Indiscriminate Drivel

A mom by any other name loves just as much…

mamaWhat’s in a name?

Well, if the name is some version of a word that refers to that woman who gave you birth (or in some cases the one whom you love as much even if she didn’t give birth to you herself), there is a lot evidently.

In honor of Mother’s Day, I thought I’d talk a little bit about the progression of this name in my household.  The snapshot of the moment looks like this:  Mom, Mom, Mother, Mommy, Mama (or Mom-mom).  That’s what my girls call me.  I know there will be a day when they will all probably call me just Mom, assuming they call me at all.  Right now, I’m rather holding onto some of the other titles hoping they don’t pass me by too quickly without me appreciating them enough.

It all starts out pretty much the same.  A cute bubble-blowing baby who is fascinated with her toes will one day utter a syllable that may be just about anything but to a mother’s ear, it is MA.  And she goes crazy!  She said my name!  I heard it!  The baby said MA!  (This, for the record, is even sweeter if the baby hasn’t yet said DA.)  Eventually, that syllable does resemble the word Ma.  How sweet is it to know that your baby recognizes you through language?

Eventually Ma becomes Mama.  Oh, I love Mama.  It’s baby talk, but it’s clearly, indisputably, a designation for only ME.  I am Mama.  The word Mama comes out when she cries and is in need of comfort.  Mama is called upon to rescue her when her sister is trying to color her in with markers or roll her up in the rug.  Mama is important and necessary, all-knowing and all-doing.  Mama is a good phase.  I love being Mama.

The transition from babyhood to toddlerhood, in this house, seems to be marked by my moniker changing from Mama to Mommy.  I don’t really understand how they all know to do this, but they do.  Maybe from books or TV?  However it happens, each time it does happen.  I turn from Mama to Mommy and I’m OK with this.  Mommy is still cute, it retains some of its babyishness.

I know a few things about why Mommy might become preferred to Mama.  It is easier for a tantruming daughter to draw it out into a full wail “Moooommmeeeeeeeeeeeeeee…….”  It’s easier to repeat a million times in a row while pulling on my pant leg and trying to get me to talk to her instead of the person on the phone.  “Mommy?  Mommy?  Mommy?  Mommy?  Mommy?  Mommy?  Mommy?”  It’s easier to scream from the bathroom in desperation “MOMMEEEEEEE- I need you to WIPE me!”

There are days I never want to hear Mommy again.  There are days I swear if I hear it even just ONE more time, my head would literally explode right there (literally!).

But then one day Mommy gives way to Mom and it takes me only about 2 seconds to miss Mommy and yearn to have it back.  I think the transition from Mommy to Mom means something but I can’t quite put my finger on it.  It means I’ve become less important, somehow.  I’m needed less.  I’ve gone from 2 syllables to 1 – my role diminished just like my title.  I’m just MOM.  Instead of being her everything, instead of being in the starring role, I’m suddenly just the stage manager.  Behind the scenes.  Necessary to make it all happen but not called out for a bow at the end of the day.

It’s only when Mom gives way to Mother (or, more accurately, muh-THER! said with that exact right amount of girl-attitude) that I miss Mom.  Gawd, I hate the muh-THER phase.  Ugh.  If you’re lucky, that doesn’t last too terribly long.  Following that, one is happy to be returned to Mom status once again.

Then, as they get bigger and busier and more independent and less available, sometimes you’re just glad to be called upon at all.  Even if it’s “Hey, you.” well, you’ll take it.  That’s why college kids get away with sucking up so much cash from their parents.  It’s the way the parent continues to hear her name.  “Mom, can I have some cash to get me through until payday?”  “Mom, I can’t quite cover rent, can you help me out?”  And you’re glad to because, well, because she said that magic word.  MOM.

I know that there is this attitude that motherhood isn’t well-appreciated in this country, in this world.  That our value isn’t fully recognized.  That it’s somehow not enough to identify ourselves as “just” moms, or to be stay-at-home moms, or mommy bloggers or whatever.

To me, it’s enough.  When someone asks me who I am, I identify myself as Linda, wife and mother.  Those are the roles that define me.  The rest of the roles I play are just supporting ones.  My starring role, the one I want on the playbill, is MOM, MOTHER, MOMMY, MAMA, MA.  And no matter what my child calls me, when I look at her I clearly see every age and every stage of her life… I see her as a baby, a toddler, a preschooler, a child, a pre-teen, a teen, and in a couple of wonderful cases, I already get to see my child as a grown woman.

I don’t care what they call me, as long as they call me.

Happy Mother’s Day to all you mamas and mommies and mammies and mothers and matres and whatever-other-name you might be called.

Plus a very special postscript to those of you who are mothers to be, those trying to get pregnant, those who get pregnant easily but have had difficulty staying pregnant, those who are trying to adopt, those who are both trying to get pregnant and trying to adopt…  To anyone who has motherhood in her heart but not yet in her life or had motherhood in her life and lost it – I think of you and wish nothing more than swift success in your journey and peace in your hearts.  Happy Mother’s Day to you, too.  I hope that one day soon your arms embrace the results of your heart’s most precious wish.

And another shout out to those who are missing their own mothers, either because they’ve left this world or in cases where they are still here yet physically or emotionally far-removed.  It’s surely difficult for you to mourn that which you do not have while also trying to celebrate that which you do.  Strength to you…

Man, this motherhood stuff is complex, huh?

By |May 12th, 2006|Indiscriminate Drivel, The Parent Hood|Comments Off on A mom by any other name loves just as much…

Case Study: What Does Brown-Nosing Get You in the Blogosphere?

dooce

(sung to “The Battle Hymn of the Republic”)

Mine eyes have seen the genius of the writing from the Dooce
I have stood up and applauded the first steps of her papoose
I was happy for them all when from the job Jon did break loose
Her blog keeps marching on…

Dooce, the goddess of good humor!
Dooce, the Avon non-consumer!
Dooce, so not a baby-boomer!
Her blog keeps marching on!

I long to turn back time to when her comments were turned on
I think of all the blog hits a good comment there might spawn
And I’d stay up all night reading ’til the coming of the dawn
Her blog keeps marching on…

Dooce, no fan of global warmin’!
Dooce, you’ll not catch her conformin’!
Dooce, can quote the Book of Mormon!
Her blog keeps marching on!

Could there ever be a day where she would take me under wing
Advise me and instruct me about every blogging thing
Like how to blog at work until H-R makes a big scene
Her blog keeps marching on…

Chuck, he’s running for the senate!
Dooce, she’ll surely help him win it!
Jon, he’ll know just how to spin it!
As Leta keeps marching on!

I want to ride a plane with her and go to Amsterdam
And with Alice and Melissa we’d all stand there hand in hand
We’d imbibe some wacky mushrooms and the trip would be just grand
Her blog keeps marching on…

Dooce, so far away in Utah!
Dooce, as hip and cool as foie gras!
Dooce, of whom I’m in complete awe!
Her blog keeps marching on!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Dear Heather or her bodyguards or private investigators,

I swear I’m no creepy internet stalker. I just happen to like making things rhyme. I’ve never even BEEN to Utah. I’ve flown over it though and it looks rather arid so maybe I’ll just stay here in the Midwest with our acres and acres of corn fields and our meth labs and puppy mills.

This whole little tribute thing was born from the thought that, damn, I wish your (her) comments were turned on because, like Mayella from To Kill a Mockingbird, I got somethin’ to say.

Anyway, doubtful you’ll ever lay eyes on my silly little tribute, but in case you did, well, I didn’t want to have the FBI show up at my door babbling on about me stalking some internet blobber and looking slightly confused about what the hell a blobber is. Know what I mean?

Best Regards,
JustLinda

ps: Sorry about that foie gras line…. it’s baaaad, but maybe better than cole slaw???

The mommy-van is ankle deep with French fries

minivan

I was never one of those women who stated that I wouldn’t drive a minivan. I spent years being envious of minivans. In fact, there was a time I had to squeeze three children in a Ford Escort 2-door with no stereo and no A/C. I lusted after minivans the way a Susan Lucci lusted after that daytime Emmy award.

When we got our first one, I was in heaven. Oh, but it was nice. Plenty of room for the kids and their friends. Me, up front on my throne where I could open and close all the windows and lock and unlock all the doors. I was like an egomaniacal dictator driving around in my own little country on wheels. “Quiet!” I would shout, “Or I shall fade the stereo from front to back and blast Simon and Garfunkel into your young and impressionable ears!”

The thing about having a lot of space is that, well, you have a lot of SPACE. And, oh luxury, oh opulence! I could fill that space with stuff. I had jackets and blankets and strollers and tool kits and toys and…. and well, it just kept going. The other thing about having a lot of space is that there is no incentive to take things OUT because, well, there is still more space.

Being one of those working moms (and yes, I do realize that ALL moms are working moms but I’m that kind that loses ten hours a day to a professional commitment that does not include taking care of my house or family which provides me with a paycheck that allows me to spend all my left over time [and by that I mean about 35 minutes per day] taking care of my house and family). So where was I? Oh, yeah, being one of them there working moms, I spend a lot of my life in my car.

I mean, there’s always something going on, right? Girl scouts or volley ball or gymnastics or PTO or something. How I managed to stay out of PTO for the past 18 years, I’ll never know but I’m in it now and I even have a project to manage. Let this be a warning to you – NEVER LET YOUR GUARD DOWN! So I leave work and grab a child or two or three and on our way to wherever we’re going we need to grab dinner on the run.

There is a law about dinners on the run – somehow they must always include French fries. Yeah, the Senate passed it by a two-thirds majority and thank goodness the damn conservatives didn’t get their way, trying to go with mashed potatoes, but see? the liberals ARE good for something after all so French fries it is. So we worship at the alter of the Golden Arches, for they are the greatest damn marketing geniuses in all of the land putting their dumb little toys in their happy little meals so the children whine louder and louder until the mommy gives in and says “Yes, for the love of all that is holy, we will go to McDonalds if you’ll just – shush – up.” (Did you see that little mommy trick? I didn’t tell them to shut up – I told them to shush up. Had I said shut up you all would have called me a bad mommy but even GOOD mommies say shush, right?)

So my point is, me all proud in my minivan and it seeing more food in it than the Meals-on-Wheels truck and then the French fry law and all, well, it was pretty bad back there. But up front where *I* sit, all is well. Up in my throne, there are no French fries. So I rarely pay any attention to them. Maybe I vacuum it out every time a democrat is elected to office. But I’m relaxed; I’m a laid back kind of chick, so I don’t worry.

So where am I going with this?

Well, I was going to have to drive the PTO ladies to some PTO thing and so I thought I’d better manage the French fries, you know, since it’s the first time that non-child human beings would be riding in the mommy van in a long, long time.

So I pull into the car wash vacuum thingie (see? I do it so seldom, I don’t even know what it’s called) and, to my horror, here’s what I found:

~ twelve pounds of French fries
~ seventeen pacifiers
~ a group of Japanese tourists
~ an active colony of mushrooms, possibly psychedelic
~ the never-mailed letter to NBC outlining my fresh idea for a reality show with Donald Trump
~ Jimmy Hoffa

It wasn’t pretty.

So what’s the moral of this story? Hell, I don’t know. Maybe it is DO NOT LET THEM ROPE YOU INTO JOINING THE PTO! (It probably should be more along the lines of keeping your car neat and tidy but hello, I’m Linda, have we met!)

By |September 15th, 2005|Indiscriminate Drivel, The Parent Hood|Comments Off on The mommy-van is ankle deep with French fries