For some,
the card that says, “Mom, Thanks for being perfect” is fine, but for the rest
of us, with complicated mothers and complicated relationships, the search for
the right message is tough.
But even as children–of all ages--struggle to summarize
their
maternal relationship in a card, those on the receiving end have mixed
feelings too. Most of us know we don’t come close to the platitudes in those
greeting cards.
What is a good mother? Do we measure up? On this day that
celebrates kindness, patience and sacrifice many of us squirm remembering our
less than ideal maternal moments; We wonder if we’ve done something really bad
along the way and worry whether our worst day as a mother damaged our kids.
Mothers
who hurt their children is a painful topic. The reality of mothers’ hostile
impulses against their children is old news in psychological circles and
parenting books, but we rarely allow parents to admit those feelings.
Thank
goodness, most of us don’t act on our thoughts, but some mothers have struggled
with the limits and lost. When we hear about them, many of us know--in the
privacy of our hearts--that it was just the grace of God, good friends, a
reliable baby-sitter and money in the bank that kept us from taking their
place.
So maybe we should, especially on Mother’s
Day, have some compassion for the mothers who lost it, those women who did the
unthinkable; they hurt their own child. If some mothers weren’t so newsworthy
for their sheer failure at mothering the rest of us would not know where to draw
the line in self-judgment.
We can count ourselves lucky and a little grateful
that most of us have slapped but did not scald, screamed but did not hit, or
cursed but did not kill. When we react to a child-abuse horror story with the
common, “Can you imagine?” the truth is that most of us can.
We owe a debt to
those mothers because they give us the outside limit from which to measure our
parenting. The “bad” mother relieves us of the shadowy fear we all carry.
We can’t talk about bad mothers
without mentioning Medea; the mythological woman who killed her kids to punish
their philandering father. But Medea got to her breaking point after a world
tour of abuse, abandonment and humiliation.
After being dumped in a strange
country with no way home, she lost it and she killed. Medea’s story is a myth
but, as with all myths, it points to something real in the human psyche. When
we read about women who hurt their kids a healthy mother has to stop and ask
herself, “How did that woman get there?” Nobody starts out wanting to kill their
children; nobody starts out thinking scalding is reasonable discipline. It’s
baby steps all the way.
Every
mother who lost it at least once, or who did something she swore she’d never
do, can be grateful for everything that keeps her from crossing over to the
territory of the terrible mother.
Alexander
Solzhenitsyn, Russian novelist, wrote: “If only there were evil people
somewhere committing evil deeds, and we could separate them from us and destroy
them, but the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human
being.” That includes yours and mine.
So for
Mother’s Day let’s thank the good mothers and show a moment of compassion for
the “Medeas” of the world, who in their tragic solution to life’s problems show
us where we ought not to go.
1 comment:
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