Quote of the Day

"Beyond her husband, and in his heart, the wife sees and loves and serves Christ. Beyond his wife, and in her heart, the husband sees and loves and serves Christ."
~M. Eugene Boylan, O. Cist. R., This Tremendous Lover

Monday, October 24, 2011

Dumb and Dumber

So, Fagin, I've been meaning to write about this for a while. It's something I've probably thought about too much, in fact. In any case, I want to sort it out a bit. So here goes.

There are two comments I get a lot when my infertility comes up in conversation. On a good day they are just annoying, and I can recognize that they are said out of ignorance and good will. On a bad day I usually end up ranting about it to you, Fagin. You know. I've done it a lot. In fact, when one of these comments comes at a bad time I'm likely to chew it over for several days, reacting alternately with everything from anger to tears to cussing. Mostly cussing. I've mooed about how people are turds, how I'm sick of excusing really insensitive remarks on the grounds of "Ignorance" or "Awkward Situation", how if I said something similarly offensive to them, it would be more socially acceptable for them to call me out on it than it is in my case, etc. The nuances of my stupid hurt are endless.

Well, now I've cracked these comments up to be such a big deal, that it's going to seem really dumb when I remind you of what they are. Maybe that's part of my point - I don't know. It's a good reminder to me to calm the heck down. But here they are:

1. "You must be just soooo grateful for Bert!"

Ah. My first instinct upon hearing this is to feel ashamed. As though I must not be emitting adequate "glowing motherhood" vibes because I am, in fact, not grateful enough. This is probably true, though, so I usually let that slide. It's also why, when someone says this to me I only ever reply, "Oh yes, of course. We are so blessed and grateful. He's just wonderful! What a boogy woogy blah ba blahdy blah!" (I don't actually make it to the end there because usually the person I'm talking to races right on to comment two. But I'm getting ahead of myself.)

What I really badly want to say to these people is, "I think you're probably a very nice person, and I know that this is awkward for you, and while I appreciate the fact that you're trying to be all positive and remind me of the silver lining in my life, you sound like a frigging idiot right now." I want to ask them if they're reeaaally grateful for their children (comment 2 would argue maybe they're not, but what do I know?), or if they maybe think, somewhere deep down, that it's my job to be more grateful because I only have one child (maybe it is?). Or maybe they honestly think that I forgot that Bert is a blessing? In any case, what is meant as kind of a nice comment comes across as almost a scold. I feel like a big fat fool for opening my big fat mouth about that fact that, hey, um, I don't know, infertility is hard. Never mind the fact that I probably only said it because they asked.

2. Moving on. Often times comment two, as I said before, comes right on the heels of comment one. I get just enough time to feel ashamed and flustery and out comes something like, "You know, if I'm being totally honest, I'm not super thrilled with how my kids are spaced, either. If you know what I mean."

Wow.

Just wow.

I really have trouble dealing with this one. Again with the awkwardness, no harm meant, etc. I know. I really do. Which is why my immediate response is "Oh, yeah, it must be really challenging to have so many children so close in age."

"Yes," she sighs (of course it's a woman. Men don't usually say things like this), "Everyone has their crosses..."

I just... I just... man. I can't even begin to express how hurtful this is. I can't imagine saying to someone who is starving, "Yeah, starvation must be hard. But seriously, if I'm being honest, eating too much cake makes me really sick to my stomach. You know? I guess we all have our crosses..." I'm pretty sure the starving person, if she had the strength (which she doesn't, because starvation is exhausting), would lose her sh*t.

Just to be clear, let me reiterate that I do believe that mothering many young children is immensely challenging. I'm even aware that, not having done it, there is a limit to how well I understand this. But I don't for a second think that challenge is equal to the challenge of infertility. Just like I don't think secondary infertility is nearly as difficult as childlessness. Not even close. Having Bert is the greatest, most undeserved blessing of my life, and God gives me the grace to remember this many times each day. So, just as I would never complain to a childless person about how challenging a child can be, I think that a woman struggling with the challenges of many children should, in all kindness, find someone in the same boat to complain to. That may sound insensitive, but it's not. I can be sympathetic to her challenges, I can (and do) pray for her, and I can rejoice in her children. But I just CAN NOT feel sorry for her.

But hey, wouldn't it be super bi*chy of me to say all this? Yes, because it's just a dumb comment. And I make them all the time. I'm the type to say a whole mouth full of inane, boring, sometimes mildly offensive things, all because of social awkwardness. I snap in to fight-or-flight mode when a conversation feels forced, or veers in to uncomfortable territory. (I think it's f-o-f, even though it manifests itself in sweating, heavy breathing, shifty eyes, and gas.) So I should show these people the same forgiveness that I so often need.

I am trying.

While I'm doing that, though, could people just stop saying stupid-a$$ things? Oh, and thank you, Fagin, for somehow understanding this before I ever had to say it. I wish everyone, including myself, had half your awareness.


Monday, August 29, 2011

Since This Is Now Letters to No One

I will just write about what I want. So there. And what I want to write about right now is infertility (surprise! not). Particularly the good points. Wait, what? Infertility has good points? For sure. And in the interest of not losing my point completely I'm just going to list a few that have been on my mind. I won't try to explain them, because I've noticed that when I try to explain things I unexplain them.

1. Conversion, or reconversion, if you want to call it that. This continues to be the greatest benefit of infertility for me, by far. God knows exactly how hard my heart is, and no gentle means of cracking it open were going to work. He split it like a coconut.

2. Prayers. I know that myself and my family are the object of more prayers now than we ever were before. And although I forget it all the time, there is no bigger gift!

3. Food. Sometimes people feel sorry for me and make me cake or soup or brownies or whatever. Also, because our family is small, people are less intimidated to invite us over for dinner. Booya. (Which reminds me of a week or so ago when Bert shot me in the face with a Nerf gun and shouted "Booya!", but that's for another time.)

4. Daily life that, in small things, is very very easy. Caring for one increasingly independent child is so easy it's a joke. I am conscious every day that I get to shower, talk to my husband, read a book, clean my house, shop, exercise, pray, and do pretty much what ever I want when ever I want. Of course I would rather have the struggles of a large family than the struggles of infertility, but I do realize that parenting many children is, at times, very hard. I have no illusions that I would do a perfect job, or that it would be super breezy peasy all the time.

5. Gratitude. Nothing makes you appreciate the stuff that you do have like not having it all.

6. Time with my son. I love having Bert around, and really getting to know him. I am only as distracted as I make myself.

7. Sleep. I have been getting a full eight (or ten) hours of sleep almost every night for over two years now. Bet you never thought you could be jealous of an infertile lady, right?

8. Time with The Man. We were not good at putting each other first when Bert was a baby, and so much has changed between us in the last couple of years. Yay!

There's a lot more. I'll write it down some other time. And oh, look, I did explain things. Oh well. Oh, and I'm not this Pollyanna all the time. This gives me a good excuse to be super whiny next time, right?

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Fagin, Are You Still Out There?

Every time I try to write I realize that I don't have anything good to say. I'm not just saying that I don't have anything juicy or original or insightful or funny... nothing good. And I don't think I should write if there's nothing good to say. It would be wrong. Although, considering the fact that no one reads this, maybe it wouldn't be so wrong... except it still would be, wouldn't it? Because I think maybe it is possible to scandalize yourself.

No, it is. I do it all the time. I start thinking something self-pitying or blaming, and pretty soon I'm sprinting down that path, and then the path tilts dangerously downhill, and putting on the breaks is damn near impossible. Before I know it I am full-on wallowing and it takes herculean effort to get back on track.

God forbid I cause that in anybody else. Woof.

Even though I do sometimes. But that's another issue on its own.

But here's the thing. Writing (or talking) about struggles doesn't mean that I have somehow "fallen". It doesn't mean I'm weak or bad. Quite a lot of other things mean I'm weak and bad, but not that.

So here goes: I am having a hard time. With infertility. With wifing, mothering, housekeeping, daughtering, sistering, creating, and sanctifying. I am bad at it all. Sometimes in shifts, sometimes all at once. Sometimes I am the Warrior Goddess of Infertility Saintliness. Sometimes, for about five minutes. Sometimes I have things organized and lovely, and manage to be cheerful to my family on top of it all. But mostly I don't. Mostly I screw things up, and wonder why I screw things up, especially the same things, damn it.

Damn it damn it.

I think a lot about the saints. So many saints. People who were not born saints, and (in many cases) were not even close to being saints for much of their lives. People whose saintliness is made up of hundreds and thousands of tiny, tough decisions to say yes. Yes to suffering, yes to weakness, yes to disappointment and fear and frustration, and stupid freaking annoying people. Most of us don't have that once-in-a-lifetime chance to prove our love for God through martyrdom. I probably won't, and thank goodness. Because I can hardly give up second helpings.

Nope, the most I hope for is that I can say "yes" to Our Lord more than I say "no". In the tiny, unseen moments of every day. I'm doing really badly so far. But He can't make me a saint if I start out as one, can He?

Oof. So I guess what I'm saying is that I'm going to try to write more often. More often than once a year. Even if I don't have anything especially inspired to say. People who are inspired all the time are just as boring as those who never are, right?