Sunday, April 14, 2024

Outline of a family


Family

a noun

A father, a mother and their children, living together, in one house.


I like having a plan,

A path laid down for me,

Expectations, events and next steps included.

Paths take me from where I am

to where I need to be.

A clear route from here to there.

Stepping stones worn smooth

by thousands of people

who have gone this way before,

with the promise of thousands more to come.


I believe families

to be the most important thing.

I believe that no matter what,

if you had your family,

you would be okay,

you would make it to the end of this life

whole and complete,

ready for the next phase.

This assurance

was my armor

against disappointment, uncertainty and doubts

I knew I could handle

embarrassment, disappointment or frustration

as long as I was surrounded by my family.


All around me I saw families moving through predetermined phases:


Phase 1– Young mother, young father, 3+ chubby babies, poor but happy together in a small apartment

Phase 2 – Young mother, young father, elementary aged children, this phase is punctuated by many hours spent in a minivan driving to and from a starter home to practices and events.

Phase 3 – Middle aged mother, middle aged father, teenagers (can make exceptions for a younger sibling but uncommon at this phase) voracious eaters typical. A bigger home with space for gatherings.

Phase 4 – Over the hill mother, over the hill father, young adult children who come home from college for Sunday dinners, holidays and summer vacation. Children begin to display respect and appreciation for parents. The house is now remodeled, repaired and/or otherwise updated.

Phase 5 – Graying mother, balding father, young adult children married with babies, first one adorable, impossibly tiny baby, then two or three drooling toddlers, then 10 or 12 elementary kids, culminating with 18-20 grandchildren including some teenagers.

Phase 6 – Aging mother, aging father, adult children, grandchildren leaving on missions and getting married, this phase is punctuated with summer reunions and sprawling pictures of all three generations sunburned and smiling.

Phase 7 – Siblings, cousins, aunts and uncles come together to honor first the passing of the patriarch of the family, then the passing of the matriarch of the family. Gatherings are punctuated by questions like "How are we related?” Second cousins twice removed (what does that even mean?)


The continuation of these phases

has been the focus of my life.

Each generation shares their stories,

Lives recorded in genealogy records.

From sepia wedding portraits

to fuzzy Polaroids.

Rolls of film dropped off,

don't forget to request duplicates

So I can share

and pass around

These stories of me.


Phases stretch on and on into eternity,

One unbroken chain.

No empty seats at the temple,

Each of us is linked to the other.

No loners, no outliers, no one missing or lost.

Certainly no divorce or separation, no missing pieces, no loose ends,

Each person lovingly woven into

The tapestry of

Family


But what about when it's not?

Not really like that,

When there are disruptions,

Untimely divorces,

Sudden deaths,

Unmarried uncles,

Addiction and heartbreak,

Family secrets,

Relationships broken, trust lost.

Estrangements

and isolation.


Not only a break of hearts,

A break of tradition,

A break in expectations,

In patterns of behavior,

In roles we each play.


We are supposed to be this way,

look this way, act this way.

If we're not,

If we don't,

are we even a family?


Rigid standards, roles and expectations

Lay the path

to disappointment, disillusionment and confusion.

Questions of

How many kids in your family?

Where do your parents live?

Are you and your siblings close?

Well, how much time do you have?

Let me get my poster board and my marker

to map out

my family tree.


Because, it's complicated.

My family doesn't follow

The basic blueprint

that's been projected, expected and enforced

on families for decades, centuries, millennia.


And I'm both parts

Proud and Ashamed

of my broken family.

With its starts and stops.

The dangling branches,

The forks and angles

and dizzying degrees

of complications,

of faces, experiences and places

we've lived.

People we've loved

and lost

and found.


We're a mess

of branches

Scattered,

Gathered,

Grafted.


We're together

even when we're apart.

I am a part of them

and they are a part of me.

My one big, sprawling, noisy, confusing

Family.







Thursday, January 18, 2024

Ranking

 More on the points system I referenced in my post about Barbie...

Women get points for lots of things, being thin, marrying young, snagging a really good looking guy. In Mormon Land we also get points for having lots and lots of babies, like a dozen or so, and for being pregnant continuously, for breast feeding each baby because "Breast is Best." We can also accrue points by getting our bodies back after pregnancy, wearing makeup, smiling and being sweet and kind, quiet and supportive and well, small. Waiting for a pat on the head from a man. Smiling and looking doe eyed is especially point worthy. 

Motherhood, it turns out, is a whole minefield of points, both earning and losing. You bought organic produce? More points for you! Homemade, clean eating, gluten-free, dairy-free, plant-based? Points! Points and more Points! Bonus points for every time you say my kids will never eat that! 

Bonus points for homeschooling your kids, for being their one and only mother, nurse, maid, cook, cleaner, gym teacher, math teacher, social studies teacher, counselor, therapist, stylist, personal assistant and coach. What's that? A whole village? A network of people to raise my kids, not me! I can do it on my own with all these points I've earned. 

Isolating and surrounded. You mirror them, they mirror you and nobody looks good. 

No technology, more points, no liberal ideas, more points. Patriotic? You just scored the Mother-load!  

Barbie

When I was a girl playing with Barbie made me excited to get big, full boobs and wide hips and long legs and luscious hair. Well, that didn't happen. I broke my big toe in Junior High and when the doctor casually mentioned that my growth plates had closed, I was devastated! I was 14 years old and 5'3" No! I thought, I can't stay this size! I'm not nearly tall enough! What am I supposed to do?! There was nothing to do, I was stuck with this short body, stunted before I could reach Barbie's stunning proportions. In 8th grade I got another shock when I overheard a boy ask where that big-boob McCombs girl was (he meant me). I was both horrified and proud, I may not have Barbie's height but at least I got her rack! And the boys were noticing! 

Barbie created the metric system by which I judged myself and all women. Long, thick hair +1 point, narrow waist +1 point, dainty feet +1 point. (I actually used to squeeze my feet into a size 7.5 just to appear smaller). Slim, long legs +10 points, you can make your legs appear longer by wearing short skirts and high heels for +5 points, uniform skin tone +5 points, acne -1000 points. You get the picture, look a certain way or else no one will look at you at all. 

High heels, skinny waist with just a hint of bare midriff, don't want to give it all away, leave a little to the imagination girl! Long, straight, smooth hair, makeup just right, it would take me hours to check all the Pretty Girl boxes each morning. I'm mad and ashamed and disappointed about all the time and money and effort I spent on making myself a prize for someone to win.Focusing so much of my time and energy on policing and manipulating my appearance left little time for me to form actual thoughts and opinions beyond who was going to ask me to prom.

I could have been doing real things, I could have been having real thoughts! Maybe that's why spending time and money on my hair and makeup and clothes seems like such a waste now. I have lost years to primping but no more. My time is my own, I don't need to impress anyone but myself. 

I plan on spending all my time thinking important thoughts and solving problems and building relationships. No more quality time with my hairdryer and hand mirror.