Saturday, May 8, 2021

Parenting During a Pandemic: Mother's Day Reflections from a Mom to her Kids

Another Hallmark holiday is upon us:  Mother's Day 2021.  I don't honestly recall last year's holiday, perhaps because we were still in the throes of a pretty terrible bout of COVID in New York City.  We were deep in the dueling sirens phase, listening to ambulances race back and forth between the hospitals we live near.  I'm sure my daughter, an event planner and occasion-marker extraordinaire, organized her siblings to celebrate mom, but I honestly cannot recall the details.  That's no reflection on my daughter; it's solely a reflection on my inability to remember many things.

This Mother's Day, I wanted to pause to acknowledge the only thing--or rather people--who make it possible for me to participate in this day:  my children.  They've lived quite a year, from Mother's Day 2020 to Mother's Day 2021.  One graduated from law school; another finished out a college year; a third saw all of his special needs programs shut down for in-person participation, which left him without anything to do for months on end.  But the pandemic also brought all my kids under one roof for the first time in nearly a decade.  That was an incredible thing.  And lest anyone think that 'incredible' only has positive connotations, let me say that it also meant having five adults and two dogs in an apartment that once felt pretty spacious and came rather quickly to feel like a studio.  Lots of stuff to contend with, and even more laundry than usual.  My eldest hadn't been home for any extended time in nine years, since he'd left for college.  I could see that he was a bit rusty with our rhythms, especially regarding his autistic younger brother.  And even with his sister, he'd missed living with her and her particular approaches to  cohabiting, so lots of things needed to be negotiated, and renegotiated.  It was not always smooth sailing.

But, we somehow made it through the year, with my daughter thriving in school and socially, with my eldest passing the bar exam and transitioning to his new role in the Navy, and with my other son managing with surprising equanimity to tolerate the total disruption of his program-focused life.  I like to think that we didn't lose our collective minds because we had long ago established something that bonded us to one another--come hell, high water, or a raging pandemic:  enough love and loyalty to tide us over, to carry us through.

I'm typing this as a sit in a little home office--really just a sliver of space with back to back desks and computers for my younger son and me.  I don't love the smallness of the space, but I love the space itself because its walls are covered with the things that give me joy:  loads of family photos of adventures we've taken through the years.  I can look up and see my husband and me in the main plaza of Quito, Ecuador, all of us on the terrace of a restaurant in the Dominican Republic, and all of us once again, wearing our life vests before a jet ski outing in the Florida Keys.  Rather than feeling sad over the at-home restrictions of the past year, I can look at these photos over and over again and revel in the gratitude I feel for the opportunities I and we have had to be together in so many extraordinary places.  

And while I might struggle to remember what last Mother's Day was like, I can tell you that this Mother's Day, looking back on a year in which all of us had COVID, in which all of us were challenged to stay focused on things forward-, positive-, and future-looking, I am reminded of all the ways in which being a mother change, surprise, overwhelm, sustain, exhaust, and inspire me.  But I am also reminded that this is the first Mother's Day for me without my own mother.  It was the one occasion, as I recall, when my father gave my mother gifts.  I never asked him why, but I imagined it was because my father was especially grateful for the gifts my mother gave him that enabled him to be a father, a role he mastered in all the ways that can or should matter.  But that, of course, is for another Hallmark holiday...

Wednesday, April 28, 2021

Going Off Line to Learn How to Live Again

So the other day--I believe it was March11th--I shuttered my LinkedIn account.  I have downloads of my archived LinkedIn content, but I doubt I'll look at them.  I suppose there's some amount of loss in all this, of connections, of content, of being a part of.  But not really.  I very belatedly realized that I'd first signed on to LinkedIn in 2007.  So I'd been a part of that networking community for fourteen years.  And I had a whole lot of nothing to show for it.

Truthfully, I'd never used LinkedIn with professional expectations.  In recent years, I'd given up even on the pretense of using LinkedIn for professional networking and posted increasingly--if not exclusively--personal content.  Everything from observations about and reflections on my kids, to comments on what I've been reading, and what I've learned from various Jewish ed classes.  I became more cynical and discouraged about the nonstop self-promotion and branding that seem to characterize much of LinkedIn--and all of social media, it seems.  There was nothing I wanted to brag about, nothing to brand, nothing I had to sell.  So why bother?

I thought I'd mind being off LinkedIn, and maybe I will at some point.  It's only been about a week, after all.  But I was pretty confident that no one would know I'd left.  Or more accurately, no one would care.  And it was that revelation, that my absence would matter to exactly no one, that made me realize that my time on social media was an utter, and sad, waste.  If I'm going to be invisible, let me just be.  Without the grasping for attention, without checking to see how many people read or commented on a post of mine, without doing the math to calculate what percentage of my 900+ followers cared at any given time about anything I had to say.  

I scrolled through my list of connections before I shuttered my account, and I realized that at least two of them were deceased.  That seemed the perfect exclamation point, somehow, for this entire undertaking.  I was imagining I was part of something that even I didn't much care about being a part of.  I was imagining that being on LinkedIn mattered to my so-called career, when it had no relevance at all, since I wasn't actually pursuing any leads or connections that were career-related.  What I was doing, I think, was imagining that I had a toehold in a world that everyone thinks you must have a toehold in to matter.  It's as if not having any kind of social media presence makes you truly worth less, outside the bounds of all those folks keeping busy doing, and posting, and being and branding.

Maybe I've just consigned myself to utter irrelevance.  If so, it would just validate feelings I've had for some time now that as the world races ahead (toward what, who knows?), I'm left standing still, befuddled by all the change happening around me, and unable to keep up.  I'm the horse and buggy lady in a world of flying cars.  I'm just a person, after all, and an infinitely insignificant one.  I suppose to some folks that sounds sad.  And maybe it is.  But maybe, in my embrace of my smallness, of my footprint that barely registers, of my voice that no one hears, I'm embracing something of value.  Maybe in the quiet, in the self-imposed exile I have chosen, there is something better.  Or at least something not worse than that thing I pretended to chase, half in, half out, never believing that I belonged anyway.