Tuesday 15 May 2007

Frayed Mums and Jagged Edges

Sunday was a streaming, sodden day which either caused or reflected my mood, I’m not sure which. We went to a christening; it’s a convoluted story as to how we came to be there, since we don’t really know the parents very well, but it’s enough to say that we were obliged to go. I’m usually seduced by the ritual at such events, charmed by the welcoming of a new life, the family celebrations, the future all bouncing and rosy. This time, I felt uncomfortable and out of place; one of those social events where you don’t really belong, can’t relax with accustomed ease into old friendships and family groups. I’m adept at using my children as a shield on such occasions – babies are the most useful, since you can sit and feed them, change them, gurgle at them in privacy, safe in your charmed circle of two. Older children are a bit more tricky – I had no hopes for my eight year old, who was immediately swept into a crowd of children with no nod to the niceties of small talk, but I’d hoped my three year old and I could have a mutual cling. She who snakes herself around my leg whenever I’m feeling chatty and confident, however, had a sudden and unwelcome taste for independence and ran after her brother with a toss of her head, leaving me trailing pathetically behind. R got involved in one of those male conversations that was all about numbers; "how much? how fast? how many?" He normally hates conversation like that – the jostling, the back-slapping, the one-upmanships, the sly digs. But he’d got drawn in, somewhere along the line, and I was confronted by a sea of broad backs in the kitchen, so I headed off towards the cluster of new babies and their Mums in the sitting room. But this was all sharp edges and bright lipstick, the babies all accessorised beautifully, the Mums somehow managing postnatal power dressing. They all seemed so certain, so confident, so seemingly unfazed by these tiny kicking interlopers into their lives, although I know that can’t really be true. I didn’t have a clue, in those early weeks after my first was born, I remember being almost pathetically pleading towards mothers with older children, sucking up reassurances like a drowning man seeks oxygen. Not so these women, although maybe they were still in denial, still confident that they could return their lives to normal by sheer force of will. They were discussing work, all adamant that a four day week would allow a perfect work-life balance until their children were more independent and they would return full-time – when the kids were, say, 2. It doesn’t work like that, I was silently saying, it’s not so cut and dried, it’s all messy and fluid and your tidy compartments will run into one another with alarming frequency. Children have their own rhythms which won’t always fit into a corporate timetable, their needs will be greater than you can yet know. Maybe that was just my experience, and won’t be theirs, although in my defence I have met scores of women who feel that work gave up on them once they had children, not the other way around. And those friends who have managed to stay firmly on the ladder whilst raising their children have had to grip harder than they could ever have imagined.

Occasional words from their conversation gave me a jolt and reminded me that I was once part of this world – not the milky twilight zone of new babies and night feeds, but a world of business trips and meetings, blackberrys (not the picking kind) and laptops. I can join in, I felt like saying, I’ve got office stories too, I thought I was a player, once. But I’ve become invisible, now, to people who don’t know there’s another world out there, and instead of joining in I could feel myself becoming all fluttery around the babies, like a nervous grandmother. I reminded myself that I gave up social visibility for a softer life of depth and richness. I’ve got to put my toe back in the water again, soon, before the black hole of the overdraft swallows us up. But this time I’m prepared for chaos and mess; straight lines and sharp focus and steely ambition are a thing of the past, now. I’ve never been so happy to get home and sink onto our worn and shabby sofa and shut the door. The world’s still out there, waiting. But it will have to take me as I am, slightly frayed and blurred around the edges.

32 comments:

Posie said...

What a lovely blog and understand totally where you are coming from. I have been in both situations, full time working mum, part time working mum and now stay at home mum. With children you can never get those years of childhood back is the way I see it, they are the most precious of times, and when you really have the time to step out of the work environment you do become aware of how much it 'controls' life, and of material versus nature, and what really is important in life.

Milla said...

I bet you they all sank on the sofas thinking "phewee, got away with that one!" At least I hope they did. Luckily we don't seem to get too many of these PowerMums (shudder) and you're right, where was the grateful lapping at your older-children/wiser ways? A plague of mastitis on the lot of them!

toady said...

You've just so eloquently written what I've been thinking for years. I chose to stay at home , we were skint but me managed. You never get those years back.

Elizabeth Musgrave said...

I know so exactly what you mean and as always you put it so perfectly. I have been entirely stay at home mum suddenly invisible and drowning, part time working mum just about keeping it all together and, only when my children were quite a lot older, suddenly corporate power mum, always feeling a bit bemused by it. Now not quite sure where I am - on the cusp of something probably, althought a rather different cusp from yours.

Kitty said...

I told you sometime back we were having the same life in different counties. You read my blogs and go 'eek' and I read your blogs and nod sagely. And vice versa. Ditto big, swallowing overdraft - don't mention interest rate rises, the air is fraught with tension around here. Ditto work, ditto other mums, ditto small talk... shall I go on or shall we both just shake heads wonderingly?

Eden said...

I know exactly the feeling. You half envy and half scorn their professional life. You half congratulate yourself on owning the real cost and joy of motherhood, and half castigate yourself for having lost a tiny bit of your gloss. Getting back to work is so intimidating, and the thought of not being with your children is hard. I bet those 'power mums' are not so perfect inside as they look. No one is. but your children will always have had the benefit of your time. What a great gift you are giving them.

countrymousie said...

You look far from invisible to me!
My poor daughter outlaw is in this half way world now - three days work - two days at home and it hellishly hard. I think after this weekend with Heiress being so poorly she may give up until she is 5. Not sure.
Blackberrys are almost passe - purpleberrys are so now!!
Great blog again young lady!

Bluestocking Mum said...

What a great...and wise blog SM. I am with you. Been there and could talk, like you with the best of them. But leave 'em to it, that's what I say..
Each to their own, but I wouldn't ever go back to it.

warm wishes
x

Un Peu Loufoque said...

France is the only place I have lived where poeple didnt expect me to throw a child in a creche and return to wotk immedietly. When I say I am a femme de foyer even though edlest is 15 and youngest 6 they all nod as if I am a teribly sensible person instead of a foolish mother, such a relief!!

Fennie said...

Lovely and wistful as always and I know just what you mean about the 'defence' of having your children around at gatherings. Or other people's children come to that. I've often felt more useful and intelligent helping a child to paint or taking time to explain how something works than ever I have engaing in 'adult' conversation.

As for ritual, I'm with you there, especially in old buildings with great hammerbeam roofs and you think of all the generations of women that have passed from todler to crone beneath its unchanging gaze.

Pipany said...

Oh don't you sound like me, Suffolkmum? I just HATE that feeling. Why do we put ourselves through it? I braved the blasted playgroup again today bouyed up by the support of all here and, of course, it was fine as I knew it would be. I know the times of feeling out of our depths don't last, but I do wish they would cease to pop up when we least expect them xx

Westerwitch/Headmistress said...

I was often asked - what do you do, or are you just a mother!!!! I wanted to just be a mother! I ended up running my own children's clothing business instead. I have wroked from home since 1984 - and I never intend to work for anyone ever again . . . .I am a really tough boss, but fair . . .

Jane said...

I found that I became much more ambitious once I had children - it would have to be a pretty amazing job to justify me being away from them.

Unfortunately I found that the job - as you say - gave up on me. I was, to all intents and purposes, demoted - though they couldn't cut the money. I gave it a year and then left to start my own business.

I have found though, that some of the most intimidating, having it all women are the most insecure.

I hide behind other people's children now that mine are growing more independent.

J
x

Inthemud said...

I felt for you in that situation! It 's a feeling I understand too, being outside looking in , a part from the group for thinking differently. They may not be so confident in reality, maybe just a show. But anyway who cares about them. You're a great mum and it doesn't matter what any of them think about work and babies, you've decided to do what s best for your family.
I never gave up work totally , but did very part time when they were younger and have struggled so much to juggle it all, to the detriment of my health, gradually increased as they got older and now full time BUT from home, so best of both worlds.
Such a poignant blog!

Withy Brook said...

As an older Grandmother who had children at a time when working while the children were young was only just taking off - and not at all in the North - please remember that if the yawnong overdraft will allow it, the children are sooo much better if cared for by their mother. I have to admit that I did have a mother's help and was kinder to the brats as a result! My daughter in law has managed to stay at home - makeing jewelry and/or painting to help out. The boys are now 15 and 13 and for some time she has worked part time as a teaching assistant which of course fits in with school terms. My step daughter in law is a full time mother of 2 -nearly 2 and just 1. Obviously some people cannot help working but maybe some of your power mums suffer from guilt feelings. Those sort of people terrify me!

I came to your blog to say that when you ate at Wallington, even though you are so young, the caffe was probably run by Patricia Jennings nee Trevelyan, who played her Northumbrian pipes to entertain the eaters sometimes. Time goes so first that maybe it was already run by the NT when you were there!! She still played in the central hall until recently but I think she has given up now. She is only 92!

DevonLife said...

Oh good blog Mrs Suffolk. As a worker / mum I find myself becoming the chameleon in these situations. with worker mums I'm all work-meetings-ebit, with home mums it's kitchen aids all the way.

Sally Townsend said...

You put it so well and the older they get the more they seem to need you. No-one tells you that though !

Chris Stovell said...

Your blogs are a very honest account of what so many of us feel or have felt - look at the number of women who identify with what you've articulated. Well done and keep going.

muddyboots said...

l suppose l have been lucky, working from home, hubby hasn't missed out either with harry from a very small age wanting to help dad. l do get cross with polititions telling women to get out & work immediately after childbirth. Great blog & very interesting comments.

Blossomcottage said...

I was lucky to work with my first husband from home and then I had masses of time with the children, but I for one think tht you can never repeat those lovely childhood days and its worth every moment of overdraft! We had one pompus friend who was a nurse and she was always pointing the finger at me for not going out to work, she even said at a dinner party one" You have never done a days work in you life!!" I must say getting rid of her was one huge bonus when my ex and I went our seperate ways.I am so glad I have never done a days work in my life!!
Blossom

Stay at home dad said...

Blackberries and laptops, yes; but also getting up before the baby, business trips to nowhere and meetings you forget why you're in halfway through. Those were the days!

Sahd.

Pondside said...

You've obviously struck a chord here Suffolkmum. We women are so hard on one another - the out-of-the-house-workers and the stay-at-home mums. I stayed home with my two and felt very lucky indeed - although it wasn't easy financially. I remember one woman telling me that I had taken the 'easy way' out and that I wasn't a 'risk taker'. HAHA as if staying home on one income, stretching everything at the end of the month and not knowing whether there'd be a job for me to go to when the kids grew up wasn't a HUGE risk!
My grown up son has told me how privilaged he feels to have been raised at home as opposed to in a nursery. That was the best mother's day gift!

Elsie Button said...

that was brilliantly written! i have come across this type of woman you describe and they have made me feel inadequate in the past, but not now, not after reading this! my daughter is 6 months old and people keep asking me when i am going back to work, and i just clam up, don't even want to talk/think about it. i just want to be with my incredible little baby all the time, and not miss a thing.

@themill said...

Fantastically written blog, as always. I had my children in the have it all eighties and I was looked on with disdain by some for choosing to stay at home. It's the hardest job in the world but I have never regretted a day of it. We've had fairly limited holidays, still no central heating and I work like hell, but I just don't get paid for it. As they grow I am holding onto them with open arms and watching them become their own people.
Now to tackle the overdraft!

LITTLE BROWN DOG said...

Excellent blog again, Suffolkmum. So many things I could identify with there.
Yes, it seems Sunday was a teeming wet day all round - we went to Malvern Spring Show, after which we all had to change completely - down to our soaked underwear, and The Boy told me afterwards "I think that was the wettest day of my life!"
I know too well the phenomenon of the Blackberry Mum - suspect a lot of it is something of a coverup. And all that baby-related one-upmumship... (shudder). I wish you had been in my post-natal group - I suspect we could have swapped anxieties, insecurities and moments of wondering what on earth was going on. Instead I had a woman called Angela, who often announced that she was so glad I'd been able to make it - at last she'd found someone who was coping less well than her." Hey, thanks.

JacquiMcR said...

I am a part-time worker and mum of two. As my kids are now in primary school, I work 15hrs over 3 day so that I am out while they are at school and so I don't need childcare.

Pre-school I worked two days a week and then 20hrs over evenings when my hubby was home, again no childcare and a much needed little extra income.

My current job lets me keep up with the outside world but doesn't interfere with my kids lives (other than to pay for extra treats). I think all mothers have their own battles with how they feel about work/kids balance and in the end you can only do your best.

Good luck - jacqui x

Cait O'Connor said...

Your way with words is very special, I love it. You must join a writing group, you would be an asset to them. I wish you lived near ours. I can't recommend a Pat Kavanagh book offhand but will get on the case for you. I am not surprised you have Irish blood; my father's family came over in 1840's ish too so I am stuck there in that side of my tree. My mother was born in the west of Ireland (Kerry).
I think we are all with you on this one. Your children are the luckiest to have you as their mum.
I agree with you about mothering, it is the most important job in the world. In my opinion mothers (or fathers) should stay at home with their children for the first ten years at least, it's not much out of your life and those fast-passing special days will never come again. These 'farmed out' children are psychologically a time bomb waiting to go off when they reach adulthood. But don't get me started......
Love your blog
Caitx

annakarenin said...

It is the governments attitude that pees me off. Not one party recognises any worth in stay at home mothers, we do not exist and are not worthy of their vote.
Single mothers working mothers etc all recognised in some way or form but not us lot,totally ignored for trying to do what we feel is right for us and for our children. I also feel that they are partly responsible for the friction that then develops between the different groups of women all desperately trying to defend their decisions on what route to take and not feel guilty about it.

@themill said...

Here, here AnnaK!

Pig in the Kitchen said...

You put that so well! Have just come across your blog via muddyboots. I am mired in the 'stay at home mum' status, I would sometimes kill for an early-morning latte and pointless meeting. Anyway, must dash have some power-washing to do and some networking washing-up, busy busy busy.
Pigx

CAMILLA said...

Hello SM, thank you for message. I have not been to Bury St Edmunds, but one of my adopted dogs came from that area.
Camilla.x

blueberry hill said...

Hi,

I have just discovered your blog and have only read the last 2 posts but have to add a comment! I was in the rat race for 17 years and gave it up almost 3 years ago. I have no children - I just got married last year - but I now work from home and am my own boss. I can really recommend this. My business started off small with little earnings but has started to mushroom.
If you can, and if you want to , I would really recommend doing something from home - starting now and moving it onwards knowing that one day your persistence will pay off and you can be living a lovely life with your own values.

Off to read more of your blog now!

Annie