WHATEVER COMES, I'M STILL MOM.Byline: TEREZ ROSE IT'S bingo night at my son Jonathan's elementary school elementary school: see school. . He's never played serious bingo before, the kind where adults and children alike hunker down Hun´ker down v. 1. to crouch or squat; to sit on one's haunches. 2. to settle in at a location for an extended period; - also (figuratively) to maintain a position and resist yielding to some pressure, as of public opinion. 3. , armed with stacks of bingo cards, markers and steely steel·y adj. steel·i·er, steel·i·est 1. Made of steel. 2. Resembling steel, as in color or hardness: steely eyes. expressions. At 7, Jonathan doesn't yet understand the ways of the world -- that you can play multiple games all night long and still never win. My son, I sense, is about to learn a life lesson. Therefore, so am I. ``Bingo!'' I hear him shout out 15 minutes into the games as I'm selling cards to late-comers. A buzz of speculation fills the crowded cafeteria. I'm thrilled. I'm also scared. Does he really have bingo? I wasn't paying attention Noun 1. paying attention - paying particular notice (as to children or helpless people); "his attentiveness to her wishes"; "he spends without heed to the consequences" attentiveness, heed, regard to his card. He scrambles up to the judges' station and my stomach twists. And for a good reason. The judges point at a spot on his card, then shake their heads. He hasn't won. The stomach twists become knots as I watch him return to our table, face stoic, chin jutted out. ``They made a mistake,'' he says, trying to control his trembling trembling visible muscle tremor caused by fever, fear, weakness, electrolyte imbalance, especially hypocalcemia and hypomagnesemia, and neuromuscular disease. trembling disease voice. ``They were wrong.'' I am the mommy here, so I hide my own pain and keep my voice breezy yet sympathetic. I compare his marked card to the numbers on the blackboard. ``No, sweetie. See? You got this first number wrong.'' The night, of course, is now tainted taint v. taint·ed, taint·ing, taints v.tr. 1. To affect with or as if with a disease. 2. To affect with decay or putrefaction; spoil. See Synonyms at contaminate. 3. . Stress levels increase as grumbles give way to tears and accusations. ``Why did you make me come to bingo night?'' he cries 40 minutes later. ``I knew I'd hate it. I hate this.'' I feel sick. My head pounds. We finally leave early, only to have him twist around in the parking lot and shriek shriek - exclamation mark that he changed his mind, that he wants to go back, that he'll do anything to go back, and please, pleeeaase, Mom? But, of course, I must hold strong. The ride home is a full-blown symphony of screams, sobs, pleas, threats, and hurled taunts that I just don't understand; I just don't care
"Don't Care" is a 1994 (see 1994 in music) single by American death metal band Obituary. . Bad Mommy. You blew it yet again. I'm not cut out for this job. I can't cope, I cry to my husband, Peter, who always manages to maintain control when battling our son's willful nature. But, that said, how can I be expected to stay strong and resolute res·o·lute adj. Firm or determined; unwavering. [Middle English, dissolved, dissolute, from Latin resol when my son, my baby, is sobbing out my name, now holding out his arms to me? When our eyes meet, so do our souls. This is, after all, the little creature who grew from a seed inside me, who was set on my chest seconds after being born, wet, slippery flesh against flesh. A mother and child eternally share a bond that transcends rules and reason. My emotions are intertwined with his, a point driven home a few years ago when we found a dead snake in our driveway. The snake was black and delicate, smaller than a pencil. Jonathan picked it up and we decided such a pretty creature deserved a proper burial. Peter dug a hole for it and said a few noble words before motioning for Jonathan to set the snake into the ground. I watched his little face process the implication of the scenario. Tears filled his eyes. ``But I don't want it to be this way,'' he cried, clutching the dead snake. And right then, I was there inside him, experiencing the terrible, sweeping realization that this snake, once alive like us, was now dead and he was expected to drop it in the hole, dump dirt on it and bury it forever. He began to cry, heartbroken heart·bro·ken adj. Suffering from or exhibiting overwhelming sorrow, grief, or disappointment. heart sobs against which I had no emotional defense. I crouched down, held him close and sobbed with him. A snake. A bingo game. What happens when the issues become bigger? A broken heart; the betrayal of a close friend; the dawning awareness of life's inherent cruelty and unfairness? My presence on that journey, I realize, is what defines the role of mother. Wherever he may go, there I'll be, swept along emotionally. I panic that the sweet years are slipping past too quickly. No more sippy cups or sweet mispronunciations of words. No more holding hands as we walk together into his classroom. Some day soon, he'll tell me he'd rather go to his classroom alone. In another half-dozen years, he'll be asking me to walk 100 feet ahead of him at all times and never acknowledge that we're related. This cliche I'd laughed about with my friends now shocks me with its inexorable approach into my own life. Whether or not I'm cut out for this job, the truth is, I will rise to the challenge. I am his mother, after all. And that title -- encompassing guardian, disciplinarian dis·ci·pli·nar·i·an n. One that enforces or believes in strict discipline. adj. Disciplinary. disciplinarian Noun a person who practises strict discipline Noun 1. , confidante con·fi·dante n. 1. A woman to whom secrets or private matters are disclosed. 2. A woman character in a drama or fiction, such as a trusted friend or servant, who serves as a device for revealing the inner thoughts or intentions , advocate, greatest fan -- says it all. |
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