Teenagers VS Toddlers

February 2010

Tuesday night. A full table. They’ve run out of chairs. A bar stool is pulled up for a late comer. This family dinner of friends. Laughter, as they struggle to carve steaming chunks of bread baked too late in the day. Flour, salt, yeast, water – left to their own devices. It is magic. Their jousting and joking voices trip over each other like clear water over ancient rocks.

If I could bottle the alchemy of this teen mealtime I’d decant it into two bottles. The first I would hand to the naysayers whose eyebrows migrated towards their hairlines, when I was in the mind-numbing grind of toddlerhood and they sniffed ‘Just you wait ‘til they are teenagers. Now that is hard.’

I’d offer the second bottle to a newish mother swamped in those merciless early trenches. I would say ‘Just you wait ‘til they are teenagers.’ Then I’d tell her ‘That is when it all makes sense. The guessing games of early childhood will be behind you. They will have the words. And you will have had more than a decade to discover exactly who they are.’

I’d choose a day with my teenage children over a day with them as tiny kids every time.

Babies and toddlers might be adorable… in small doses… when you can hand them back to their parent. But as the parent amid baby and toddlerhood, my joy was tinged with claustrophobia. When overwhelm threatened, you might get to leave the room. But not for long. Parenting very young children is a lot of basic problem solving (Hungry? Tired? Wet/dirty? Sick?) and accepting things you cannot change. Repeatedly for long stretches of time.

Warning young parents that everything gets worse in the teenage years is a bit like smugly telling pregnant women birthing horror stories. It doesn’t serve a purpose. And it is NOT a truth universally acknowledged by those who are living through this life stage.

Most teens sleep through the night, can go to the toilet independently, feed themselves, book many of their own appointments, and organise their social lives without parental involvement.

As my children fly towards their own adventures, I don’t feel loss. They are doing what they are meant to do. The snippets of time I get to share with them mean a lot to me. Our conversations play between the silly and the serious.

And they are comfortable enough to share their experience of childhood with me. The good, the imperfect, and the ugly traumas that were borne of challenges even their adult parents had no control over.

They articulate things I was deaf to in the early years. When I was so rigidly set on giving them a great childhood that I was unable to accept that sometimes my best would not be good enough for them. When I couldn’t see that putting in the effort and not intentionally harming them would have to be good enough at the time.

Some of those days remind me of managing a catastrophic abdominal wound. One with organs protruding through ragged edges, open to infection. A good surgeon won’t immediately stuff everything back in and neatly stitch the skin back over the disaster. They will flush everything, control the bleeding, and then they will pack it all with laparotomy sponges. They will dress the wound but leave the abdomen open. It won’t be pretty, but it will be good enough at the time. They will come back when the patient is less critical, when dead tissue can be excised, when it is clean enough to close safely. Their patient may end up with a big scar, but they will have survived.

For me early parenthood was complicated. It included not making it home with my first baby until she was four months old. Post-natal psychosis followed by the beginnings of bipolar 1 disorder meant we spent this time in the mother baby unit of a psychiatric hospital. Since then, bipolar episodes have landed me in hospital for weeks or months every 2-3 years.

Our family is open about mental illness. I have excellent insight into my symptom pattern. We have always had supportive family and friends to help during my hospital stays. My access to good mental health care means that in between episodes my mental health is better than that of many parents without a diagnosis.

I used to think – naively – that doing all of these ‘right things’ meant my children would make it through maybe with skinned knees but never wounds nasty enough to pack at the time and close later.

Yet here I am. At times confronted by the scar tissue my teenagers show me. But I am also deeply grateful to be in a season when they are old enough to have the words and the trust in me to speak their truth.

They bombard me with joy, and noise, and friends around for an impromptu dinner on a Tuesday. They head into the world and return at odd hours. And my heavily medicated sleep is no longer broken by the cries of babies demanding everything of me all of the time.

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Welcome To Motherhood

(A letter from the mother I am today to the mother I was about to become)

Hello Anita in 2006,

I am writing to you from fifteen years in the future. You are about to have your first baby. You earnestly believe you have to know it all now.

You don’t and you can’t.

You have imagined who the person you are about to meet will be. But a newborn is full of secrets. It takes time to get to know your child.

I am making cinnamon scrolls and listening to Mozart at dawn on your baby’s fifteenth birthday. I remember her at just a few days old. I looked into the unfathomable darkness of her gaze and felt as though I was being interviewed for a job I had no qualifications for.

What have I learnt since then?

For everything you get ‘right’ parenting wise, you get something else ‘wrong’. Can I make a suggestion? Let go now of the idea of right and wrong. It barely exists. As long as you are not wilfully abusive towards your child, the rest are just lucky bullseyes and unfortunate missteps from which you learn. The things you think are important now will be things you won’t care about in the future.

For example – your baby will be born by caesarean and be breastfed for seven days. You don’t need to know why right now. But I can reassure you that fifteen years on, how she was born and how she was fed as a baby are irrelevant.

I know this information shocks you, because you are welded to the sticky stories you were fed at prenatal yoga and hospital classes. It’s not your fault that you believe this stuff. You don’t know better.

Always remember that even (perhaps especially) in times when you are completely baffled about what to do next, you know your child better than any expert. I remember when your baby moved into toddler age, she would have epic tantrums, that went forever.

I read a parenting book, which advised the best thing to do was to firmly hug your tantruming toddler. The pressure of the hug was meant to calm their nervous system. I tried this with our little girl. It escalated her further, and the tantrums would then take double the time to resolve.

I can smile about it now, because after years of learning who she is, I know that when she gets upset, one of the first things she needs is space. The hugs are helpful later.

Don’t believe the cliches cloaking motherhood. You don’t need to martyr yourself to be a good mother. Unfortunately, you will learn that in challenging circumstances. But you will learn it and be a happier and better mother for it.

Then there are generalisations. For years beforehand I was fearful of ‘the teenage years’ because we are fed horror stories. I don’t assume her remaining teenagerhood will be devoid of challenging times. But so far, I think – give me a teenager over a baby anytime. We can communicate. She can share her sense of humour with me. I know the things she cares about, and what she doesn’t.

I love the physical independence of a teenager. She sleeps through the night, goes to the toilet on her own, can make herself food, can catch a bus, and arrange her own catch ups with her friends.

No one ever tells you that (if you have lived with your child since their birth) you won’t just be dropped into parenting a teenager. By the age of fifteen you will have had fifteen years of getting to know what works for them and what doesn’t.

Lastly please remember – motherhood doesn’t happen in a vacuum for anyone. We are fed images and text and given lectures on the ideal way to parent. But often these are presented in a vacuum – as though nothing else aside from mothering were happening in your life.

As though when you are mothering you are somehow immune to life.

Immune to relationship break ups, job losses, bereavement and grief, homelessness, pandemics, diagnoses you never could have predicted, and all that can go astray in a life.

And while these things may temporarily compromise the ‘quality’ of your parenting, they are also what can make you a better parent in the longer term. They are the things that can teach your children that life is not perfect, and most importantly that their mother is not perfect.

Children don’t need a perfect mother. They need a mother who is genuine. Who tries her best. Who is able to admit when she has stuffed up. Who is vulnerable. Who, rather than sweeping away all the challenges in her children’s’ path, can sit with her child and agree that some things are just shit. And who after sitting with the difficulty can point to something that is good. Whether that’s a stack of banana pancakes, or the child themselves.

Welcome to motherhood!

Love

Anita in 2021

The beginning of motherhood also heralded the beginning of Bipolar 1 Disorder for me, starting with postnatal psychosis on day 7. To read more about this, you might like to check out a sample of my memoir here Book

Other posts of interest may be:

The Parenting Trap – Is Information The Enemy?

Mental Health Parenting Truths 101

My Mental Illness Makes Me A Better Parent