The trials of parenting
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MAXINE COHEN
The phone rang. It was my daughter, Barbara, calling to ask if she
could spend the night. Her apartment had been painted that day, and
the stench was driving her crazy.
“Sure,” I said. “Come on over. Maggie [the dog] and I would love
to see you.”
I hoped we’d have a nice night together, not always a given. I’d
like to think of Barbara as grown-up; she is 25, but she is not. She
is still very much a teenager -- head-strong and temperamental. She
knows everything and doesn’t want any help or input from anyone,
especially her mother.
I joke that Barbara is my porcupine girl. Not so funny really. The
get-away-from-me quills spike out without a word being spoken.
I was glad the evening went well.
The next morning she came downstairs, dressed for work, to ask if
what she was wearing looked OK.
It really didn’t look OK. It needed a different shirt. Barb
already knew this, which was why she was asking me in the first
place, but she was running late for work and hoping I’d think it was
good enough.
What do I say? She’d only brought a few items of clothing with
her.
I decided to tell her truthfully what I thought -- the shirt was
the problem -- and to offer to let her borrow one of mine.
So, we stood in the kitchen and discussed the shirt. Iron it? Tuck
it in? Wear it out? Roll up the sleeves? I could see she was getting
more and more upset by the second.
She stomped out and went back upstairs to fish through my closet.
I followed her, making helpful suggestions. Or maybe not so helpful,
because she turned to me -- half-naked and with that
I’m-gonna-do-it-my-way energy that I hate -- and barked, “Don’t say
another word. I don’t want your help. Leave me alone.”
Stop. Think. Recognize that your child is having a problem and
control yourself. Do not add to her anxiety by your own need to help
her to fix it. You should have known better than to follow her
upstairs in the first place. Breathe deeply.
I went downstairs.
In a few minutes, Barbara reappeared, wearing a different shirt,
handbag over her shoulder, ready to go. She came down the stairs and
made a hairpin turn, heading directly for the front door, so that I
couldn’t see what the shirt looked like with the rest of the outfit.
Out she went, slamming the door behind her. I heard the car door
slam and the engine start.
Not two minutes later the phone rang.
“Good-bye, Mom. Have a good day. Thanks for letting me spend the
night.” All said in the sweetest voice imaginable.
I figured Barbara knew that her behavior was inappropriate and
excessive, but she couldn’t contain her anxiety well enough to
control herself. So she acted out and then felt remorseful and wanted
to fix it but was not yet mature enough to be able to take
responsibility and just apologize.
It’s a hard thing to do, to contain yourself and behave
appropriately when you feel overwhelmingly anxious. Just like me
following Barbara upstairs into my closet. How hard I struggled to
contain myself, but that is the work at any stage of life or level of
development.
Barbara is the youngest of my three daughters, almost all raised
and out of the nest by now. And it is sometimes too easy for me to go
to the place where I remember the good parts and drop out the ongoing
struggle of the small, and sometimes not so small, annoyances that
made daily life challenging. But this was a good reminder. It keeps
the experience of raising children fresh and alive and keeps me in
the trenches.
And so the next time a mother or father describes to me his or her
pain and frustration with the ongoing trials of parenting, I will nod
knowingly and humbly, with true empathy in my heart.
* MAXINE COHEN is a Corona del Mar resident and marriage and
family therapist practicing in Newport Beach. She can be reached at
maxinecohen @adelphia.net or at (949) 644-6435.
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