BAD MOTHER

As I’m doing my laundry this evening, I happen to see my daughter’s bath toys hanging in the net holder in the tub. I catch myself pausing, staring at them for about 20 seconds then I continue on with my chore.

Interesting?  I suppose not.  Random?  I suppose yes.  A good reason to write?  For sure.

Seeing her bath toys hanging there provokes a deep emotional response and I almost cry. I miss her. My lovely, interesting, funny, comforting 7 year old. But before you jump to the conclusion that she has passed on from this world to the next, she hasn’t. She lives with her father.

That bit of information, I assume, makes you wonder why? Is it because she’s not a good mom? Does she have problems why she can’t look after her own kid? No good. Poor kid. BAD MOTHER. Those are some of the things that I picture people wondering or saying. Why? Because I have confronted it before.

Here’s a little more to the story. I left my marriage and moved away from my community and my 2 youngest still live with their father there, the oldest lives with me.

Has the sympathy or empathy for me diminished yet? Probably. Most of the time I’ve accepted other people’s opinion of me and tried to toughen up and not let it bother me. I’ve done my time in “explanation mode” and learned to stop trying to defend myself, because after all these years later, as long as we make it work behind the curtain, then it’s really no one else’s business.

But just because we can make it work, doesn’t mean that it’s easy.  Not at all.  Most of the time, it takes a lot of energy to get away from the feeling of giving up and taking the plunge in the self-pity abyss of thinking you are a bad, terrible, horrible parent. I do have to say though, that this happens much less frequently as the years pass, but it is one of the toughest things I have experienced, and I have allowed myself to feel it when I need to.

I’ve also reconciled and put to rest the feeling that because I made decisions about my life, my marriage and my family, I deserve to feel the pain of missing my children. Only bitter and negative people would think that. But, they wouldn’t think that if they were in that situation themselves.  So no, I don’t buy into that. I love my children and I am totally allowed to miss them. I will find a bit of clothing, or toy or some other kind of keepsake lying around the house from their time here and I pause. I don’t always cry but I do always get the feels.

It may seem as though I am in “explaination mode” with this post, but I assure you, I am not.  Realistically blended or divorced families are becoming more abundant and I am beginning to realize that maybe I am not the only one who feels this way. Maybe I am not the only one who suffers through the episodes of guilt (in addition to the regular bouts of parenting guilt), the loneliness and pain of missing them.

I can’t speak for my kids but I know it’s not always easy for them either. I keep my comfort in the one thing we have all silently agreed on, and that is that we are going to put love first. We may butt heads and there might be a lot of raw feelings, tears and hurt, but we will always love one another, and we will always put that love ahead of anything else.

 

 

“It’s a wonderful -legislative, law unabiding, inconsistent- life /slash world” ..hashtag HopeForHumanity

When it comes to social media, I truly like seeing the family/friend updates, pictures, memories in the making, creative posts, funny jokes, personal heartfelt stories shared…but…

(Photo credit: Aurora Gull)
.. the amount of global tragedy intertwined is really disparaging. It leaves me wondering, a bit too often,  “What the hell is wrong with this world?” 

We all do our part to contribute to sharing our own perspectives, thoughts, and solutions. Some are brilliant and uplifting, to see people who are not bound by a narrow scope. The possibility people, the solution seekers. So I have to wonder again, Is that the hope? The people and the inspiring actions we hang onto when the overwhelming and overbearing plague, the lack of human conscience, is attacking the spirit of Mother Earth? Mother culture? Yes. It is one ray of hope.

Our eyes so subtly give us an example of the balance we seek. Open too long and we suffer. Closed too long and we slumber. We blink to balance. And if our visual sense can no longer function, we rely on the other senses, the unity within our body, to create that balance. We do not simply give up and die. 

If we look at our eyes as metaphor for the relationship we have with our own bodies to that of the world, and see the world through our own bodies, a clear picture of our contribution or lack thereof is quite apparent.  What are we thinking, saying, doing, or not thinking, not saying or not doing that contributes to the health of Mother Earth?  Not to say that health issues cannot strike no matter what. Like natural disasters, lightening strikes…accidents….things do happen outside of our control. The biggest lesson in that is not to allow ourselves to become bitter, but to control our responses, and our own actions.

We can end the unnecessary tragedy. We can restore the balance. It’s not about government laws, or pieces of paper. And it’s not going going to be easy either. 

Common goals have to be more than just making money, having “more”, or being “happy”. We must weave together the basic elemental fabric of what we need to exist. The purpose, values and way of life that will allow all people, in all walks of life, to thrive as one with Mother Earth. 

#HopeForHumanity #OneLove

Night

Go forth into dreamland

and cast off life as a sin

Where reality ends

and a new life begins.

Where the choice can be yours

As the clock, it still ticks

The rabbit hole or the potion

Pick one Alice, pick.

It only takes a second to fall

into the world that you crave

Or one which you cry

As though trapped in a grave

This journey we take

Many twists ’round the bend

As each night we embrace

Our world, at reality’s end