Add

I Knew Everything. I Knew Nothing.


Four years ago today, I was a mother but I wasn’t a mom. I knew what motherly instinct felt like, that deep-seated need to protect at any cost even if it meant my own personal misery. I had felt the unconditional love that a mother felt. I thought I knew everything there was to know about being a mother. I had watched D parent the Munchkin. I had read some books. I was ready for it all.

I wasn’t ready for anything.

On this day before my oldest son’s fourth birthday, my oldest parented child, I am feeling nostalgic and introspective. I am feeling overwhelmed with emotion. I’m also somewhat amused at my past self. I think of how I felt and the things that I thought on this day, four years ago. I didn’t know that my kidney was shutting down and that I’d be induced the next day. I was just a 38-week pregnant woman who was uncomfortable, more so due to my kidney disorder. (My uterus at this point had totally pinched off the ureter out of my right kidney.) I was excited to finally be a mom after having been a mother for two years. It was a weird place to be and I felt alone in that thought process.

The things I didn’t know are the meat and potatoes of actual, everyday parenting. I didn’t know that my me time would be hard fought after my oldest parented child’s arrival. I didn’t know that you could love a child so very deeply and still be aggravated and frustrated. I didn’t know that everything you thought you knew about parenting was usually made null and void at some point. I didn’t know that the issues I thought I had overcome regarding the placement of my firstborn would rear their ugly heads and make it impossible for me to move forward as a mom until I got professional help.

It’s that last “didn’t know” that leave me feeling sad at times. I know that every mom claims that the first few months of her child’s life are mostly blurry, a series of sleepless nights erasing some of the memories. I worry sometimes that the blur was brought on by an inability to focus on the task at hand, caring for my son, due to a preoccupation with missing his older sister. I was so overwhelmed by the memories and flashbacks and guilt and feeling of loss regarding his sister that I found it difficult to truly enjoy our time together. I hesitate to take it so far as to say that I didn’t bond with him; I think we are truly bonded, deeply, on levels I didn’t know that I could be bonded with someone else. But I do feel that I cheated him out of some special time during his early days, weeks and months. I wasn’t as present as I could have been. I was lost in a world that the adoption industry doesn’t discuss with mothers who are considering placement. As I took care of that tiny infant who is now a smart, funny little boy, I kept wondering if I would have done the same things with my firstborn. I kept wondering if it would have felt the same. I kept wondering if I could have done it had I parented her.

I still wonder at times. Not as often as I don’t play the what if game (as much) after all of my years in therapy. But I wonder. Who doesn’t wonder?

I am so thankful that our small infants don’t remember their first days, weeks and months. I would feel eternally guilty if my oldest son asked me, “Mommy, why did you cry so much when I was a little baby?” (Of course, as I battled some pretty heavy postpartum depression with my youngest son, he could ask the same.) I love both of these boys with the fire of a thousand suns, just as I love their sister. As I reflect on this particular day in my history, I wonder how I would have changed my parenting had I known everything that I know now.

Would I have spent more time just cuddling in bed with my oldest son? Would I have allowed myself some more room to feel instead of ignoring the emotions for (approximately) three months? Would I have asked for more help? Would I have been more honest with myself, with those who loved me, when they asked me what was wrong? Would I have been easier on myself? Would I have laughed more at some of the things that I flubbed up? Or would I still have been tense and anxious, demanding perfection of myself since I felt, in my core, that I had failed my firstborn? I don’t know. I do know that I have managed to get one child to four (tomorrow) and another to almost two (next Tuesday) and they seem to be generally well-rounded. Despite my issues, they seem to love me. Despite my issues, I know that I love them.

So is it even worth asking all of these questions? In another four years will I look back on this post and laugh at everything I didn’t know about what was just around the next bend? I assume so. Life is like that most of the time. I’ve learned so much in the past four years, both about being an everyday mom and a birth mother. I assume that the next four years will bring about more things that I never knew I didn’t know… and hopefully a lot of wonderful memories.

The Discussion

see what everyone is saying

  • MOMbo TV November 16th, 2009 at 3:19 pm #1

    Such an interesting post…. My oldest is going to be 4 at the end of December….Our mothering journey’s are all so unique. Thanks for sharing yours with us :)

    [Reply]

  • Jennifer November 16th, 2009 at 3:51 pm #2

    Another beautiful post, Jenna. What’s funny about this is it can also be applied to those parenting children after tremendous childhood trauma… which is something I am currently dealing with. Sometimes I get lost in knowing what is reality and what is just my own issue rearing its head through my own parenting ~ and then knowing how to handle it effectively is such a complicated and gut-wrenching thing…

    I know it’s not the same, but I can certainly empathize. And my many congratulations on making it through four wonderful years… All three of your children are very lucky to have you!

    [Reply]

  • Dawn November 16th, 2009 at 5:10 pm #3

    You write so beautifully, Jenna! Happy almost birthday!!

    [Reply]

Respond

get in on the action.

* Required

Ads






Tag Cloud

Articles Baby Week birth stories blogging body image Books Bristol Palin celebrities change contests Dawn is Awesome Discovery Health donations Election 2008 encouragement Family gifts hair healing i'm too radical journal writing Laurie Berkner Letters Madline Spohr memories Mom It Forward mommyblogs Mother's Day Open Adoption Bloggers Open Adoption Roundtable peace people in our story Politics roles Sarah Palin Steven Curtis Chapman stories The Bump The Shack The Time Traveler's Wife titles weddings Women of Faith words Writing

Random Posts Recent Comments

  • Mia Says:

    It really is a tricky issue in talking about adoption, whether in print or IRL conversation. Each ad...

  • Upstatemomof3 Says:

    It is an interesting topic and not particularly easy for me either. Before my youngest came home we ...

  • Jodi Says:

    I am so sorry for your loss. I will be thinking of you during this difficult time. I know there's ...

  • Dawn Says:

    Oh Jenna, my heart goes out to you. May the strength of his love continue to hold you and give you c...

  • Carroll Says:

    Oh my. New reader here. I just clicked over from the post about your grandpa, and now that I know wh...

  • Dawn Says:

    Also my memoir didn't sell! But this is the first book I wanted to write -- I just didn't think I ha...

  • Deb Donatti Says:

    "As such, what I think Dawn and I are hoping to accomplish is to provide enough information… the inf...

  • Elizabeth Says:

    I think there is a basis of truth in that quote as well. Definitely food for thought. As an adoptive...

  • Elizabeth Says:

    I think our agency does a great job with providing support, counseling and education for both sides ...

  • Socialwrkr24/7 Says:

    I think this is a pretty accurate quote when applied to relationships. If I'm honest with myself, I ...