When I called my mother last week, she sounded so relieved.
I had interrupted the gauze-like melancholia that had begun to weigh her down.
She spoke about gratitude, how lucky she is, and yet there lurked a lingering
despair about growing old. What she can't do anymore, what she sees in the
mirror, how she doesn't sleep well.
A year ago I lived a couple miles away from my mother. Like many seniors, she
lives alone. She used to reside in a 55+ community where she organized football
pools, bridge games, and an assortment of social gatherings. She hated watching
the ambulances pull up to the door. She hated hearing about another friend
heading out on their final ride to the hospital. The community kept raising the
rent and her fixed income wasn't changing - and so she moved. My sister and husband,
with a deep and loving generosity, invested in a single level, ground floor
condo nearby - and that's now where my mom resides. Her bridge partners come
over on Tuesdays and she joins her lady friends at the local Ixtapa restaurant
for happy hour.
I am not trying to condense all the facets of my mother into the above
paragraph - goodness, no. I'm pulling out small moments and noticing how
they've painted a picture in my own mind - what I've ignored, what I have not
been able to deny. Perhaps by moving farther away, my time with her has become
more intentional. Perhaps I've witnessed for myself how hard it can be to
confront an aging body and mind. I see within her the deep well of grief; how
hard it is to be the last woman standing and witness for the passing of too
many loved ones. I see her desire to be held and loved, to tend and nurture. I
see the fierce independence, the intelligence, and the frustration with a
ever-changing technical world that won't let her feel competent.
Thinking about my mother is juxtaposed with changing dynamics in my own life.
Where once I was the one who married and moved away, now my son and his wife
have done so as well. This is the first holiday season that he won't be here
for at least some small part of our family gathering. As happy as I am for him
and the choices that he's made for his life, I still miss him. The traditions
and rituals that are indelibly written in my heart this time of year are only
special in relationship to those I spend time with - my family and loved ones.
So I feel his absence acutely with the full understanding that THIS is the
future. This is the empty nest. Where he is for the holidays is not about how
much he loves me - its about the fact that his heart has expanded and loves
others. I love his extended family too. No, its not a lack of love or care - it
simply is a reality of adult children doing exactly what you want them to do:
find love, be happy, and live a wholehearted life.
How many times did I, as a young married woman, head to another part of the
state for a holiday? I moved - and took two beloved grandchildren with me. And
during all of those choices - while I knew that my folks were going to miss me
and mine - my husband and I made choices for our immediate family, not our
extended family and certainly not taking into account what our parents wanted.
My attention was focused on my marriage, the well being of my children, health
insurance, good schools, careers. Exactly what I would want my own children to
put first before my desires.
It's sitting here on the other side of those life decisions with my kids that
brings home to me how poignant those moments were for my parents. I can
empathize now in a way that I never let myself then. I had to steel myself
against their anguish when we left California for the job in Washington. I
didn't have time for the long phone conversations or shared vacations of my
younger self. I had to make choices that didn't take their emotional happiness
into account.
And I'm ambivalent about that. I kind of wish I had been better able to see and
listen - even when I wouldn't change the choices that I made. I wish that my
knee jerk reaction to hearing how my parents were sad or missed me - hadn't
been a defensive guilt that I had let them down. I used to think that my mother
was the master of all martyrs and knew just what to say to make me feel guilty.
I think she often just told me how she felt and I immediately felt she was
telling me that I was intentionally hurting her. I didn't know how to hear her
feelings of disappointment and simply acknowledge them without taking
responsibility for those feelings. I didn't know how to hold the tension
between what I chose as wife and mother with being a daughter, sister, and
sometimes a friend.
It is a tension. A thread that pulls us all together into a large extended
family. In-laws, children, marriages, grandparents, partners. Add in careers,
friends, health, new life, death, illness, geographic locations. Sometimes that
thread has no elasticity. I think our culture - especially as a woman of my
generation - has taught me that I must be the one to manage all those tensions
all the time. Guilt, remorse, saying "I should have, could have, ought to
have" - make the familial ties tender and raw.
But that's changing now that I'm on the other side of raising my kids - and
watching them head off into their adult lives. It's changing as I listen to my
mom talk about her day. She takes me on a journey into the twilight - the
wisdom, the pain, the astonished frustration of aging in today's world. I want
to be there for her on that path. I also want to share with my own children how
much I miss them - and walk them through to the knowing that they having
nothing to feel guilty for - that love and caring for each other, missing each
other - is never a bad thing. I miss my son right now because I have such
happy memories of all our wonderful times together. That's a delightful,
precious truth.
Just as my mother and father missed me. I was a delightful, precious child to
them too.
Being a bright light in someone else's life can feel like a burden - but what
if I accept it and simply let it be a gift of love? If I can do that, maybe I
can show my own kids how it’s done - so they never feel that love is an
unwieldy burden or an uncomfortable responsibility.
Love stretches, it holds - even when it brings tears or loneliness or grief.
Even when there is laughter and joy.
You are a bright light in someone else's heart. Let that settle in.
Tuesday, December 20, 2016
The Elasticity of Love
Labels:
Aging,
empty nest,
Relationship
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What a beautiful post. You constantly amaze me, even after all these years.
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