funny,
isn't it?
by jeanne charters
Sometimes,
when I think that we humans haven’t come very far in our quest
for intelligence and compassion, I think about my daughters and know
that there has been progress–lots of it!
Since
this is May, I want to discuss mothering, in its highest, lowest,
and most clueless forms. My mother was extremely controlling. She
did it out of a wish to protect me from all things that might hurt
me. I know well that I was loved by my mother; but early on, I vowed
not to be that kind of mother when I had my kids.
It
should be noted that I was an only child who had never held a baby
in my life until my first daughter was born to me. No babysitting…no
little neighbor babies around my house…no exposure to anyone
under the age of 12. I expected babies to come out easily, be perfect
and, most of all, be reasonable.
When
Cori was born, I was 21 years old. When I asked my obstetrician about
the possibility of natural childbirth, something I was reading about
in magazines, he treated me like the ignorant child I was. Instead,
he put me in a room and left me there alone for 8 hours to howl in
terror until he knocked me out, did a botched episiotomy and took
my little girl by forceps.
Child
birthing in the 50’s was barbaric. All we were told was to try
not to scream. Since I had no idea of what labor was all about, I
figured that would be a cinch. Afterwards, I felt so embarrassed that
I had lost control and made a fool of myself at Mercy Hospital. I
recall no mercy at Mercy.
By
the time I was 27, I had Stacia, Julie and Caroline as well. They
were delivered by C-section because of a tumor I’d had after
Cori was born. I was grateful to have a section because I was terrified
of another normal birth.
So,
anyway, there I was living in a teeny walk-up apartment in Chicago
with 4 tiny girls and a husband who was gone most of the time trying
to rise on some corporate ladder or other. I had no car, no family,
no friends. Plus, I had the convoluted common wisdom of the time telling
me that to pick up a crying baby would spoil her beyond redemption.
I made a lot of mistakes. So many, in fact, that I am still amazed
that those 4 little girls have turned out as well as they have.
Coming
from a controlling mother, I vowed not to repeat that particular mistake.
However, I think I erred too far on the side of permissiveness, except
for the times when I nearly lost my mind and behaved in ways bordering
on child abuse.
Okay,
okay, so I wasn’t that perfect mother from I Remember Mama or
The Donna Reed Show, but I wasn’t Joan Crawford with a wire
coat hanger either. Plus, I’ll bet even Donna Reed wasn’t
like Donna Reed when the TV cameras turned off. Like most of us in
those days, I did the best I could with little information and a societal
attitude of “spare the rod and spoil the child”.
But let’s get back to my premise of humans in their quest for
intelligence and compassion. My 4 daughters have birthed 10 babies
now…7 boys and 3 girls. They did it with the help of hospitals,
doctors, midwives, epidurals, and home birthing techniques. They remember
those births as the most joyous times of their lives. Now that’s
a lot of progress.
When
Cori, my eldest, asked me to come to California to be with her at
the birth of her first child, I didn’t go. Frankly, I couldn’t
bear the thought of watching my little girl go through that agony.
Turns out I missed out on a beautiful natural birth with a midwife
in attendance…and her son weighed over 9 pounds! Cori truly
doesn’t remember agony around the birth.
My daughters’ sons and daughters are beautiful, wise, selfish,
funny and glorious. They are strong individuals, each and every one
of them, because their mothers have done a great job of mothering
them with love and consistency. “Time out” has replaced
the spatula, and, wonder of wonders, it works! I’ve seen it.
My
grandchildren include a child with special needs, some with learning
difficulties and one who will soon need a kidney transplant. But each
of them is perfect in this family’s eyes. When the child struggles,
the mother helps or tutors the child. She does not medicate. I realize
that some children truly need medication, but I fear that attention
deficit disorder and depression have become the buzz words that help
some parents abrogate responsibility in this generation as sure as
ignorance helped in mine.
So,
on this Mother’s Day, I cheer progress and intelligence and
compassion. Funny, isn’t it that some things really do get better
with time?
Jeanne
Charters
is a former V.P. of Marketing for Viacom Television. She started her
own award-winning broadcast advertising agency in 1990. Jeanne lives
in Fairview with her husband, Matt Restivo.
[ charmkt@juno.com;
828-628-0023 ]