breath, and said, “Yes” to one of the orange slides.   The surprise and excitement in her eyes filled my heart with pride. 


Wanting someone at the bottom with her, we walked back to my mom.  Along the way, I explained how as parents we want our kids to be safe.  And how, what I really want to do is to wrap her up in bubble wrap and place her safe on a shelf at home.  But that I know she is brave and wants to try new things.  I told her that I was so proud that she could be courageous, even when I wasn’t, when I couldn’t be. 


Then I did the strangest thing.  Even as I write this, I can’t believe I did it. 


I didn’t walk up the steps with her.  With the thinning crowds and the park closure looming, I walked her to the bottom of the steps and told her, “Go on, I’ll see you at the bottom.”


For all my worries that she would get up there and be too scared to come down, that she would hold up the line waffling (it’s happened) , I didn’t go up with her.  I didn’t go up and cheer her on.  I didn’t go to hold her hand or to give her a soft place to land if she chickened out.  I wanted to be below so I could witness her bravery.  I wanted to watch every glorious minute of it.




With the whirlwind of worry, I forgot to grab my phone for pictures, and I didn’t dare go back for it, for fear I would miss her big descent.   Although there weren’t many people on the platform, I couldn’t see her.  I worried that she got scared and headed back down the steps to our designated meeting place (just in case).  It seemed to take forever. 



Then suddenly, there she was.  She whizzed by, so fast I could barely keep my eyes on her.  I watched her come to a stop in a wave of water, and rushed down to meet her.  Her grandmother and I covered her in congratulatory hugs, celebrating her accomplishment.  


As they announced the park was closing, she was asking about the bigger yellow slide.  “Maybe next year,” I told her.  I was grateful for the closing gates, because if there had been time, I am not sure I could have told her no to the big yellow slide in the middle.  I am not sure that my heart wouldn’t have exploded in fear if I had said yes.


All evening she talked about how she went on “the second biggest slide” at Sandcastle.  She told her PapPap about her adventure.  She told her friends at school the next day.


I thought a lot about her courage.  How she just went up and did it.  How she did it without me standing up there with her.  Her courage staggers me.  How could this brave little girl come from such a scared and fearful mama?


I think about something I have often told her.  Courage isn’t about not being afraid.  Courage is about being afraid but still moving forward. Still trying.


Becoming a parent, especially an older, single parent, I am all too aware of the precious gift I have been given.  But I am also painfully aware that this child, who has an amazing sense of adventure, was sent to me to challenge me, to push the boundaries of the comfort zone in which I have insulated myself for way too long.


In my own way, I was courageous that beautiful summer day.  I was courageous enough to let my daughter sail down the second biggest slide at Sandcastle, despite my fears.  And letting go of our kids, letting them fly – or slide – is the most courageous thing of all.


Friday, September 5, 2014

Angel


Angel B.   I am thinking a lot about Angel B. these days.  Angel was a classmate of mine in high school.  She was, I guess you could say, one of the “smart kids”.  Studious, bright, got good grades.  And for the first half of our high school career, she was exactly what you would expect of a smart kid.  She was very nice, but quiet.  Somewhat shy and reserved.


Junior year, I walked into a class, and ended up sitting near her.   When she turned to greet me, I was blown away.  She was, well, the best word I can come up with is vibrant.  It wasn’t just the new hairstyle and make-up, it was a light from inside of her.  She was vivacious and charming.   She radiated confidence and charisma. 


I was one of those girls on the fringe, not really part of any one crowd.   I wasn’t really comfortable with the things the popular kids were doing (drinking, having wild parties, fooling around), but I wanted to shine in some way.  Angel was shining and her transformation seemed magical.  I don’t know what happened to Angel that summer, but the change was miraculous to me.


I am thinking a lot about Angel now.   I am thinking about her, 25+ years later, because I still want to know.  I feel like I need to know.


The years have taken their toll on my confidence, of which I was already in short supply.  I could cite any number of reasons why: my failure to achieve a college degree; my “rescuer” mother; my poor choices in men; too many years in a job where the corporate line is “you aren’t quite enough”; abandonment & weight issues.   


As the years have passed, it has been easier to hide myself, literally and in plain sight.  It was less painful to sit at home watching Friday night TV than it was to go out and feel lonely in a crowd.  It was easier to make up excuses than to come up with social conversation.  It was easier to stay fat and invisible than it was to risk being rejected or used.    It was easier to keep my house a wreck than to have a party and risk no one coming.




My reasons and rationales have protected me from pain, hurt and rejection.  They also protected me from friendship, love and connection.  It’s a choice, maybe not the best one, maybe an inadvertent one, but it was still a choice. 

But now my choices are harming someone else.  The one person in the world I would die for.  My choices, my fears, are harming my daughter.   She is becoming isolated because I am isolated.   I have an invisible force field around me and my daughter is living in its shadow.


It is no longer a matter of trying to change my ways, but I MUST change my ways because my daughter is becoming isolated, too.  And I cannot allow my fears to rob her of having a life filled with people besides her grandparents and me.


I am thinking about Angel a lot today as I prepare to say good-bye to our closest friends.  Natalie and her kids moved in across the street just about two years ago.  She is the friend I know I can call for a 2 a.m. emergency.  She is the friend who takes my kid or lends me hers so I can have a few productive hours in peace.  She is the friend who has seen my house at its worst and doesn’t care. 


This morning it became official – she is taking a job out of town.  She and her husband are separating and she has been unable to find a job in our city.  She got a great offer, and she needs to take it.


I am sad.  I miss her.  And I am terrified.


I am terrified because Natalie is the first person who felt like a real friend in a long time.   Because without Natalie, my social circle becomes a period - there isn’t anything else.    My lack of self-worth lead me to  always wait to be invited in as Natalie invited me in.  And now, I need to make my own invitation.  I need to make my own way.


I don’t know how to do that.  Maybe it’s because I never learned how to make a friend on my own - my best childhood friends were the children of my parents’ friends.  Maybe it is because my mom worked at a time when not many did and that naturally limited my ability to participate in after-school activities.  Maybe I was just born this way.  (I tend to lean towards the latter.


And so I think of Angel.  And wonder what magic spell was cast or potion she took that transformed her into the dynamic young lady she became that summer.  And where I can get my own.


Because I have always been on the outside looking in.  Just on the fringe on the group, included as an afterthought.   


I look at my daughter, and I see myself.  And my heart breaks.  I want more for her.  I want her to be able to make her way, to be the kind of person who is open to letting new people into her life.  And I need to show her how to do it.


I need to step up and figure it out and the time is now.


I need to recognize my worth.  Recognize my value.  Put myself out there in a way that feels horrifically scary and leaves me horribly vulnerable. 


I need to trust my strength.  Trust that rejection, which will inevitably be a part of this process, won’t break me.  Trust that someone else will recognize and appreciate my worth.


I need to let myself shine.


I will probably never know what happened for Angel that summer.  I don’t know if she took a class, read an Andrew Carnegie book, was hypnotized or truly did find her fairy godmother.


Around the same time as Angel’s transformation, my childhood BFF, Kristin, underwent one of her own.  Wanting something different, she set out to become popular.  Anyone who knows Kris knows that when she sets her mind to something, there is nothing that can dissuade her.


That year, she landed a part in the school music.  She traded in her marching band wool & flute for the mini skirt and pom poms of the drill team.  She put herself out there, determined to change her life.  And change it she did.


Her transformation was painful for me, as I was part of her old life that was left in the dust.   I remember my mom telling me that she just decided to change her life and she did.


Could it possibly be that simple?


It doesn’t feel simple.  It feels huge and hard and scary and so far beyond what I am capable of. 


But it can’t be.  It can’t be because I swore to love and protect and nurture this child and she needs better.  She needs me to be better.


I will be better.






Have you ever transformed your life? 

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Navigating the Waters



The text came one evening, shortly before our school’s annual Kennywood day – a day designated for our school district at our local amusement park.


It contained a photo of an outfit and the message that many of the graduating first grade girls would be wearing this shirt to Kennywood and it could be purchased from Justice.   I knew, without a doubt, that I was among the last mom’s to receive this text.


I admit that it’s a tender issue for me.  All my life, I have wanted to group of my own.  I was attracted to shows like 90210; I wanted to be a part of a group of friends who were there for each other, who had each other’s’ back.  Friends who took trips together and had beach picnics and gathered for national holidays. 


Brene Brown says that fitting in is the biggest obstacle to belonging.  I think about that a lot as I try to navigate these waters that I experienced in late middle school through high school.  These waters of cliques and exclusion that my daughter, and many daughters, face in elementary school.


But I also know that it is normal for kids to want to fit in, and I don’t want my daughter to feel left out over something as inconsequential as a shirt.  At least not one that I can afford and seemed easily attained.


I show my daughter the photo, explain that many of her peers will be wearing it, and ask if she would like it as well.  “Sure,” she tells me, in a casual way. 


Perhaps if she had been more enthusiastic about it, I would have acted sooner.    It’s kind of a plain shirt, none of the bling or glitter that Justice is well known for.  Plain gray, number 19 on the front from some unknown reason.  But she just said, “Sure,” the same way she might answer if asked if she wanted rice with her dinner.




So I planned to run to Justice on the weekend.  When it was convenient and less disruptive to the slower lifestyle I am trying to cultivate.


After Saturday morning Cheer practice (another major tender spot for me), we headed to the nearest Justice for the shirt.  It was hot and my girl was not happy about shopping.   After a half-hearted attempt to find the shirt amongst the dozens of racks and displays, I approached the counter, showed the texted photo. 


The young woman was truly remorseful as she checked and found none in my daughter’s size.  She was helpful as she contacted area stores.  The closest stores that were likely to have it were each a good 45-50 minutes away.  Way further than I wanted to drive.  Way longer than the amount of time I wanted to give up on our weekend.   


We don’t always get everything we want in life and that is an important lesson to learn.  Our children need to know that life will sometimes disappoint them, and that they are capable of handling those disappointments.  That they can come out on the other side and things will be fine.  And that sometimes those disappointments will be great blessings. 


I told the sales clerk that the other locations were just too far for me to get to.   
As I turned to leave, she tore off the receipt paper, on which was printed the list of stores most likely to have the shirt, along with the item code and store phone numbers, just in case I changed my mind.


My daughter has a wonderful, sensitive soul.  It is her kind heart that makes her so special.  It is also her sensitivity that can result in a meltdown, especially when she is hot, tired and hungry.   So as we left the store, I told my daughter that it was sold out.  I wasn’t sure what to expect.  Would she be crushed that she didn’t have the coveted shirt.  Would she be the odd-man-out in the group? 


And that’s when the popularity gremlin came out in full force.  Mentally, I was already plotting:  If I could find the shirt, we could have them hold it and go out after early morning cheer practice the next day, and probably be home by noon.  That wouldn’t cut into our day too badly.  I was trying to decide which store I wanted to call first, based on which route would be the least painful to drive.  That’s what moms do, right? 


I no sooner had started to share my plan with my daughter when she interrupted me to ask, “Why do we all have to look the same?”

As I stammered for the answer she said, “We come in all different shapes and sizes.  Why can’t we just wear what we want?”


I assured her that she didn’t need to wear the same thing, but that some of her peers thought it would be fun to dress alike.


She told me that she only thought it was fun to dress alike when it happened by accident, and she really didn’t want to waste part of our weekend driving to store that was far away.


With tears in my eyes and a heart full of wonder and pride, I voiced my support for her individuality and gratefully crossed the additional shopping trip off my life.


It is not the first time that my daughter has chosen to forego the crown and be her own unique self.  I continue to be awestruck at her ability to do so.  I thank God for giving her this gift, because it didn’t come from me.   I pray that she will never see beyond my façade and never acquire my attachment to fitting in.  I love her all the more for it.


I also live with fear in my heart over it.  I know that she will be ostracized for her choices.  I already see how the “popular” girls treat those who don’t fit into the molds they have already created in their minds.  How they treat the girls who can’t do a cartwheel, or don’t wear clothes from Justice or whose moms have to work full time.   I have already held my crying child in my arms, as she struggles to understand why she can’t just be accepted for who she is.


I don’t know how to answer questions that I still struggle with. 


I believe that one day, in the somewhat distant future, she will be a beautiful young woman with such depth and light that will attract people who appreciate the wonderful gifts she has to offer.  I pray that until that time, I will be able to support her, to keep her soul from getting crushed by the turbulent waters that seem way too deep for someone so young.