My mother walked out on us once, threw up her hands, turned her back and hit the road. We didn’t blame her since we’d driven her to it; there were no more buttons left to push. She came back eventually, but there were several long, tense moments when her return was not a given. But let me start over.
I needed a break this week. Just a random, purposeless, sit still and do nothing break. These times can roll up on you until they’re suddenly breathing hotly down your neck, buzzing in your ear like a relentless mosquito. After a couple of weeks of bringing meals to school for teacher appreciation, notarizing permission slips, attacking the mound of papers on my desk for work, trying to tame the jungle yard and keep everyone fed, the late afternoon headaches would hit, and no amount of caffeine would quench the monster.
As if on cue, some sadistic, hateful person posted a serene beach picture featuring their pedicured toes in the sand, which brought on the heavy woe-is-me sighs. I’m sure this is only me—you’re probably breezily zipping along in the fast lane—one of the balls I’ve been juggling drops, or I eat one too many meals on the go. I haven’t had a meaningful conversation with my spouse in three days, and if I have to scrape up one more nasty hairball from the floor, I’m going to lose it.
I thought back to when the kids were little, days when a clean house was relative, applesauce and ice cream sounded like a good dinner plan, and I’d be lurching around the house like Quasimodo, carrying one teething baby on my hip while dragging a whiny toddler who seemed to be permanently stapled to my leg. Some days the morning hours til nap time would drag by in a blur of broken crayons and diapers, and God bless my husband who dragged in at the witching hour before dinner on days like that. Let’s just say I didn’t greet him at the door wearing pearls and a smile.
Those days weren’t always pretty. I’d stare out the Window of Despair, asking what had I done, seriously considering how much gas I had in the car and wondering how far I could get. They call these black moods postpartum depression, and happily, there’s help for that. But in the days of my own childhood, they just called it motherhood and you were expected to soldier on unaided.
Which brings me to the night my mother left. My father was on a year-long tour of duty out of the country, leaving my mother alone in the house with three teenaged girls and two young kids. This is a cruel and unusual predicament for all but the most unflappable. These were the ingredients for a perfect storm: three teenagers with synced PMS, a demanding five-year-old, and a busy toddler with a penchant for injury and going AWOL.
After 18 years of marriage and a family, my mother had finally given herself permission to take a couple of college classes, so she was trying to read actual literature and write coherent papers in between the demands of five children. Perhaps she thought she’d been a little distracted lately, but whatever the reason, she decided to take time away from her books to make a special Sunday roast beef dinner for the six of us. The table was set with the main dish, mashed potatoes and steaming hot gravy, rolls, and vegetables. Glasses were filled with iced tea and we had all gathered around the dining room table to spend some quality family time together before the busyness of a new week started.
No one remembers what started it. One of my sisters uttered some snarky teenaged remark aimed below the belt. Another sister took offense, aiming right back, and it escalated. Escalated in the sense of Hurricane Katrina starting out as a cool ocean breeze. The noxious cocktail of female hormones, a long week, and some innate death wish fermented to the point of fission. The first shot fired was a spoonful of mashed potatoes. Before my mother could scream, “What is the MATTER with you people?!” it was all out war, with hot sloshing gravy, flying green beans, vicious screaming girls, and finally, the coup d’grace: the entire pitcher of iced tea hit the wall.
The third sister snatched up my younger brother from his high chair where he screamed, wide-eyed at the mayhem. She yanked me by the hand, dragging me into the hallway, away from the flying feast, her only thought to “Save The Children!” At some point during the melee, someone must have noticed an absence. No parental intervention. No parent, period. Mother had left. The driveway was empty and an eerie and remorseful silence had befallen the dining room. Uh-oh.
Had my father been home, that would have been the end of the story. Our family would have had two fewer children as the two at fault would have been summarily executed in the backyard. As it was, they swallowed hard and cleaned up every inch of the dining room with heads hung low. My brother and I were quietly put to bed where we went without protest. The three older sisters sat somberly in their room, probably discussing options for how to pay the mortgage until dad came back.
When we woke up in the morning, she was in the kitchen making breakfast before school as usual. We found out later she’d driven to the beach and sat on the dunes. No telling how many hours she spent there, letting the sound of the waves soothe her nerves, watching the little crabs scurry in and out of their holes while she chain-smoked Tareyton 100’s. She had had it up to here and needed to remember that she loved us.
We didn’t speak of that day until years later. And it would be many more years later before my father was told, after my sisters had moved out and could ostensibly arrange their own Witness Protection.
On days when I, too, have had it up to here with whatever fill-in-the-blank calamity takes over, I remember the epic food fight story and the time my mother left. I recognize the mental red flags that signal that it’s time to bug out to salvage some sanity.
It’s okay, necessary, to take breaks. Time-outs aren’t just for two-year-olds! Walk away from the computer, arrange lunch with a friend, close the bathroom door and just breathe for a few minutes. It will not always be this way or feel like this. We are given new mercies at the start of each day. While you’re telling your kids to share and be kind, be nice to yourself, too. And for heaven’s sake, go out for dinner.
Thanks for reading! To return to the FICTION WRITERS BLOG HOP on Julie Valerie’s website, click here: http://www.julievalerie.com/fiction-writers-blog-hop-may-2016
This. Is. Brilliant.
And I can so relate.
That opening paragraph would make a GREAT opening to a novel…..
Oh, this is brilliant, Bonnie! Good for your mom for knowing when to walk away before blood was also spilled. 😉 A good reminder for everyone to take a break once in a while, for sanity’s sake.
There were six of us – 3 boys and 3 girls. Once, when it all hit the fan, Mom disappeared. I never knew where she went, but my grandmother came to stay with us for a couple of days. Finally, a few days later, Mom was there when we got home from school. Six “I’m sorry” tumbled out at once. Mom hugged each of us and that was the end of that.
This is a wonderful post and you have an amazing way with words.
Love your voice, Bonnie! I’m here from the blog hop–but I’ll be back 🙂
Thank you so much, Laurie! You made my day!
YES! YES! YES!
I’m so happy for your mom. So happy she got the heck OUTTA THERE and took some time for herself. I’m sure she felt pretty low, very overwhelmed, and a bit crazy for walking out – but what she did was PERFECT. The younger two were in perfectly capable hands with three older teenagers and the teenagers needed time to regroup and rethink. What your mom did was brilliant. Atta girl, MOM! 🙂
This is a fabulous blog post – one that I hope goes crazy viral. Enjoyed it very much!
P.S. Your captcha is asking me to do math. I suck at math. 🙂
Glad you liked! As anyone with children knows, every day is not rainbows and butterflies!
Loved this post and feel for your mum. I’ve had that feeling a few times and it’s so hard not to act on it. But maybe sometimes the best thing to do, is exactly that. Take the car and go for a while… Thanks for sharing that and will definitely think of it the next time I’m about to lose it 🙂
Thanks for taking the time to read & comment, Sandrine! I think we’ve ALL been there! Some days it’s less like Mary Poppins and more like Jurassic Park!
The best so far Bonnie! Tears streaming down my face as I read – some tears from laughter and the others from absolute understanding your mom’s need to flee from the scene of a potential crime scene if she did not!
Great story. It reminds me of the day my children call, “The day mama threw salt.”. Love your blog.
Thanks, Beth! And that sounds like a story I need to hear!
This had me laughing and sighing and feeling a kinship with you and your mom and mothers everywhere. At the end I was left thinking, yes it’s all that and more and it wrings the life out of me and then gives it back a thousand times over. Thank you for your beautiful writing and for your connection to life and all that it is.
Thanks, Jill! I thought of you and your 3 girls. Someday, you too will have that swirling vortex of teenaged hormones. Buckle up! 🙂
Oh. My. Word. I can so relate. (Can’t we all?) I was almost catatonic in the front yard when I came home to a broken door and a preteen saying “I didn’t think a wrench would break the glass.” Thanks for the reminder that we’re not alone. 🙂