Maybe getting married IS the cornerstone of happiness…

marriage susan pattonNot a day goes by that somebody doesn’t write some extremely contentious article on the internet. Sometimes it’s a really valid strong point of view, sometimes it’s an attempt to get people to talk about and share the article so that numbers go up the site attracts more advertising dollars and sometimes you write something with the most noble of intentions and it just goes feral.

Parenting and feminism are real big push button subjects. No one really likes to be told how to think, especially in areas where there are clearly so many shades of nuance.
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I’m happy not to be religious but I’m even happier to be traditional

Barmitzvah traditionI am feeling a little overwhelmed by the impending Bar Mitzvah this weekend. Testimony to this is the fact that I have fallen asleep twice day and as I write this it is only 4pm.

I fell asleep at the beautician having an omnilux treatment and then I managed to fall asleep while having synthetic eyelashes adhered to my natural eyelashes. I think that falling asleep with someone’s fingers in your eyes is quite a feat. Waking oneself up with a loud snore is also quite a mean feat but one I was slightly more ashamed about today.

But it’s been a big week. Family have been converging from one corner of the world (South Africa) and preparations for the Bar Mitzvah are at warp speed.  My son has learned the portion that he has to sing in synagogue so well that last night when we watched the full dress rehearsal the parts of me that weren’t leaking out through my tear ducts were bursting with pride. Quite a surreal feeling actually which may have left me with such a tense neck that I cannot turn to either the left or the right (actually that tension may have been caused by my being over controlling, slightly neurotic and bad at being with people for an extended period of time.)
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A checklist: Are you ready for high school?

ready for high schoolI have been so busy planning my son’s Bar Mitzvah that I have completely neglected to ruminate on the fact that he is starting high school. Just the same way I have forgotten to deal with the fact that I am about to be the mother of a teen.

I can understand my forgetting to deal with the teen bit because since the day after he turned 12 I have been saying things like “I can’t believe you are nearly 13” and “Don’t do that! You are nearly 13” and “You are almost 13 you should know better than that”. I plan to start using the “you are almost 14” line on him on 11 February (he turns 13 on 10 February). So, you see, in my mind he’s been a teen for a while now.
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In between dating and old age

between dating and old ageLast night I dropped my son and his friend at the movies. They were meeting two girls. At the movies. At night. In my mind that’s a double date. Oh my god. My little boy on a double date.

Except he’s insistent it wasn’t a date. He’s probably even right. He just went to the movies with three friends. Two of them were girls and his mother is the irritating kind of woman who puts everything into little boxes that fit her preconceived social structures just right.

It took everything in my arsenal of zen mum not to insist on phoning the mothers of the two girls , I didn’t even vet them outside the movies. In fact, I actually dropped the boys outside with firm instructions to always treat girls (and everyone else) with utmost respect and then I drove away as if I didn’t have a care in the world. In fact if I wasn’t telling you now you’d never have even guessed that I was going straight to the Chemist to check out their supply of natural calmatives.

Armed with only the boring common-or-garden variety of rescue drops, I went back into the shopping centre to wait for the mother of Little Pencil’s friend. We urgently needed to talk, as girlfriends that haven’t seen each other for a whole day need to talk, and I urgently needed to be within jumping distance of my son should he need me (which I knew he wouldn’t but I was sticking to my excuse).

As I waited for my friend to come and join me I watched the people around me. In particular I watched the people that were leaving the movies.

It dawned on me that people who go to afternoon movies are of a very particular demographic. They’re almost all over seventy. Most of them are women (a common “problem” in a society where women outlive men) and they walk slowly and carefully, the weight of age making its mark on their every movement. They no longer stand straight rather they bow to their age.

I had just let my little boy go and here I was, somewhere between the teenager racing off with all the exuberance of youth to his ”non-date” and the old women at the movies who bore the burden of way too many dates. Literally in the middle of these two lives – about 30 years away from the teen and about 30 years away from going to afternoon movies.
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It briefly occurred to me to be happy that I was still so young, so snugly in between the two ages so as not to be old (although my son would laugh for days if I tried to explain that I was as close to his age as I was to old age). I looked at these people and tried to imagine where I would be in 30 years time. I felt a little bleak when I realised that not many of them were smiling on the inside. In fact now that I recall it not many were smiling on the outside either.

Perhaps I should be giving people benefit of the doubt, maybe they had all just walked out of a movie like Philomena and they were really feeling very emotional. But maybe not. There is a certain somberness that comes with being an adult.

All the learning, maturing and developing that we do in our youth is unfettered with the stress of responsibility. All the learning we do as adults seems to weigh us down. I’m not looking forward to going to afternoon movies and coming out afterwards looking like I’ve been eating lemons and my days on earth are numbered by a clock sitting heavily on my back . I’m not looking forward to being old, although the other option is worse.

How do we ensure that we grow old happily? What’s the secret to keeping the exuberance of life as a teen ticking along when you are older ? How do we bear responsibility while still maintaining optimism? .

Maybe the answer lies in seeing a movie with a date. And not in the afternoon.

Maybe we just shouldn’t waste all of our youth on our youth.

I have been worrying about this for 13 years

photos for the bar mitzvahWhen my son was born almost 13 years ago I started to worry about his Bar Mitzvah.

While the Bar Mitzvah may be a rite of passage for the Jewish boy who becomes a “man” on the occasion of his Bar Mitzvah it is the rite of a Jewish mother to worry and it’s something that I took to rather like a duck takes to water as soon as it’s born. As soon as he was born I started to worry about his thirteenth birthday.

Strange as it may seem to people that know me, it’s not the idea of Little Pencil becoming a man that has been driving this 13 year worry. It’s not him singing his portion in synagogue in Hebrew in front of 200 people that fills me with apprehension, I’ll leave that to him to worry about. It not even the actual function that is worrying me, in fact that is pretty well organised and it’s going to be amazing. What has worried me all these years is photographs.

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The mother that makes me look like the poster girl for free-range parenting

My son is right on the cusp of adolescence. He’s thisclose to being a teen even though, quite frankly, I’m not ready to be the parent of a teenager. I don’t feel much older than a 19 myself (except when I try to run, then I feel close to 100)

But time isn’t going to stop and it seem like I am going to have to get used to the surly moods I can see slowly beginning to creep in, the testosterone fueled tantrums, the sight of Little Pencil trying to be swallowed into the ground when I sing and the fact that he would rather be with his friends than anyone else on earth.
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You never know when it’s the last time

little pencil at the parkI don’t remember the last time it happened, I don’t have a record of the date or a clear time in my head of how long ago it was. But, I can remember the minute details because they were always the same
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Thank you, Collette Dinnigan, for not having it all

collette-dinniganI grew up wanting to be a mother. I was the child who played with dolls, babied my cuddly toys and actually fantasised about soothing crying babies and changing nappies.  I was the teenager who’d babysit anybody under ten, I studied education so that I could be a teacher and look after other people’s kids before I had my own.

Then I was the adult who struggled to have a baby and when my son was born my dreams came true. I became a mother.

Over the years I’ve been a stay-at-home mum, worked from home; held down a couple of part time jobs and worked for a few years in a very full time role. I’ve been the mum frantically searching for people to look after my son when I couldn’t be there and I’ve been the mother that’s looked after my friends’ kids while they are at work. I’ve been extraordinarily lucky.

I understand I’m talking from a place of great privilege in that I am able to make work decisions around my son rather than the other way. I realise how many people have no option. I also understand that for some people the option I choose makes them want to gag, but that’s okay because I am not asking for judgment, nor am I making judgment.

I don’t want my name in lights, I don’t want to look down from the top of a corporate ladder to watch my child play out his life without me in it. It doesn’t mean I wont let him grow up and be independent, it doesn’t mean I won’t have a full and meaningful life, it just means I am aware that I only have one shot at bringing up my child and that’s what I really want to do.

And what I realise as he grows up, is that it’s not just the very early years that count.  Newspaper headlines scream to us of the need for improved childcare, more spaces, better funding, longer hours. You would be forgiven for thinking going back to work after having a baby is logistically the hardest part of motherhood.   But those little kids grow up and the truth is that big kids still need to be taken care of, even if it’s in a different way.

Big kids still need to be picked up from school, they still need to get to afternoon sports. They still need a parent in their lives.  At twelve you are not an adult and nor should you be treated as one. And as travel time becomes “dinner table time” (it’s where all the talking takes place) you want to do all the lifts you can.
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On the weekend I read a column about Collette Dinnigan and her decision to close down her fashion label.  The column quoted Dinnigan as saying:

“I wasn’t doing my job or motherhood properly, ‘I like to do things at full-mast and I wasn’t prepared to be a mother at half-mast any more.

“It was an extremely intimate and genuine decision. I believe children need routines, consistency and assurance. These things don’t come from a textbook. They come from your gut, your heart and instinct. I need to be around much more to teach them these things.”

“My mother’s love was unconditional. She worked but I never once felt anything was more important to her than my brother and I. Or that she wasn’t around for us. It felt hypocritical to be working at my pace and expecting the same outcome with my own kids.”

Good on you Collette Dinnigan’s for not preaching about how hard you work to balance it all. Because you can’t have it all.  That’s not to say you can’t be a brilliant mother and work full time, of course you can.  But you can’t have it all.

I often get told I’ll regret my decision to dedicate so much of my life to being a parent, that when my son leaves home I’ll have nothing left, I’ll be lonely and regret my life “wasted”.  I laugh at that idea a lot.  It’s not like I’m home waiting for him while tapping my feet on the floorboards to his favourite tune. I work from home, I have my own interests, I have friends, I have a life – he just happens to be the most important part of it.

Yes, I am sacrificing some career choices but I’m okay with that. I’m okay with fitting in with a stereotypical maternal role because I fit so well and I’m okay with my decision being a thousand shades of different from yours –  let’s just get rid of this great 21st century myth of having it all.

The biggest (and cutest) cry-baby ever

I am a crier. I cry when I am hurt physically or emotionally, I cry when other people hurt, I cry when I hear something that touches me deeply and sometimes I cry when I feel really happy.  In fact you will often see me with eye make up all the way down to my chin and foundation stains down my cheeks.  Attractive huh?

Before I saw this video I thought I was the textbook definition of cry-baby. But, this little shnookum has just stolen my crown. Watch her as she responds with Lana-like levels of emotions to her mother’s singing.

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Awwwwww

Growing up… and letting go

growing-up“This is what it feels like to have no kids” said my husband on the weekend as we strolled through the city after a leisurely breakfast at a place where there were no kids menus and no babycinos.

Little Pencil had been to a soccer match and a school fete, played a billion hours of x-box, stayed up past midnight watching the soccer at a sleepover. And then he’d been to another friend where’ he’d stayed for dinner. I am exhausted just typing that.

We’d been alone most of the weekend, looked at houses we toyed with the idea of buying, shopped for stuff for the house we actually live in, went out with friends, ate too much. Just the kind of thing we did before we had Little Pencil. Only difference was the conversation.
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