My Amy wanted to share a bit of my space again. More about My Amy, and a list of her posts here.
Paws and I hit
up our favorite breakfast spot yesterday morning. On the way into the
restaurant, she ran ahead of me: a long-legged figure in small jean shorts,
purple Crocs, and a blue and white striped shirt with ruffled shoulders.
Her shorts were
too big and when they started falling down she stopped and tried to hike them
up. I flipped over the waistband and on she ran.
So simple. And
yet.
It gave me
pause.
Sitting in the
booth and coloring with her, cutting up her food, asking her to sit back down
when she’s eating, giving Eskimo kisses: all of it was a moment of revelry for
me, like I haven’t felt in a while.
The question
that has been rattling around in my head for months again rose to the surface.
Do I want to be a mother?
Since the first
time Younger Girl fell asleep in my arms I have wanted to have a child of my
own.
I love being
with the kids who are my nieces and nephews.
The tantrums,
the fights, the piggyback rides, the explanations. Love it.
The questions
that come from nowhere. Once, when she was about 4, Older Girl turned to me,
twisted up her face, and said Amy, why do
soldiers like to fight?
Try fielding
that one.
The delights
that come from nowhere. After a particularly fun outing, the Seattle Boy asked
me can you be my mom?
And explaining
to a six year old why that made me cry was a little tricky.
These 16 kids
range in age from 13 to six months, and they own my heart.
I have climbed
trees and chased chickens with them.
I have made them
peanut butter sandwiches, folded their laundry, and soothed them after bad
dreams. We have had dance parties. We have gone on trips.
We have talked
about everything from starting middle school and bullies to why ladybugs fly
and how come it’s naptime even though THEY’RE NOT TIRED.
They’ve invited
me to their graduations, told me about their friends, and blown their noses on
my pants.
They have taught
me a million times over the joyful parts of being a parent. The best and
hardest parts, in snippets and weekends and hours.
Now I’ve got
kids whose permission slips I sign.
I call their
doctor’s offices, fight to get them the support they need, talk to their
counselors, and worry about them at night.
I buy them
birthday presents and take them to lunch.
Sometimes they
call just to shout at me. Sometimes they want to show me their art projects.
Sometimes I am the one they blame.
I try to imagine
the best futures possible for them.
Then I try to
keep the promise I made: I’ll do whatever I can to make that future happen.
They have taught
me a million times over the gut-wrenching parts of being a parent. The parts
that keep all parents hyper-vigilant and waiting for the morning.
We talk about
everything from if they are happy where they are and what they’re worried about
to what the coolest part of school is so far and what they had for lunch that
WAS SO GROSS.
Sometimes they
cry like their hearts are breaking right in front of me.
Try fielding
that one.
I’ll never get
it right. But at least I’ll be there.
My mom has
always told me two things about having kids: there’s never a perfect time for
it, not really. Better times than others, sure, but never a perfect one. And
that being a parent is the hardest job a person can have. One that is, in the
end, completely worth it.
Do I want to be
a mother?
Aren’t I sort of
one already?
On a
strictly-part-time,
not-the-total-real-deal-because-my-heart-isn’t-actually-walking-around-on-two-feet,
you-can’t-totally-know-what-it’s-like-til-you-have-one-yourself kind of basis
of course, but still.
If my mother,
and my sister-in-law, and my dear friends are any example, being a mom is about
loving someone else so much that you’d lie down in traffic for them.
Check.
It’s about being
there for the big moments and the rough ones and the fun ones and the amazing
ones.
Check.
It’s about the
worrying, the protecting, the conversations.
It is messy. It
is hard.
It is
incredible.
Check, check,
check.
Last night,
putting Paws to bed, she refused to let me snuggle her. Nothing new, she’s been
doing that for several months now. So while she curled up with her baby doll
and tucked it in, I lay next to her and softly sang some off-key lullabies.
To be honest,
I’m not sure that Momma, Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up to be Cowboys was
originally intended as a lullaby but hey, if it works then go with it….even
though the first time she sings ‘little warm puppies and children and girls of
the night’ at preschool will be interesting.
Just as I think
she’s dropping off, she rolls towards me. Her small warm hands reach out for me
and she cradles my face.
I lean in and
kiss her sweaty forehead, smelling the soap that we used to wash her face clean
during her bath.
Mamy, she mutters. Is ok,
Mamy. Love you.
Love you too, Bug, I whisper back. More than anything. Always.
Messy. Hard.
Incredible.
~Amy
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