Dear Sons,
How
are you? The weather is terrible here. Which you undoubtedly know because
you’re currently trashing my living room because we can’t escape.
Darling
fruit of my loins (I plan to call you this exclusively in your adulthood), it
has occurred to me that I am the first generation of those who will leave a
digital paper trail. This means that every withering status I’ve posted about
parenthood, every unflattering baby photo of a catastrophic nappy explosion, every
snigger posted online about a missing tooth, or eating your Halloween sweets
after you’d gone to bed (major dick move, genuinely sorry), or self deprecating
comment about it all just being too damn much will be available to you some
day. Your IT skills already intuitively surpass my own. So in advance, I am
sorry.
Social
media is new to us and thus we’re clumsy with it and the thoughts of long term
effects are only occurring to us now. Apologies miles in advance for future
employers being able to simply Google your embarrassing baby photos, we really
didn’t think that through.
You’re
going to have access to honesty previously only exclusively understood from
parental generation to parental generation which meant there was context. Your
grandmother could chuckle about wanting to throw her infant out the window to
your mother as a new parent as a means of providing reassurance and the ever
important idea that ‘this is not what you thought it was going to be, but it’s
worth it.’
You
are probably going to gain access to this information long before there is any
context involved. Probably long before the all important realisation that your
parents are just humans who are flawed and clueless. You are going to realise
we had no idea what we were doing and how we occasionally drowned under the
pressure.
Firstly,
you need to know, that none of that was because of you personally. You were
wonderful, you were adored, you were my best friends and I have never wanted to
be perfect for anyone before I met you and that’s where I crumbled to bits.
Worse,
being the first generation of online parents we were bombarded with
information. The female on female misogynist warzone that is any parenting
forum will undoubtedly play an enormous role in any new mother’s early decisions.
We were overwhelmed with wonder weeks, baby whisperers, breast vs. bottle, and
every parenting fad in between without ever once taking into consideration that
making parents feel helpless and clueless is a multi million dollar industry.
When the latest ‘fool proof, guaranteed’ method to get a full night’s sleep
doesn’t work, where do we turn? Social media, hopelessly reaching out with
exhausted digital hands to other new parents, ‘Please tell me you’re feeling as
bad as me. Please make me laugh. Please tell me this was you last week and then
it all suddenly got better.’
These
are not new feelings for any new parent, not by a long shot, but now the
written sentiment exists somewhere in the ether permanently, ready to be reread
with a little digging.
Dear
sweet baby boys, please know that if someday we end up Facebook friends (highly
likely, I’m not like other moms, I’m a cool mom) and you manage to trawl back
through how many years worth of your documented childhood and the trials and
tribulations of parenthood, just know, it wasn’t you, it was me.
The
role of ‘mother’ is an archetype that does not take into consideration the
human being attached to it.
There
is an idea, perpetuated by a lot of mothers online, in my experience, that once
you become a mother you take on a role that nullifies your personality. It is a
role that for a period I adopted, and ended up on antidepressants as a result.
The fact of the matter is that long before I became a mother I was a person
with flaws (many, many flaws), habits and quirks that didn’t just disappear
because I had you. In fact, I found that once I started employing my ‘old self’
into my parental role so much more fell into place. As a ‘good’ mother, I am
found wanting, I’m a terrible housekeeper and even worse at maintaining a
household and regimented schedule. Keeping track of after school activities is
my personal hell. So, soz in advance for the lack of extra curricular strengths
you’re going to have. Just know that I tried my best. I tried because you’re so
lovely and I wanted you to have everything but we all have constraints.
Keeping
up with the persona of mother while healthily maintaining your old self… well,
holy crap, it’s a hard one. You feel that there’s a generic set of ideals you
should be applying to your child but your personality can’t help but rear its
opinionated little head. Whether you continue through life upholding these
ideals or not, just remember, we all tried our best. Like my mother before me,
I may possibly be raising you with ideals that you may later come to vehemently
deny (e.g. she was a devout Catholic, I’m raising you with no religion). I once
heard you raise your children 50% better than how you were raised. I will
inevitably fall short, but I can assure you, I tried my best.
The
upshot of that combined with social media is that some day you will have access
to where I voiced my concerns about my shortcomings via pithy remarks or
discussions online. In that instance, I can guarantee you, my frustrations were
not about you (they may be worded as such but… as a preteen or teen you’ll
appreciate what nightmare fuel it is to have someone tamper with your sleep)
but while these remarks may be worded in a way that implies you, please be
nothing short of aware that they were about me and my own inadequacies. No, I
never really held it against you for the lack of sleep, or the teething, or the
multiple public meltdowns (that started as exclusively yours but evolved into
both of ours). It was frustration at myself and targeting it an online audience
that could offer solace and even, at times, advice.
You
were wonderful, you always were, and if I had the chance to go back and do it
all again I would in a heartbeat, even that freak out you had in a restaurant
where a waitress had to assist detaching you from my hair, but I reached out
online as a result.
As
a society we are becoming more and more isolated, substituting real life
interaction with the internet. I certainly have raised you more with the
support of online communities that upheld my ideals rather than those in my
immediate contact. I have saught that support in real life and found it! Which
has been fantastic. The upshot of this has been that I have left a permanent
mark about the hardest parts available for you to find some day. Personally, I
feel this was a worthy price because I can explain myself.
Baby
boys, it has been a hard, rocky, turbulent road. Not just for me but for all
mothers. However, there is no one that I would rather take it with than you.
Love always and forever and embarrassingly
publicly,
Your
lost soul of a mother who sold you out in a bid to keep doing what I felt was
best for you xxx
Written by Mary @maryeyeballs
Written by Mary @maryeyeballs
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