Happy Mother’s Day!

I wasn’t online yesterday, so I am a bit late with my Mother’s Day wishes. After I called my mom, my older stepson let me know that he was coming over to spend the day with me for Mother’s Day. It was a happy surprise.

I didn’t ask him why he wasn’t heading over to his biological mother’s trailer to spend the day with her. First, I have always told the kids that their relationship with their mother is between them and her. Second, well…I haven’t exactly been in a coma the last decade or so. I know what he has been put through, how he has been treated, what he has listened to. Maybe I shouldn’t have been surprised.

I was just happy to see him. Watching him with his father is so much fun. They are both colossal smart asses, and as they try to one-up each other, they glance over at me to see if I am laughing harder at their joke than the other’s. They are alike in many ways, like being gifted artists, but so drastically different in others. For example, my older stepson gets embarrassed a lot easier than my husband, and his ears actually turn red, which we tease him about. He also cares much more what other people think, something my husband and I have tried hard to get him to let go of, for his own sake.

My stepson had brought some drawings to show his dad, and he sat down on the couch in between us so we could both see them. It reminded me of when he was little, tucked in between us, showing us something, telling us a story, just happy to be together. As he told us what each drawing was, and he and his dad hashed out edits he might make, I grabbed my phone and sneaked a picture of the two of them together, lost in their moment.

I don’t think they realize how beautiful their relationship is. They bicker like any other father and son, and one trait they most definitely share is hard-headedness (and denying it), but ever since he was little, the two of them have been like two peas in a pod. They are full of non-stop joking and picking at each other when they are together, and both of them get a troublemaking gleam in their eyes when they are near each other. They feed off each other, get louder, more energetic, but they are also affectionate and always hug each other good-bye and say “I love you”.

We sat a long time after dinner, just talking and joking around and catching up. It’s still hard sometimes for me to see him as a young man instead of the little boy he was when I met their dad. I suppose that never really goes away.

He had hugged me as soon as he saw me yesterday and said, “Happy Mother’s Day.” I did, indeed, have a very happy Mother’s Day. I hope all of you did too!

His Own Place

My oldest stepson moved in with us about two years ago.  He came to us like an injured animal, zero self-esteem, head hanging like he was expecting a lashing at any moment.  My husband and I became overnight motivational speakers, peppy cheerleaders, trying our best to build him back up, get him back on his feet.

I had started to think that just maybe, it was never going to happen.  He would take a step forward, then resist the hell out of us, step back, almost like he was deliberately sabotaging himself so he would never have to leave the safe harbor of our home and be on his own.

My husband and I both struggled with that. Both of us moved out on our own at a young age and loved it, thrived on independence, leaped out of the nest willingly, wings flapping a mile a minute, ready to take on the world.  My stepson seemingly not wanting to get his own place puzzled us and seemed quite foreign to us.

We forged ahead, kept working with him.  We taught him what he needed to know: how to do laundry, clean a bathroom, balance a checkbook, budget for his own place, write a resume, iron a shirt.  We taught.  We re-taught. We reminded.  When that didn’t stick, we lectured, yelled, performed interpretive dance, whatever it took to force something to seep into his occasionally thick skull, and more importantly, break through the barrier of his fear, his lack of confidence, and start to help him realize that yes, he could do all of this just fine.

A few months ago, my stepson started searching for his own apartment.  We reviewed his budget together, and we helped him figure out what he could afford, how much to set aside for utility deposits, furniture, getting set up in his new home.

He was so proud to inform us when he found a place.  He paid for all of it on his own.  He paid his deposit, came home with a key, and was beaming from ear to ear.

And as for his father and stepmom, who had been nudging him in this direction for the past two years, aiming for just this moment?  Well…we were proud, of course, but what surprised me was how lost and sad I felt.

It’s silly, really.   This is a big moment for him, a milestone.  I smiled and told him how proud I am of him.  I shared ideas for jazzing up his new place.  My husband meticulously inspected every square inch of his new apartment and made a repair list, some of which will be trusted to the property maintenance, and some of which he would not dream of letting anyone handle but himself.

The other day, I was making a list, jotting down things my stepson still needs for his apartment, thinking out loud to my husband, when I noticed he was watching me with a wistful, thoughtful look.  He said, “You are a good mom.”

I stopped, suprised, and then just smiled.  My heart soared.  It meant a lot to hear that right then.  He hugged me and said he knows I do a lot for the kids.

My stepson has mostly finished moving his things to his new place, and as the signs of his presence here have dwindled, as the closet emptied, as books disappeared, as clothes vanished, I had to resist the absurd urge to stop him, to put everything right back where it was, ask him to sit down, be a kid again, damnit.

I won’t do that, of course.  It’s his job to grow up.  It was my job, and my husband’s job, to help that happen, make sure he was ready.   So it’s time to stop being sad.  This is a moment of celebration, not loss.  His first apartment is a big, big step, and I won’t ruin it by being sentimental, sappy, clingy.  I want him to be as excited and proud of his first apartment  as I was of mine.  I won’t take that away from him.

But I will admit, it means a lot when he texts me to ask a question, how do I do this, what do I do about that.  I know as time goes on, those text messages will get less frequent, but I also take comfort in knowing that it will only mean we have done our job well, and he is more comfortable at the steering wheel of his own life…which is what we wanted all along.

The Text

Stepmom (1)It’s pretty well known by anyone in any caretaker role that parenting is often a thankless job.  The work and the effort are taken for granted, and the draining worry is overlooked by the very ones giving you all those gray hairs.

The other day, I was sitting at work, ready to tear my hair out, when I got a text from my older stepson.  Out of the blue, he thanked me for helping him out with something he was having an issue with when he moved in with us over a year ago.

I respect my stepson’s privacy, so I don’t want to get into detail about what that was, and that isn’t the important part, anyway.  The important part is, he thanked me.  And that means a lot to me.  Far more than he knows.

I do a lot for the kids without expecting much in return.  That’s pretty much part of the job description for parenting in general, so I don’t expect a medal or a ticker-tape parade.  Until I met my husband and the kids, I didn’t fully appreciate all that my parents had done for me and all the energy and work it took to do it, so I get it.

His text made me smile.  My older stepson has been through a lot.  I don’t think he had fully grasped the reality of some people in his life until he had some distance from them and moved in with us.  Opening his eyes has been painful for him.  He still hasn’t picked up all the pieces or made sense of it all, and it’s hard to explain to him that there really is no sense to it.  Some people just are not who they pretend to be.  I alternate between wishing he would see what I see, and wishing I could just shield and protect him (and the other kids) from it all.

I’m glad he recognizes that I have tried my best to help him out and do what is best for him.  I’m glad he let me know he appreciates it and that he thanked me.  Just a few words on a phone screen made my day and made me so happy!

The Coke Bottle

One of the most difficult changes I’ve made during this weight loss journey is cutting way back on soda.  I love soda.  I could drink it all day long, and drink nothing else…and for a long time, that’s exactly what I did.  I was consuming hundreds of empty calories each day just by chugging soda.

When my older stepson bought me a Yeti travel mug, I decided to start brewing unsweet tea at home and take it to work with me in my new insulated cup.  It’s awesome!  My tea stays cold, even sitting on my desk all day long.  Now I drink much more tea than soda.

So when my husband came home the other day with a bottle of Coke for me, I honestly wondered what in blazing hell was wrong with him.  Didn’t he know how hard it is for me to say no to soda?  Didn’t he care how hard I’ve been working to make healthy changes and lose this weight?  What was he trying to do, anyway?  Sabotage me?

He smiled at me and asked, “Did you read the name that is on the Coke bottle?”

I hadn’t even noticed.  I had shoved the Coke behind my tea pitcher in the fridge, hoping that out of sight would also be out of mind.

My husband is a bit of a smartass (okay, a LOT smartass), and we pick on each all the time.  So I figured the Coke bottle probably said something like “Poopy Head” or “Grumpy” or “Shorty”, something that he would laugh about and tease me about.

Well, I was quite wrong.  The label on the Coke said “My Love”:

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My husband said, “I thought of you when I saw it.”

How could I be mad about that?  I couldn’t!  I thanked him for the Coke and gave him a kiss.  Then headed out for a run, because hey, these pounds aren’t going to lose themselves!

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