For the most part, I attempt to keep a positive attitude about rearing four females. It is not easy. I hated it when older women with crinkled lips, a voice two pitches lower than Lauren Bacall's, drooping, shrivelled breasts, and permanently furrowed brows would feel the need in line at the market, upon seeing all my daughters to warn me: "You just wait until they get older. My boys were so much easier. They'll make you crazy." There would my girls stand: ribbons in their smoothly brushed blond heads, the large bow of their lips stretched into a smile, revealing their pearly-perfect teeth, enormous blue eyes, blinking up at them, and they tell me this crap? I wanted to pinch their weltered bosom and wring their puckered mouths.
This is the hardest thing I have ever done. Ever. Ever. Ever. I refuse to think that rearing any child of either sex is easier than the other. It can't be; to do this job correctly will lay you flat on your back. It will stress you; frustrate you; and steal your very heart without you even noticing. And just when you think you finally have it together, something else will come along and challenge your pithy smugness. I have been kept humble and been humiliated. I have endured the delivery of four human beings from my very body, dealt with swollen leaking, painfully engorged breasts, been bitten, puked on, pooped on, gone without sleep, and many material things. But those are nothing to helping my two adolescent daughters know themselves and know this world in which they live; to understand the frailties of both themselves and their fellow human beings; to keep that in context with our religious beliefs; to help them learn to establish boundaries that are healthy and when and how to let someone else know them; to learn the gracious gift of charity- that is, to examine one's motives and intentions before reacting. I wish I could shove them all back in, carrying the weight of their bodies in extra girdth. Surely the stress gained in my body would be reaped in the relief of my soul?
More and more, I am finding that this making of them is becoming the making of me.
Posted by Rae at February 14, 2005 06:00 PMSo well written Rae. Rings true from here, though the perspective is different.
Posted by: Greg at February 15, 2005 11:17 AMYeah, I don't get it either. Ask any schoolteacher what they'd rather have, a roomful of girls or a roomful of boys?
Posted by: jeff at February 15, 2005 01:16 PMOK, you know I couldn't leave this one alone. I too don't see that either sex would be easier to raise. I only have one sex, and that sex gives me a run for my money (interesting pun intended). Each has their difficulties, I am sure. I love my boys, but don't think I haven't watched a mother hold the hand of a quiet, beautiful, blue-eyed little girl, clad in the latest Gymboree ensemble (down to the socks) and looked at my own offspring in his Spiderman underwear and cape, black rubber boots, sans shirt, sporting the latest haircut courtesy of Dad and wonder what it might be like!!
Posted by: Special K at February 16, 2005 04:17 PMMaybe I didn't express myself clearly: I don't think either sex is easier- rather I think rearing human souls with demanding little bodies, and sometimes spiteful tongues can kick anyones a$$. I would just get angry when those women would tell me how much better their male children were than their females and how they fortune-told (?) that mine would be exactly like theirs.
Posted by: Rae at February 16, 2005 07:22 PMI didn't write it very well, but I only meant that I could identify with you that raising children (no matter their sex) is difficult and stressful, not to mention heartwrenching and rewarding. Parenting, like nearly everything else, always looks greener on the other side of the fence. Sorry if my comment seemed insensitive, that truelly is not what I meant.
I shall go take my foot out of my mouth and stick my head in the oven.
Missin' ya!
Oh, shaw, K. No big deal. I am just emotional and generally ungrateful this part of the year every year anyway. Of course, those female hormonal flucuations aren't helping me at all.
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