To the ‘nontraditional’ moms
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Sue Clark
Now that traditional Mother’s Day has come and gone, I’d like to
honor the host of kind adults who functioned as surrogate mothers for
my daughter, as I (literally) worked my way through 18 years of
single motherhood.
The first and most deserving of respect is my publicity-shunning
ex-husband, Laura’s Dad. (He will just hate this!) Dave has been a
50% physical-custody parent for the 15 years of our divorce. Since we
lived three blocks from each other, we had it easier than some
co-parents. He attended all school functions with us; we sat as a
family. There was no pointless sniping and we both worked hard to
keep our daughter as the focus, instead of dwelling on negatives.
I still remember my first single Mother’s Day, when he sent me a
card saying, “You’re a good Mom.” He was her soccer coach for years
and helped her pursue school projects and all her personal goals in
an enthusiastic, if less dramatic manner than I did. My daughter once
observed, “I got the best of you and Dad; for example, I got Dad’s
calmness.”
There have been many other people who deserve “Nontraditional Mom”
status in our family over the years:
Dave’s sister Marilyn, who watched our child for the first scary
months as I went back to work as a school counselor, and gave me the
daily updates along the lines of, “She’s fine, don’t worry.”
Miss Chrissy at Christ Church by the Sea Preschool, who became
Laura’s idol and sent her a postcard when she moved to Arizona
Genevieve, one of Laura’s favorite baby-sitters, who not only won
her heart with her humor and joie de vivre, but sent her letters from
camp encouraging her to ‘use the potty,’ at that critical stage of
life.
Beatrice, the mother of one of my daughter’s best friends -- a
devout Christian -- who explained to her children, “We don’t believe
in divorce, but we respect Sue, Laura and Dave’s decision.” Beatrice
spent lots of time with both girls, giving them plenty of time and
stay-at-home mom fun. Laura and I still think of Beatrice, now in San
Luis Obispo, and chant, “Ooh, La, La,” as she did.
Tom, the one-of-a-kind after school teacher for the YMCA in the
1980’s, who read articles (only the silly ones) from the Star and
Enquirer to the kids, taught them guitar, and had a huge dinosaur
with a Barbie hanging out if its mouth in the trailer. He had such a
strong following of kids and parents, that when the YMCA was going to
move him, there was a parent protest. Tom was a walking example of
the need for a worthy salary for day care workers.
John Daffron, first grade teacher who taught by youth exuberance,
and by dressing as a half-man half-woman on Halloween for the
children.
Laura Holmes, a fifth-grade teacher who pulled my child out of a
mindset that she could not pass the Gifted And Talented Education
(also known more simply as “GATE”) test by telling her, “If you don’t
pass that test, there is something wrong the test, not you. This
teacher was one where, on the first day of school, my daughter and
her friends told me, “Mrs. Holmes understands kids.” She and my
daughter still correspond.
Sue Steen and her family, whose oldest daughter knew mine through
sports. Really, this mother was more of a surrogate mom for me. We
had many talks over the years about how I was doing fine as a single
mom and everything was going to be OK.
Laura’s pals, Errol and Sonny -- now retired and living in Alabama
-- functioned as doting grandpas to a little girl who didn’t have
any, and as beloved fathers to me.
I know there have been so many more teachers and coaches who have
been in loco parentis over the years. These people don’t get the
greeting cards or flowers -- at least not on the traditional day --
but I want to send them one today.
None of us said to ourselves as children, “I want to be a single
mother when I grow up”; yet circumstances and complex issues
parachuted some of us into that territory. To the guides and mentors
along the way, I say “Happy Mothers’ Day. We remember you and all you
did for our child.”
* SUE CLARK is a Newport Beach resident and a high school guidance
counselor at Creekside High School in Irvine.
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