What Mothers Really Want
by Joyce Maynard
THERE WAS A big bluegrass festival
coming up a short distance from our town, and my friend Erica loved
bluegrass. So I invited her to come with me. It was happening,
coincidentally, on Mother's Day. Erica is a mother. So am I.
She looked sad when I told her the date of the concert. She'd love to
go, she said, if it was any other day. But her children would be so
disappointed if she spent Mother's Day away from them.
There you have it: everything I hate most about Mother's Day. Here we
have this holiday that's supposed to be set aside for honoring and
celebrating the largely uncelebrated efforts of women on behalf of their
children.
And instead, there was my good friend--a woman who has been driving
car pools and sitting on the sidelines
of soccer games in freezing weather and cutting the crusts off her son's
bread twice a day for the last seven years--foregoing an activity she
would have loved, to make her children happy on Mother's Day.
Around our house, there was, for years, a different kind of Mother's
Day problem. Long ago, my children evidently got the idea that they
should provide me with breakfast in bed on Mother's Day. This would be
reasonable enough, except that I don't like eating in bed. (What I don't
like, actually, is sleeping in a bed filled with crumbs.
And one inevitably leads to the other.) The other problem with
getting breakfast in bed is that I'm an early riser and my children, on
Sunday mornings at least, are not. So I was always having to go back to
bed on Mother's Day morning sometime around 10:30, by which time I would
probably have been up, dressed and attending to business for several
hours.
And then, when I was finished with the fattening muffin I didn't
really want, and the scrambled eggs, and the watery coffee, I would come
downstairs to find a frying pan sitting in the sink, covered with bits
of dried-up egg.
I had two options then: call my children and deliver speech number
43, the one about how there are no elves who appear in the night to
clean our house, or save my strength and clean the pan myself.
I have tried it both ways, and either one makes me cranky. All the
more so if it happens on Mother's Day.
If you ask me, mothers should be celebrated and honored every single
day of the year. But if that isn't going to happen, I'd actually prefer
no holiday for mothers at all. It's not that I don't want recognition
and presents, truthfully. It's that the recognition and presents should
be more substantial.
I would like the equivalent of an Oscar. And a place to go, along the
lines of the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, to pick it up. And a designer
dress to wear for the occasion, and jewels from Harry Winston. I would
like the opportunity to compose my acceptance speech, and when I do, I
will certainly remember to thank my children, without whom this award
would never have been possible.
If I'm going to spend the next 11 months, three weeks and six days
picking up stray socks and ferrying children to friends' houses, I want
to collect a little more for my trouble than breakfast in bed. Satin
sheets maybe, and a maid to turn them down at night, and a chocolate on
my pillow.
Or, simply, a year in which I do not have to remind my sons to put
the top down on the toilet seat.
The other problem with the way most of our loved ones honor us on
Mother's Day has to do with what part of us they honor. For instance: I
actually love to cook. But I do not want to be showered with pot holders
and aprons on my special day.
Other Mother's Day gifts which have less than thrilled me include a
pressure cooker, an electric knife sharpener and a memo pad with a
suction cup that attached to the dashboard of my station wagon, to keep
my To Do list visible at all times.
One year, when my son Charlie was in second grade, his class hosted a
special Mother's Day night in his classroom. Each of the students had
been asked to prepare a biography of his or her mother for the event.
Charlie's biography read something like this: "My mom likes to clean our
house. She picks up stuff a lot. She does a good job with the laundry."
What mothers need on Mother's Day is to have their family honor all
those parts of themselves that aren't about mothering. We want tap
dancing lessons and purple bras from Victoria's Secret. We want leather
mini skirts. We want instruction in race car driving or playing the
saxophone. We want our husbands to rent us a Harley Davidson for the
weekend and take off with us to some little motel without the children.
We want the part of us recognized that made us mothers in the first
place.
Or give us the gift of time--just plain time, with ourselves or with
our women friends. Take care of the children for a night and let us have
a sleep-over at the ocean with other women we love, whose husbands are
also taking care of their children, so we can all get together and give
each other facials and stay up all night talking. And not necessarily
talking about our children--they might be surprised to know how much we
have to talk about besides them.
Most
particularly, give us a gift that extends beyond the 24-hour period of
Mother's Day. Show us you value us and recognize what we do, even when
every Hallmark store and FTD florist isn't reminding you to do it. If my
children want to make me a card, I'd rather get it on some day like May
18 or September 7 or January 30. Just a regular day.
Because I'm divorced and my children were at their father's house
that weekend, I spent last Mother's Day totally alone. I got up early
that Sunday and went down to my favorite nursery, where I stood in line
behind a couple of guilty looking guys who had left the plant-buying
till the last minute and were now purchasing the largest azaleas
available. For myself, I bought $50 worth of flats of flowers and seeds,
and a big bag of manure.
I spent the morning tilling the soil in my garden, and the afternoon
planting. I played all the country music albums my children would have
made fun of if they'd been around.
I barbecued myself a piece of fish--a food I love and almost never
prepare because my kids hate it. I soaked for a long time in the tub,
and nobody hammered on the door needing to use the toilet. I called a
good friend who lives in Oregon whom I hadn't talked to in nearly a
year.
I went to bed early and read a mystery, with a glass of wine at my
side.
When my children came home that night, I was truly thrilled to see
them.
They piled onto the bed next to me and told me how sorry they were
that they hadn't been around to make me breakfast in bed, and I tried to
look regretful and told them I'd made do with half a grapefruit instead.
They gave me IOUs for things like lawn-mowing and dishwasher-emptying
and vacuuming. And, I am pleased to say, they performed all of these
things for me cheerfully and without discussion or debate--the first
time I presented the IOUs, anyway.
The truth is, I love my children more than anything. And the most
precious gifts they give me never come on Mother's Day (just as the most
romantic moments hardly ever occur on Valentine's Day).
But as much as I adore being a mother, I also know this: I was who I
am before I had my children, and I will be that woman long after they've
moved on to lives apart from me. In between the moment of giving birth
to our kids and seeing them off to college, their faces loom so large
for us that it's easy to lose sight of our own selves.
Nobody's better than a mother at putting her own needs and desires
aside in the interest of serving her family. The thing about Mother's
Day is, it's a holiday that seeks to glorify that kind of self-sacrifice
and promote more of the same, instead of serving to remind women to take
care of themselves at least half as well as they care for their
children.
That's why this Mother's Day I will be hiking over a rugged 15-mile
trail to the Pacific Ocean for breakfast--a hike I take on a weekly
basis, requiring a commitment of time and energy I would once have
regarded as unthinkable during precious weekend time I could have been
devoting to my children.
And they, I have learned, can fare as well without me these days as I
fare without them. They will be invited, but not required, to accompany
me. Somebody else will be washing the eggs off the frying pan. |