He Is Never Going to Say It’s Okay

Last week, we traveled to Kansas City and Chicago to see some baseball and visit family. On Day Three of the trip, the plan was to catch a day game, then fly from KC to Chicago.

At the game, his third in as many days, my son had a meltdown that may or may not have been nationally televised. I took him out of the seats to a spot where he could “get in a calm body.” (That is what I said, because no matter how much I might have thought it, telling an exhausted four-year-old to get his shit together so I can watch the baseball game would have been very poor parenting.)

We were just starting to get in our calm bodies when I received an expletive-laced text from my husband. It seems he’d gotten a text alert from the airline that our flight was scheduled to leave in 90 minutes. Odd, since it was 2:30pm and the flight he booked departed at 7:30pm.

He came flying out of the stands, most definitely not in his calm body, and the three of us rushed out to our rental car. Actually, rental car is a misnomer here. It was more of a rental behemoth. This thing was a beast, a fact that will soon become relevant. I drove the getaway tank while my husband tried to figure out what was going on with our flight.

As it turned out, the airline canceled our 7:30 pm flight and rebooked us on a 4:00 pm flight. When my husband inquired as to why no one notified him, he was told “We sent you an email.” Evidently, American Airlines is completely unfamiliar with the concept of firewalls, spam filters, etc. Email is a wholly inadequate method of conveying important changes to travel itineraries, but I digress.

It was clear we weren’t going to make the 4:00 flight. We had to return the rental, check bags, wrestle a four-year-old, and get me through security at KCI without an ID (I lost it during the trip).

For the uninitiated, security at Kansas City International Airport is no fucking joke. We log considerable travel miles in our extended family, and we are unanimously agreed that KCI has the most hard-assed security operation of any airport we’ve ever flown out of. This is probably the only issue on which my family can achieve consensus. Getting through a regular airport without an ID would be hard enough. Despite assurances from the delightfully friendly people running both the KCI and the TSA Twitter accounts, I knew it would be damned difficult to get through security in Kansas City with no ID.

(Some of you frequent fliers – you know who you are – may be reading this and smugly thinking, “The abbreviation for Kansas City International Airport is MCI, not KCI.” You are correct. But no one who is actually from the KC area calls it MCI – we call it KCI, period.)

We pulled into a gas station to fill up the rental freighter. I then decided to park in one of the station’s spaces while my husband utilized his considerable technology arsenal to find a means of escape from KC to Chicago.

Because I was driving an absurdly enormous SUV, and I was sitting up higher than I’m used to, I failed to see a cone in the parking spot. In my defense, one could not accurately describe the cone as orange. The cone was past its glorious, conspicuous prime and was now a faded peach color. That said, I still should have seen it, and I didn’t, and I ran that fucker over. Just mowed it down. I tried to back up in a vain effort to free the sad cone, but that just made matters worse.

About the time I realized the cone was wedged up under the suburban attack vehicle, an employee came flying out of the service station. He lit into me about running over the cone.

I’m a Midwesterner. I am deeply uncomfortable with causing any sort of distress or damage to others or their property. Instinctively, I began to apologize, profusely and sincerely. The man was unmoved. He kept yelling at me about the cone. The incredulous, disgusted expression on his face said what little he left unspoken regarding his estimation of my intelligence.

I continued to apologize.

Then my four-year-old piped up from the back seat.

“Mommy, he is never going to say it’s okay.”

I sat back in my seat, caught off guard by the truth that just came out of my son’s mouth.

You know what, kid? You’re right. This man is never, ever going to accept my apologies and say, “It’s okay.” This is a lost cause.

By this time, the man had retrieved his cone. Seeing that it was still intact, I drove away, catching one final glimpse of him shaking his head at me in the rear-view mirror.

I’ve been replaying this incident in my head since it happened. I’ve come to the conclusion that my son was on to something. Sometimes, the other person is never going to say it’s okay. There are some situations, big and small, in which we never get closure.

I’m a big believer in the importance of apologies. If I’ve wronged someone, I believe it’s incumbent upon me to try and fix it. I can’t undo what’s already done, but I can learn and, with a little grace and luck, move on stronger and better than I was before. The same is true if the tables are turned, and I’m the “injured party,” for lack of a better term.

There are times, however, when a thing is so broken it can’t be fixed. Or the other person can’t meet me where I am, even if where I am is far beyond the halfway mark. How do I “get right” with myself and in my spirit when there is no closure? How do I know with certainty the other person is never going to say “It’s okay,” or that I am never going to be able to say “It’s okay” to someone else, and give myself permission to move forward when it means moving away?

I don’t know.

Maybe I’ll ask my kid.

A Good Place to Start

It was my fault we were rushed. My four-year-old son was on Spring Break from preschool and, not being on our regular schedule, I lost track of time. Suddenly, I realized we had minutes to get out the door for an appointment.

Was my son still in his pajamas? At 3:15 in the afternoon? Yes. Yes he was. We do Spring Break right in our house. Except when don’t, because we fail to give ourselves enough time to prepare for a timely departure. By “we,” I mean me. And by “ourselves,” I mean myself. I am the designated adult in this scenario.

I unceremoniously switched off PJ Masks (if you don’t know what that is, count your blessings and move on) and started barking out orders to put down toys and put on clothes. As all parents know, this is a highly effective strategy for managing small children. They respond beautifully to this approach. They care deeply about punctuality, and frantic rushing always produces the desired result.

Parent: “Get dressed right now! We are LATE!”

Child: “Oh, I understand. Let me put down this fun toy and focus on the task at hand. Anything you choose for me to wear will be perfectly acceptable. Let me be as cooperative as possible to compensate for your lack of time management skills.”

If only. I expected my son to care that we were late, which was totally irrational because he doesn’t actually comprehend the meaning of the word “late.” I know this, because I’ve asked him.

It was, of course, a shitshow. I struggled to control my frustration. The more I tried to impose my will and wrestle him into his clothes, the more he resisted.

Finally, he was dressed and we left the house.

In the car, I talked to him about what had just transpired. I was on a roll, being all kinds of parental. Laying down the law. “When I tell you to do something, you do it.” And so on. He started to say something. I cut him off.

“I am talking. You can talk when I’m finished.”

When I was done talking, I said “Okay, what did you have to say about not getting dressed?”

I was feeling a little smug and magnanimous. Such a progressive parent I am, giving the child an opportunity to express himself. This is, after all a benevolent dictatorship.

“Well, Mommy, what I had to say is…you didn’t say ‘please.’”

“What?”

“You didn’t say ‘please.’”

Dammit. I went over the scene in my head. He was right. Not once did I say “please.” We were late – my own fault – and I started issuing orders.

There is merit to the argument that he’s the child and I’m the parent and he should do what I say, when I say, period. But he’s also a person. And I’m a person. I don’t want someone to abruptly insist I stop doing the fun thing I’m doing, immediately switch gears, and do a not fun thing, just because they can’t tell time. If I want to raise him to be a considerate person, isn’t it incumbent upon me to treat him with consideration?

I said, “You’re right. I didn’t say ‘please.’ If I had said ‘please,’ would you have gotten dressed?”

His response was clear and firm: “Yes.”

I said okay and let it go. I was skeptical, but it was time to move on.

The next day, I had an opportunity to test the hypothesis. I said ‘please.’ He looked at me with an obvious flash of recognition, and quickly complied with my request. It was clear he knew I’d heard him.

I know saying “please” won’t always work. I seriously doubt it will even work most of the time. Still, it seems to me that, as a general life rule, “please” is a good place to start.

Sometimes, we get so caught up in the intensity or stress of a moment that we forget the basics.

Ask instead of tell.

Listen.

Say “please.”

Every Mistake, We Must Surely Be Learning

So many things happen when you have a baby. At the top of the list is finding a place to put the baby. In our case, this meant converting our tiny upstairs guest room into a tiny nursery, and my “craft room” into a play area. I am like a goldfish. I will take up as much space as is allotted me. Since most of our guests used the basement guest room, I’d gotten used to having both of those rooms to myself. I also have a difficult time parting with things. When it came time to clean out those rooms in order to have habitable space for a baby, it did not go well. It was very dramatic. There were tears. It’s possible some things were tossed out the second-story craft room window.

I was beyond excited about the prospect of motherhood. It was something I had hoped for madly but wasn’t sure would ever happen. It wasn’t that. But I was pissed that I was the one who was making all the room for the baby, both internally and externally. The baby was taking over my body and my space. My husband gave up one shelf for a few of my books.

In the aftermath, we had purged enough junk – seriously, it looked like a Michael’s craft store vomited in our alley – that the two rooms were empty and what was left of my stuff was crammed into a quirky piece of antique furniture known since my childhood as “The Thing” because no one has a clue as to its intended purpose.

For three years, I shoved my papers, office and craft supplies, books, etc. into The Thing. It was my own real-life Tetris game, trying to creatively stack and arrange bits and pieces to keep them contained, and I was losing.

One day, my husband had the audacity and, frankly, poor judgment to criticize the overflow. I…lost…my…shit. Lost it. I started ranting about how he and our son had entire rooms to themselves, and I had been relegated to one piece of furniture in one corner of one room. He shrugged and replied, “Okay, well, why don’t we convert the storage loft to a space for you?”

Fuck you and your calm logic, guy. But also, thank you. Yes, please, I would love to go to the Container Store and IKEA this weekend. I set about making a refuge for myself in the loft above our bedroom. One would think I learned from this incident that it’s a good thing to give people a heads-up if you have needs that are going unmet. I did not. I tend to learn lessons the hard way, and this was no exception.

Fast forward a few months, and I had a similar meltdown – this one via email – because I was feeling hugely resentful about not having any time or activities of my own. I was righteous in my indignation. Most email responses from my husband are literally one word. Some day I will write a post dedicated to all the ways I’ve used his tendency to simply reply “Ok” to my advantage. I don’t know what happened on this particular day, though, but my normally laconic husband let loose. He said if I wasn’t happy or pursuing personal enrichment, it was on me for not speaking up and I had no one to blame but myself.

That was not an entirely accurate statement. My husband is a true co-parent, but he has a demanding job and an insane travel schedule. Like most moms, my free time tends to be limited to that tiny little sliver between my son’s bedtime and my own. But my husband had thrown down the gauntlet (in writing, no less), so I was determined to take advantage of it.

I signed up for a beginning yoga class. Yoga and I were not a good match. I know that’s a blasphemous statement in today’s society. Most people find yoga calming and centering. My experience was the opposite. In fact, I had a harrowing vision in shavasana that scared the hell out of me. I recounted it to someone who works in the mental health field, and she said, “You know, maybe you’re someone who should not be left too much alone in your own head with your own thoughts.” Yep. That.

The other thing I wanted to do was learn to play the guitar. I’d thought about it for years. My dad played, and some of my best memories are of him and his guitar. I never hear “While My Guitar Gently Weeps” without remembering how it felt to sit next to him on our forest green living room sofa while he played classic rock on his acoustic guitar.

The challenge was working out the logistics of lessons. I knew I needed formal lessons – I’m not someone who can just get on YouTube and pick stuff up that way. I found a company that offered in-home instruction, so even if my husband was traveling, I wouldn’t have to skip lessons. I asked if it would be a problem that I needed a teacher who could come late in the evening after my son was asleep. The owner laughed and said, “These are musicians. Most of them don’t even wake up before two in the afternoon.” Perfect. Sign me up.

So I started learning the guitar. It was hard. And not just for the obvious reasons. It dredged up all kinds of memories and feelings from my school days. I’d always heard playing a musical instrument helps with math and some types of science because it uses the same part of the brain. That makes total sense to me now. Starting guitar lessons took me back to algebra, geometry, chemistry and the spiral of frustration and inadequacy.

One of the things I hated most about being identified as “gifted” was that all the other kids and teachers knew. “If you’re supposed to be so smart, why can’t you do this?” The worst was when I was the one asking that question.

Guitar did not come naturally to me. I started to feel that familiar, overwhelming pressure to “get it.” Guitar, which was supposed to be an outlet and a source of enjoyment, was causing me all kinds of angst.

About a month into lessons, I had a really rough week and didn’t practice at all. I dreaded the lesson. I thought about canceling, but decided to just own up to not practicing and face the inevitable disappointment from my teacher. He let me finish my profuse apologies, and then he said the most incredible thing: “There’s no reason for you to apologize. These are your lessons. I get paid whether you practice or not.”

Holy shit. He was right. This was my process. There were no tests. I wasn’t going to derail the syllabus if I took my time and learned at my own pace. If life got in the way and I couldn’t practice, there would be no punishment. I was driving the train.

It was a revelation.

For the first time in my life, I have the freedom to learn for the sake of learning. I get to tackle something that doesn’t come easily to me, just because I want to. There is zero pressure. I think it’s the most liberating thing that’s ever happened to me.

My teacher told me most people quit about 3-6 months into lessons because they realize how difficult it is. It takes a long time to be able to play anything that sounds remotely like music. I just passed the six-month mark and, let me tell you, I suck at playing the guitar. I am so bad. But someday, I’ll be good. I can’t tell you when that will happen. Guess what? I don’t have to. And that feels amazing.

Note: The title is from The Beatles’ “While My Guitar Gently Weeps,” written by George Harrison and mastered by my dad. I finally have some appreciation for his accomplishment. Rock on, Dad. Miss you.

Dream Medium?

As a general rule, the months following the birth of a first baby are not a great time for decision-making. It’s a foggy, hazy time, in which the focus is solely on survival – the baby’s and yours, in that order.

One of the more questionable decisions I made during that time was an ill-advised purchase of a wall decal from Zulily. It was a giant, intricately-designed rocket, with the words “DREAM BIG.” If you’ve ever hung one of those wall decals, you know how deceptively complicated that shit is. It requires a surprising amount of coordination and the use of both fine and gross motor skills. It took two parents and many curse words to get the thing hung.

It didn’t take long for me to get tired of looking at it, and eventually I painstakingly peeled it off, wearing down a thumbnail in the process. My husband, bless his heart, said very little when I took it down, considering what a pain in the ass it had been to put it up.

The biggest reason I grew to dislike it, aside from my mom’s suggestion that its diagrammatic design looked like something out of a Cold War-era brainwashing experiment, was the words “DREAM BIG.” It seemed like such a big request of such a little guy. Of course my son could not read it, but I could, and I decided that wasn’t really a message I wanted to send as a parent.

Scrolling through design websites and flipping through parenting magazines, we see examples of this everywhere. “The sky’s the limit.” “Aim high.” “Reach for the stars.” (By now it should be evident that we went with an “air and space” theme for our son’s room.) They are intended to be inspirational. We want to instill in our children a sense that they can be anything they want, if they “dream big.” By hanging these signs, posters and decals in their rooms, we are encouraging them to be their best selves. Aren’t we?

I’m not so sure now. Are we inadvertently asking too much? Setting up unreasonable expectations? Sending a message that “big” is the only acceptable way to dream? Is it okay to dream medium?

Where is the line between empowering our children to believe in themselves, and setting them up to be dissatisfied? What does success look like? Who defines greatness? How big is big enough? How do we strike a balance in the messages we send our children – and ourselves – about achievement?

After my first blog post, I received a stunning number of messages from people saying “Me, too!” I am not the only one who feels like I fall short of the mark, whatever the mark is. It was really something to discover I am not alone.

Much has been written about women and the idea of “having it all.” I’m not talking about that. If you want to read about that, Ann Marie Slaughter says it better than I ever could. I’m talking a different, but tangentially related, phenomenon. So many of us grew up believing we were supposed to do great things with our lives. I don’t know why we seem to feel that way. I do know it’s not just limited to women. I’ve heard from men, too.

I don’t have the answer to this. I’m working on it. In the meantime, there is only one sign in my son’s room now. It is a quote attributed to Babe Ruth:

“Never let the fear of striking out keep you from playing the game.”

And that’s where I am now.

Batter up.