Mother’s Day is a difficult holiday for me, as you would
expect. Losing a child makes the holiday complicated enough, but adding
infertility to the equation makes it an incredibly painful day. I recognize
that the rest of the world sees me in this grey area – I’m a mother, and yet
I’m not. Whenever I say that to people, they immediately disagree with me. “You
ARE a mother!” they say. And it’s true, I am. But I also know that in my
everyday life, people do not think of me as a mother.
I get it. I really do. There are many maternal experiences
that I just don’t relate to because I haven’t lived them. I don’t know what
it’s like to be so tired because of a fussy, colicky baby who won’t sleep. I
don’t know what it’s like to manage the terrible twos. I never have to run out
of work to pick the kids up from daycare. I don’t watch Baby Einstein or The
Wiggles (or whatever is popular with kids these days) because there are no
children in my house. And I’ve never had anyone call me Mommy. I know that I
live in this in between world where I know I’m a mother and the rest of the
world sees me as one only when prompted, but I don’t have any of the “mother
experiences” that other mothers do.
Just recently, I had a conversation with someone who asked
me the dreaded “do you have children?” question. I talked about Vivienne, as I
always do. They asked if we planned to have more children. I said we wanted to,
but it was proving to be difficult. And their response was “I hope it works
out. You’ll be a great mother.” Not you ARE a great mother. You WILL be.
Because parenting a child who isn’t here doesn’t count in the same way.
That was an experience that really summed up how I feel
about Mother’s Day. I talk about my daughter freely because she was, is, and
will always be my daughter, whether she’s here or not. People will recognize
her, offer their sympathies, but then go on to say that I’ll be a great mother
some day. I live in between the definitions, and so a holiday that doesn’t include
much grey is a difficult one to work with.
Mother’s Day actually wasn’t supposed to be like this at
all. You’ve probably never researched the history of the holiday, assuming,
like I did, that it was invented by Hallmark or American Greetings. In fact, it
is credited to a woman who wanted to honor her own mother, who had lost 8 of
her 12 children. But you’d
never know that by how it is celebrated now. Today, we have cards to honor the
mothers of children here, but not the mothers who only hold their children in
their hearts or the mothers who long to parent a child that their bodies won’t
let them have.
And so I’m left unsure of how to manage through this
holiday. When they ask the Moms to stand and be recognized at church, it doesn’t
feel right to stand. But sitting doesn’t feel right either. And so I stay home.
My husband and family struggle to find an appropriate card or gift that
recognizes me as a mother, but doesn’t imply that our children are here. I know
it’s a difficult task. I can’t really leave my house on that day because of
everyone enjoying their Mother’s Day with their children, another painful
reminder of things we miss with Vivienne. And so I put my head down and power
through, like I do with most holidays. Except that this is a holiday that
smacks me in the face with the inconsistency in how I see myself and how the
world sees me.
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