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So, The Thing Is... I'm Feeling
A Little Guilty
by: Barbara Cooper
So, the thing is… I am feeling a little guilty.
I know, I know, what’s new? I’m like the travel agent for guilt
trips. Right now I’m feeling a little guilty because I am so madly
in love with my little Smiley Jane, who turns two-years-old today. I
mean, REALLY crazy about her. I can’t keep my hands off of her. Her
smile just lights up my whole world and that laugh—gosh, if I could
bottle that baby deep-belly laugh, I would be the richest woman in
the world. It’s hard to capture the essence of Jane’s personality
with words. I can’t really describe that sense of perpetual motion,
that blinding smile. It’s like she is lit from within, and I think
that light is joy and enthusiasm and awe for this world. She’s so
loving and so happy (even with that awesome temper) and then you add
that baby skin and that wall-to-wall smile and the next thing you
know, I am feeling guilty!
I can remember going through this phase with Ana (now
four-and-a-half) too, although she was never quite so over-the top
at loving me back as Jane is. But there was no need to feel guilty
because she was my first. I just totally indulged myself in a big
crush on my girl. But with Jane, there’s this vague sense that maybe
I’m being somehow unfair. Like maybe my infatuation with her takes
something away from Ana.
And it’s true, you know. I am NOT madly infatuated with Ana at
the moment. I LOVE her and I appreciate her and I marvel at her but
it’s also her job to push my buttons. She’s good at it. The whining
thing. The testing thing. The negotiating thing. The monitoring my
speed limit when I drive thing. I can honestly (albeit ashamedly)
say that when she goes to school, I am a little relieved. It’s just
hard with her right now. She’s four going on about thirteen, and she
ignores me half the time and is cheeky another fourth of the time
and then she’s so completely wonderful and loving and funny the
other fourth that I feel MORE guilt.
Oh, but that Hurricane Jane! I miss her if she’s merely taking a
long nap. Sometimes when I go in to check on her at night and I see
her, asleep in her mermaid pajamas and her little rump up in the
air, I have to stop myself from picking her up, just to feel her
little baby self. She’s so compact at this age. She hugs so well. I
am getting some real one-on-one time with her now that Ana’s in
school in the mornings. And she’s just CHARMING.
I took her to the playground the other day and she wanted me to
swing on the big girl swing next to her. “That’s GREAT swinging,
Mama!” she said, encouragingly. (I love the way she always uses
everyone’s proper names when she is addressing them.) A little bit
later, as we sat on the playscape and looked at the full moon still
visible in the sky, she turned to me, blue eyes grave and awed.
“Boo-ful. It’s boo-ful, Mama.” I gazed back at her, afraid my heart
would burst. “Yes, Jane. It is. Beautiful.”
I think part of appreciating Jane so much is that I know now how
fleeting these days are. Every wonderful stage gives way to
something else, and where once I cradled her and leaned over her as
she took her first steps, now I’m watching her run away from me into
her own world. And after Ana, I knew this was coming, so all the
times Jane runs into my arms become that much more precious. I give
myself permission to enjoy the view of her little naked behind and
the funny way she confuses her pronouns. (“Hold you? Hold you,
Mama?”) She’s given to spontaneously saying, “I luff you, Mama.” But
I know. I know the day is coming when it will be gone, the last
vestiges of her babyhood, almost without me even noticing.
Sometimes I watch Ana in this new role as my Independent Big Girl
and I just want so much to reach out and pull her into my lap and
hold her for a long while. I want to tell her I’m on her side. But I
can’t. She wouldn’t stand for it (or believe me, for that matter.)
The other night she came out of her room after bedtime on some
pretext and when I tucked her back in, I kissed her.
She wiped my kiss off.
I guess this is a normal rite of passage, but must they all be
such heartbreakers? I thought I was allotted a period of time when I
got to be the hero -- what happened? This past summer, after I’d
said “No” to her about something, she wanted to go to the grocery
store and find a new family and go home with THEM. (I wish I could
say I responded with sensitive probing about her feelings but
instead I said, “Okay, as soon as you find a new family, I’ll drive
you right to their house.”) The teenage years loom large.
So you can see why I prefer, ever so slightly, the uncomplicated
relationship I share with the little Hurricane. She who still craves
my presence and hugs me with abandon and misses me when I’m away.
She who spontaneously started to YODEL in the grocery store a few
months ago. (Seriously!) She, who is so responsive to my slightest
touch. Who is silly just to make me laugh. Who likes to wear my
shoes.
Maybe the first two years or so of a child’s life are given to us
as gifts –so we have a firm foundation of holding them closely that
will withstand the next sixteen years of them distancing themselves
from us. As Graham Green said, “There is always a moment in
childhood when the door opens and lets the future in.” I don’t
actually know that this is the start of the third year, but it would
make sense.
I don’t really want Jane to stay a baby –there are many other
wonderful milestones along the way to adulthood. But I am enjoying
every minute of it while I can (albeit with a small amount of
guilt.)
Happy birthday, Smiley Jane. May you always have that sparkle in
your eye and that yodel in your heart.
Babies are such a nice way to start people. ~Don Herrold
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(c) Barbara Cooper 2002
About The Author
Barb Cooper is the mother of Ana (4.5) and Jane (TWO) and this
newsletter entitled "So, the thing is.... She lives in Austin,
Texas.
barb@sothethingis.com |
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