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The
Case for Young Mothers
By Tiffany Lewis
The other day at the park I befriended an elderly Spanish-speaking
woman babysitting twin toddlers. We conversed back
and forth and she watched me frolic around with my two
boys. As she was leaving she pointed and asked,
"La hermana?"
"Oh no," I said, assuming she was referring
to my two-year-old. "He's a boy."
She shook her head. "No – you.
Are you their big sister?"
I laughed. "No, I'm their mother!"
"Ahh!" she exclaimed,
"but you are just a baby!"
Which is, I must admit, entirely true. I often feel
that I am simply playing an extended version of make-believe
"house," only my kitchen set is much bigger
and the pizza isn't plastic. These little boys running
around are simply life-size dolls, except the dirty diapers,
sadly, are very real.
I have tremendous respect for women who decide to have
their first child at 50. I honestly wonder how they
do it. I'm a relatively fit, energetic person, but
by the end of the day I'm usually lying on the floor,
exhausted.
With these older mothers, where does their liquid energy
come from?
Mine comes from sugar cereals and chocolate chips stashed
in the freezer. These are things you can't eat once you're
All Grown Up. And here's another confession: When
no one is looking, sometimes I drink the milk right out
of the carton.
I elicit stares wherever I go, this funny young mother
who actually seems happy. People assume that because I
am young I must have stumbled into motherhood by accident.
And I must not be very bright. On my first visit with
my OB/GYN in Miami he asked about
my highest level of education. A look of surprise came
over his face when I told him I have a bachelor's degree.
"In what?" he asked incredulously. As I was
leaving my appointment he gave me a kiss on the cheek
(he's Chilean, so he's allowed to do that) and said, "Ah,
my grandmother had six children by your age, but you,
you seem so young."
And I am. But that's the beauty of it. I'm
a kid raising kids. I dance and sing to Raffi.
I'm the only mother at the park who munches on goldfish
crackers and sips juice boxes along with her kids.
I get just as excited about Dr. Seuss as my 2-year-old.
Sometimes I throw tantrums. I probably deserve to
go to "timeout" occasionally.
I love browsing the toy section at Target and playing
Legos with my son. I make
a mess of my food at dinner (I could really use one of
those catch-all bibs). I don't like picking up after
myself – the boys' room is a toy tornado; mine is an explosion
of books and papers.
I need that daily nap almost more than my kids, and snack
time is my favorite time of day. We sit on the rug, my
boys and I, scattering cracker crumbs everywhere. We roll
and run, and I don't have to worry about pulling a muscle
or cracking a rib.
And because my husband and I are young, we are also poor.
We have absolutely nothing of value in our house. Our
kids climb all over the couch, puke on the rug, color
on our comforter. I grew up in a family where crayon murals
on the wall were an outlet for creativity. I want
my kids to know that they're more important than a few
pieces of cloth and wood glued together. Things are replaceable;
childhood is not. I feel bad for children who live in
homes resembling museums, where the only thing they're
allowed to play with is their toys. Since when did children
want to play with toys? They'd rather dissect the vacuum
or gnaw on the phone.
Now, don't get me wrong. I have several 40-year-old friends
who are brand-new mothers. And they are wonderful
mothers. I just don't like feeling this collective sense
of societal guilt for not plunging ahead with my career,
as if I'm the one doing things backwards. Why should
I spend my energetic young years sitting in a cubicle
until I am worn out, and then decide to have kids?
To me, it seems counterintuitive.
I love being a mother while I still have an ounce of energy,
while I still have most of my teeth, and before the gray
hairs set in. I want to kick my heels as high as
my kids when we swing, not sit on a bench and crochet.
I want to sing "Nephi's Courage" with as much
vigor and vim as the Sunbeams.
Because no matter our age, we're all learning as we go,
tripping and stumbling our way through this fantastical
ride called motherhood. Only I'd rather not do it with
a walker. I'd rather do it in pigtails.
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© 2004 Meridian
Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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| About
the Author: |
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Tiffany
Lewis is the exhausted and proud mother of two active young boys,
Jackson (21/2) and Addison (approaching 1
year). They live in Miami Beach, Florida, where her husband, Seth,
works for The Miami Herald. They have not been hit by a hurricane
… yet.
Tiffany grew
up all over the country, most recently in Austin, Texas, and received
a bachelor’s degree in journalism from BYU. She and her husband
fell in love over the newsroom copy machine. They spent a glorious
summer doing internships in Washington, D.C. After graduating, they
moved to Miami, the last place on earth they thought they would
ever live.
Tiffany spends
the majority of her time hopping between the beach, the park, the
library, and the grocery store. Her stroller has already exceeded
the 200,000-mile marker. When the boys are asleep, she writes or
reads, and sometimes she cleans.
One of the things
that has helped Tiffany survive the rigors of motherhood is the
knowledge that there are millions of other mothers living a parallel
existence: with sleepless nights, piles of diapers, toilet paper
trails, temper tantrums and, of course, the joy of knowing you’re
doing the most important thing in the world. Happy mothering!
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