....on Monday the 27th and everyone is still sleeping. It snowed here last night, not a lot, but enough to send Shahob into paroxysms of joy. He really, really loves the snow. Sometimes when I look at him it astonishes me to think that he is my son, that he, this boy who is in the world, who is so clearly already his own person, separate from me and yet not so separate from me, is my son. Last night, Maryam put him to sleep on the couch in the living room while the fire we had built was dying, and when I came back from moving her car to a spot where we won't have to worry about alternate side of the street parking, she was still laying next to him, and she looked up at me and said, "I think he doesn't love me as much as he used to.... He doesn't spend as much time with me; he spends all his time with you." Which is true in part as a matter of practical necessity, not of Shahob's desire, but he is still so firmly attached to her, enmeshed with her--what she said reminded me of something I read in a book I was using when I was first trying to write my book of essays. It was written by a female family therapist and it was in response to the notion that single mothers cannot raise boys into men, that boys need to have a man in the house in order to become "real" or "true" or whatever men. And the writer told this story of a client of hers who was pregnant and had already started crying in anticipation of the child's separation from her, not the fact of giving birth, but the boy's--I think the woman knew the child's sex--independence of his mother, as if the boy would be born, look at her, say, "Thanks very much, but I no longer need you," and walk off into the rest of his life. The writer's point was twofold, about the cultural imperative that boys be men before they are done being boys, becoming indpendent and self-sufficient emotionally and psychologically before they really have the coping mechanisms to do that, and about how women buy into this notion and hurt not only their boy children, but also themselves by denying themselves the connection to their children that they need in their own way as deeply and profoundly as the child does. And it made me think, of course, of my own parenting and my own relationship with Shahob and what I am and am not conscious of along these precise lines. And I am thinking right now how hard it is to look at your own parenting in an objective way, much more difficult, in some ways, than looking at yourself as a lover or a spouse or a friend, because the child is so inarticulate about your relationship with him or her. There is no way, at least not until he or she gets a good deal older and more mature, that he or she can be for you the mirror that an equal, at least in terms of age, etc., can potentially be. Because, of course, it is not the case that lovers or friends or whatever are by definition your equal, which is a deeply painful realization to come to, but that is a subject for another time.
Monday, December 27, 2004
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