Judgy people have irritated me today, but first I have to get this out of my system.
FINALLYMERANDMCDREAMYGOTITRIGHT. THANKYOU!
I love a fairy tale ending. I couldn't be happier about my Thursday night TV experience. Except for the candle question. Where did she get all those candles? What, she just ran to Walmart and was all, 6000 bag candles please and the guy in the blue vest loaded the cases in her hatchback? I dispute that one person could get that many bag candles to burn at one time without a television crew to help them. The first candles would burn through their bags and start a meadow fire long before the last candles were lit. Even with this obvious plot flaw, sigh, beautiful. I'd sworn to give Grey's up if they failed to get together and I can now watch another year.
On to mean, parent-judgers. A friend of mine's 18-month-old has a mohawk. It's intentional, Dad has a mohawk too. A total stranger approached her in a store and asked how she could do that to her baby. AND THEN, this woman said that my friend was 'asking for her son to grow up and be one of those people.' Sounds ominous, doesn't it? Those people. Mohawk people? Because everyone knows about those mohawk people. Terrible, the way they're always up to no good, flashing those mohawks around. (I do really like the word, mohawk.)
Her story caused me to have a post-mother-judging-stress-disorder relapse related to an incident that occurred at a certain Mexican restaurant last year. I know you've all heard it before, but I'm going to tell it again because it haunts me.
In a desperate bid to get out of the house last winter (I'm talking February 2007 here, oh yes, I've held a grudge on this one), we took our two eighteen-month-old children to a local Mexican place for dinner. Ess had been home with us for only about four months and she was throwing vicious, outrageous temper tantrums regularly during meals, especially if anything sweet had the audacity to, you know, come to a natural end by being eaten. We agreed in advance that it was my turn to leave the restaurant with her if any part of the meal offended her by ending.
Desserts' end offended her deeply and she let us and everyone else in a three mile radius know about it. As arranged, I picked her up, carried her out to the minivan and buckled her in her car seat. For the record, it wasn't a fun trip through the restaurant. Conspicuous, pregnant white mom hauling screaming black child, even more noticeable than your average, oh so fun, restaurant toddler scene. Away from the offensive eaten dessert, she quieted. As I wiped her nose and talked to her, I noticed that she stank. I also realized I had left HSSH with a baby, two booster seats and a huge diaper bag to carry.
This is the part where I do something dumb. Recall, pregnant, tired, caring for two babies already, one of whom has known me for only four months. It hadn't been an easy four months. I locked the car and ran back in for the diaper bag. Half way across the restaurant dining room, a woman (notice I was nice here, I didn't say she-bitch from hell) stood up and yelled at me. She threatened to call the police if I didn't return to my car immediately. Loudly. Making sure everyone in the restaurant knew what a good citizen she was being.
Now before you go all 'serves you right' on me, I'm not defending the decision to run in for the bag. It was poor. I do not condone leaving children in cars - I mean unless you leave the window down and they have a bowl of water. Kidding. But on a scale of forgetting a good night kiss to abandoning baby in dumpster, I think this was on the lower end of the worst mothering of all time o'meter.
Her interest in my daughter's safety, I don't object to. What inspires my deep and abiding hatred about this incident is that this woman's main motivation was not my daughter, it was humiliating me, the mother. From her self-righteous pedestal of judgement, she felt, I'm sure, in the right to call me out in front of a room full of strangers. But, here's the thing. I WAS going back to my car immediately.
There was no need to threaten to call the police to get me back to my car. She could have ensured that the situation was safe for my daughter just as effectively by quietly watching me and making sure I went directly back to the car. If I had sat down and ordered a margarita, she could have just called the police. See how that resolves so nicely, without any soul crushing public beat down of an already tired, frazzled and on the edge mother?
Every time something brings this back up in my mind I get angry all over again. Not just for me but for every mother who has had a difficult situation made immeasurably worse by some know it all boob who probably doesn't have children because if she did have children, surely she would have just an iota of sympathy for how hard it can be and how easy it is to make a bad decision in the heat of the moment. She is seeing a snapshot of parenting under pressure and making the sweeping public judgement: TERRIBLE MOTHER. Mother worthy of police interference. How cruel.
I am a pretty confident person and that night bothers me over a year later. I want to travel back in time and tell that restaurant full of people about how hard I was working on bonding with my daughter, how I only buy organic milk and I stress about every decision I make for my precious kids. I want to tell them that I was tired. I want to tell that woman something too - that there are mothers out there struggling with serious problems like depression and her nastiness could easily have been directed at someone less able to deal with it.
What if she had dealt with the situation differently? What if she had been kind? What if, if she had really felt that strongly about the level of risk, she had walked outside and stood by the car until I returned? Isn't there enough guilt built into parenting without inflicting it on each other? Those parenting books we're all reading? The ones about using empathy to make your point instead of showing anger and frustration or employing threats and sarcasm? We can use them on each other too.
Friday, May 23, 2008
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15 comments:
I. Am. So. Sorry.
And yes, she could have easily conveyed her concern in a quiet - not so humiliating way. I'm angry just thinking of her nerve. My friend had kids before I did and I remember her worrying about what other parents might think of her. At the time I thought she was just being silly and letting insecurities build up.. But now that I have children I see that it is a HORRIBLY REAL THING. Not only is motherhood exhausting..trying to mother up to the standards of everyone is even more exhausting. What's really funny is that if these people would spend their time worrying over and intervening on the behalf of actual 'abused, neglected' children our world would be a better place.
A while back I gave both my boys mohawks..they were soooo cute. My husband HATED them. He was afraid that people might think they were little rebels. My feeling was that if any idiot was idiot enough to make a judgement call on someone under 5 based on a haircut they can jump off a freakin bridge. My oldest went to his father's for the weekend and came back with no mohawk. Apparently his father (who is actually somewhat of a rebel himself) could not handle the two disapproving looks he got over the weekend. Wus.
Ashley S.
Mohawks rock. My 6 year old's hair grows that way and he loves to make it official with a little dippity do.
Judgy judge judge...I feel your pain. I was walking down the street in downtown boston a few weeks ago (8pm+ a little) and noticed a van parked on the street with a bouncing little boy (1ish) strapped into a seat (wide awake)...no pharmacy, deli, childcare nearby etc. I promptly panicked and slowed the pace of my gaggle of girlfriends (all mommies too)looking for the poor little one's mom who had obviously been abducted by the geese in the park or hit by an errant taxi. Much to my surprise his daddy came out of an office building and judgy judged me for being concerned and slowing. He actually mocked me..."ohh baby in the car" he said while he did a little hands waving in the air cartoon jig. arrrgghhhh
Thanks for the visit earlier this week too. Nice ta meetcha.
Oh and on the McDreamy thing...My husband (aka the buzz kill) laughed at the end and said...Now he gets in a wreck and dies/forgets her. I laughed until I thought about it and came to the conclusion that the writers probably would do that to me!
How sexy was Alex/Izzy's last scene? Alex CRYING?! Are they trying to tease me?
Anon - I know! And Izzy being so much less annoying for a change. And Christina catching a break. And George becoming a man instead of a whiny kid. And a valid, honest, tastefully portrayed same sex relationship! I'm choked up with happiness.
Shannon - that story line would be beyond cruel. I might have to become a crazy fan type and write a letter.
And, thanks for the judgy support. It feels good to know I'm not alone.
YES Meredith and Derek!!! Woo hoo! I'm with you on the candles, too. I mean seriously.
You have to watch out for those mohawk people, I hear things about them.
I am really sorry that she did that to you. You did not deserve that. She's an evil whore.
that made me angry just reading it! I'm so sorry that bitch of a woman did that.
I cried at the ending of Grey's last night, I was never much of a fan of Meridith and McDreamy but that ending made me love the two.
Grey's first...I loved the ending, too, but I was thinking the same thing! Where and how did she get all those candles?
Your story just makes my blood boil. There was absolutely no reason to embarrass you. A story hit the news here around Christmas when a mother was ARRESTED for pulling up in front of a Walmart store (in that wide drop-off lane), and leaving her baby asleep in the car while she walked 20 feet with her other small child to drop a donation into the Salvation Army bucket.
I understand the concern, but it goes too far sometimes.
I have had my fair share of being judged in my time. And my babies have never even had mohawks.
I too consider myself a strong person, but ooh how I hate judgmental people! Your story made me all frustrated, I just wanted to take a time machine and go back there and yell at that woman. But you know what? I don't think I need to. Because I am sure 99% of the people in that restaurant, especially if they were parents, will have seen the situation for what it was. I bet when they went home that night they were talking about her, not you.
I wish I had been writing a blog when this happened. After all of your comments, I may be able to let this go! Sometimes you just need someone else to call your mean judger an evil whore for you. They totally were talking about her.
I read that Walmart story. Unbelievable.
Sister, I have been there!! My youngun' is notorious for throwing fits in public, especially when we have to leave something that she's enjoying. Which is pretty much, you know, every time we go out. (And FYI, it's not because she's spoiled, thank you very much. Not that anyone would ever bother to assume otherwise. Because, you know, when kids throw fits it's because they're spoiled by their horrible, awful, terrible parents.)
At one point it seemed like I could never go to Target without dealing with a meltdown. I'll never forget one of her therapists giving us this bit of advice for fits that occur in Target: If she melts down, go to the feminine hygiene aisle. No one will try to "help" you in feminine hygiene. You know what? He was right. Not a single soul ever offered one single bit of unhelpful advice while we were on the floor surrounded by pads and tampons. :-)
Truly, I love you guys. I need to post more traumatic embarrassing moments from my past. It's healing.
I will so be visiting the feminine hygiene aisle of a Target in the near future.
Oh Grey's was fabulous alright! Talk about cliffhangers all over the place. But I have to say, Poor Rose.
It irritates me thinking about the nasty women in both stories. Mohawks are cool on kids, and they love them so who the heck cares!
The judging mommy makes me mad. I don't know how I would have handled that situation, either of them really. Walking away just doesn't seem to do them justic.
What is it with other mothers? Why can't women be more supportive of each other?
I was in a public bathroom one time with my oldest daughter when she was about 6 months. She had a scratch on her cheek from a stray fingernail. Some woman standing next to me goo-gooed over her, "Oh, what a cute baby," blah blah. Then she says, "Too bad about the scratch," then grabs my daughter's hand and shows me one of her fingers and says, "This is the nail that did it. You haven't trimmed it yet."
(Now I'm flashing back to a time when a stranger started to put her nasty Lee Press On fingernail in my younger daughter's mouth to sooth her crying when we were in line somewhere. I pulled her away quickly and said no thank you.)
I believe in Washington it is perfectly legal to leave your children in the car as long as the car isn't running and as long as the weather doesn't present a dangerous situation for the child. I leave my kids in the car now and then when I have to run in somewhere quickly. I do always wonder who's watching, but seriously--if I'm just grabbing something from the 7-11, why on earth would I unbuckle an almost 3 year old and carry a 20-pound baby in her car seat? At some point common sense has to prevail.
I really didn't know what to comment here, but this has been bothering me since I read it, which I believe was the day you posted it - so about a week now.
This reminds me of the time that I was running all over town trying to find gloves for my son, who was 3 at the time. It was 8:30 at night and as it was, I worked 50-60 hour work weeks and hardly saw him.
I drove from one parking lot to another with him on my lap - JUST like my dad did to me when I was a young girl. A woman actually called the cops and told them I was endangering the welfare of my child. THAT was the call they got.
People just make me so mad sometimes.
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