GROWING UP AND GROWING DOWN
For the past twenty years I have spent a June week on Nantucket with my mother and my kids. (Pastels and scrimshaw are not my husband’s cup of tea.) Those annual trips became, like height marks on the kitchen door, a measure of my children’s growing up. Our bike-riding history reflects their progress from one plateau of independence to the next. In the early years I left the baby at the cottage with my mother, and pedaled gingerly along with my toddler strapped into a child seat behind me. We graduated to small bikes and short rides. I still smile at the memory of how we must have looked for a year or two, the proud mother riding ahead with two furiously pedaling goslings in a staggering row behind. My favorite stage was also the shortest lived: when we were confident cyclists on ten-mile tours, one or another pulling ahead and meeting up at predetermined rest stops to compare notes on the ride so far.
Soon, though, I was left in the dust. My children would disappear over the horizon, sometimes doubling back to make sure I was still okay or heading off into town on their own. While I kept pedaling, they moved on to scooters and dune-riding in a rented jeep – it all went by so fast. I now bike alone.
This summer I realized that while I was concentrating on how my kids were growing up, I had missed the evidence that my mother was growing down. In my recollections she was a constant ingredient in the Nantucket experience - an enthusiastic browser in the tourist shops; a devotee of Aunt Leah’s fudge; and events manager, spending hours combing the local paper for auctions, star-gazing, and amateur theater productions. She was always fascinated by new information about the island’s whaling history. Then she wasn’t.
Looking back, I now see that somewhere along the way she stopped driving the car to meet us at our biking destination. Somewhere else along the way, I began to feel discomfort at leaving her at the beach with the kids while I went grocery shopping. Her walk slowed, and the cobblestones threw her off balance. Then last year I left her in a shop picking out souvenirs for her friends, and when I came back she was standing where I had left her, staring into the same basket of bracelets.
This year she didn’t know where she was. “Whose house is this?” she asked over and over. “Where are the kids?” As the days went by she occasionally recognized the place, and when she didn’t, it must have been somewhere in her mind, because she kept suggesting that we “go to Nantucket for a visit soon.” She sat on the deck happily sniffing the damp air and watching the trees blow in the wind. She no longer expressed any interest in going into town, and when we went out to dinner, she seemed agitated by the unfamiliar sounds and crowds. But she enjoyed the meals we cooked back at the house and lingered over the sweet corn until the last kernel was nibbled. She didn’t know where she was, but she was happy to be there.
As the ferry pulled out of the harbor on our last morning, we joined the other passengers on deck tossing pennies into the gray water lapping at the Brant Point lighthouse – a wish and a promise to return to the island. Only this time my mother wasn’t at the railing; she was inside looking placidly out the window. We each threw a penny for her. But I doubt she will be back.
The fog closed in as we headed out to the open sea, and I thought about growing up and growing down. My mother is drifting toward a deeper and deeper fog. My kids, on the other hand, are heading away from the shore of their childhoods toward a new world; it is as though they are still on their bikes, way ahead of me in the salty mist – on their own expeditions of discovery.
Soon, though, I was left in the dust. My children would disappear over the horizon, sometimes doubling back to make sure I was still okay or heading off into town on their own. While I kept pedaling, they moved on to scooters and dune-riding in a rented jeep – it all went by so fast. I now bike alone.
This summer I realized that while I was concentrating on how my kids were growing up, I had missed the evidence that my mother was growing down. In my recollections she was a constant ingredient in the Nantucket experience - an enthusiastic browser in the tourist shops; a devotee of Aunt Leah’s fudge; and events manager, spending hours combing the local paper for auctions, star-gazing, and amateur theater productions. She was always fascinated by new information about the island’s whaling history. Then she wasn’t.
Looking back, I now see that somewhere along the way she stopped driving the car to meet us at our biking destination. Somewhere else along the way, I began to feel discomfort at leaving her at the beach with the kids while I went grocery shopping. Her walk slowed, and the cobblestones threw her off balance. Then last year I left her in a shop picking out souvenirs for her friends, and when I came back she was standing where I had left her, staring into the same basket of bracelets.
This year she didn’t know where she was. “Whose house is this?” she asked over and over. “Where are the kids?” As the days went by she occasionally recognized the place, and when she didn’t, it must have been somewhere in her mind, because she kept suggesting that we “go to Nantucket for a visit soon.” She sat on the deck happily sniffing the damp air and watching the trees blow in the wind. She no longer expressed any interest in going into town, and when we went out to dinner, she seemed agitated by the unfamiliar sounds and crowds. But she enjoyed the meals we cooked back at the house and lingered over the sweet corn until the last kernel was nibbled. She didn’t know where she was, but she was happy to be there.
As the ferry pulled out of the harbor on our last morning, we joined the other passengers on deck tossing pennies into the gray water lapping at the Brant Point lighthouse – a wish and a promise to return to the island. Only this time my mother wasn’t at the railing; she was inside looking placidly out the window. We each threw a penny for her. But I doubt she will be back.
The fog closed in as we headed out to the open sea, and I thought about growing up and growing down. My mother is drifting toward a deeper and deeper fog. My kids, on the other hand, are heading away from the shore of their childhoods toward a new world; it is as though they are still on their bikes, way ahead of me in the salty mist – on their own expeditions of discovery.




3 Comments:
Dear Suzanne,
I have read your blogs for a long time, although I have never posted a comment before.
I am touched by your blog on Growing Up & Growing Down.
I am a 49yo.
While my mom is not quite in the same place as yours, she is beginning to drift into the uncertainty of growing old. My girls (29,27,21) are all grown and have moved out of the nest several years ago. I feel an emptiness in my life like "fog". I look at the past and future, but somehow am just stuck in the present fog and not sure how to get out. Some days I feel like I am growing up and others growing down. I remeber your blog on Mother's and Daughter's, the part where you mention that you felt your mother never knew who you were, not sure that you made the effort to enlighten her. I too have had this same experience. So as my mother ages I almost feel like a distant participant in her care. I have such a very different relationship with my daughters, more intimate, more of a friendship. That I did not experience with my own mother.
I love my mother none the less, and will care for her as needed.
I feel as if I am chasing my girls and carrying my mom at the same time.
I am married. I first married at 17 and was married for 22 years, then my husband left me. We were divorced for 5 years, then remarried. We have been remarried for 3 years. He is not supportive in my relationship with my mom, nor my girls (which are his daughters too) so that makes me feel even more alone.
Thank you for your inspiration.
Sincerely,
Becka
Believe me, Becka, there are lots of women lost in the fog of responsibilities to the generations on both sides of us. We all know - but don't always act on the knowledge - that we can't do much about the circumstances closing in on us, but we can do something about how we take care of ourselves. As Gloria Steinem has said recently: It is time to revise the Golden Rule and start doing unto our selves as we have been doing unto others.
Along with Becka, I'm also enjoying my 'Suzanne' moments and always look forward to your topics.
This is timely - I discovered today that my father has eased into congestive heart failure, my mom is his caregiver and I have become her 'ear'. I have son's who are trying to nail down what they want to do for their careers and lives - we try to tell them that this is a process - not an endgame. My husband is recovering from a head injury and trying to adjust to his new self - as am I. My brother is an attentive son and father of 4 who is dealing with the same issues as I am.
All this to say that I think we are all just really trying to do the best we can. What choice do we have? We care for them all, but, we also need to care for ourselves; and part of that is not beating ourselves up when we don't or can't always be the best daughter, the best mother, wife, friend - whatever. It is good enough to do the best that we can and let ourselves off the hook.
I am working hard at buying into the idea of living in the present and doing the best I can at this moment and not borrow regret, the what if's...
So, best of luck to ALL of us!
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