Writer, mother, runner, vegan, marketing professional, avocado-enthusiast, mini-van driver, laundry expert, cat-owner and donut lover.

You can contact me at jessicasusanwrites@gmail.com





Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Some thoughts on parenting....

I know I’ve gotten my daughter too much for her birthday: too many gifts, too many decorations and balloons and pirate party favors, too many sugary red cupcakes.  I know it’s more for my own joy than for hers, as she will only remember the fun and the novelty for a few days, maybe a week.  But I, her mother, will always remember the look on her face when her little friends all show up, the excitement shaking her skinny body when everyone turns to her and sings, the joy in her huge brown eyes when she sees the pile of gifts.  I suppose that is the selfish part of parenting- doing things that you know will particularly make yourself feel good.  Like when you get your kids all washed and combed and dressed up in nice clothes, knowing that they will be uncomfortable and less than happy as you put the stiff dress shoes on their small pink feet.  But you know that it is worth seeing the admiration in other people’s faces as they look upon your sweet-souled angels in those few moments before their shirts come un-tucked, their tights run and messy snacks stain their new clothes.  For just an instant, you can see the love and pride you feel every day, reflected in the eyes of others.
I’d say that the selfish part of parenting is certainly far smaller than the unselfish part, for sure.  It must be said though, that the pride you take in your children, beyond the nicely dressed moments, is a more fulfilling pride than you can take in most things you may accomplish for yourself and that feels pretty good.  How can getting a degree or landing a great job or earning a fortune compare with hearing your young son singing the ABC’s softly under his breath while he plays?  It can’t, as far as I know.  The pride in him, and in yourself for teaching him, is, I think for most parents, far greater.  Giving life is one thing, and certainly something to be proud of (especially for women who actually do the giving-birth part!), but giving a good life to your children is maybe the best thing you can ever do, for yourself and for them.
The definition of “a good life” is widely debatable.  Providing for your kids means something different to me than it does to someone else, depending on endlessly varied circumstances and differing opinions.  I am lucky enough to live in a world where I can go to Toys R Us and pick out a purple sparkly bicycle for my daughter’s 4th birthday and feel really good about that.  I know other people, good parents who love their kids and want to give them everything they possibly can, consider themselves lucky to be able to give their kids clean clothes or uncontaminated water or a solid meal.  None of those particular distinctions necessarily determines good parenting, by any means, but only proves that the desire to give your kids whatever you can to make them happy (or stronger, or more fulfilled, or more comfortable) is a strong one and one that not only works to their benefit, but surely to our own as well.  And even when we can’t give our kids everything, the desire to do the most we can is there for most of us.  This desire, of course, easily brings us over to the unselfish part of being a parent, especially when we have to sacrifice something (or everything) in order to give our kids what they need or want.  But when we have the ability to give those things easily, or dress them up and show them off, well, there is really nothing so simply wonderful.
The more explicitly unselfish part is, I think, what people associate more overtly with parenthood: the extreme sleep deprivation, the tantrums and whining, the long hot afternoons at noisy playgrounds, the inability to go wherever you want whenever you want (a realization that most people don’t fully grasp until they are laden down with a car-seat, a stroller, a massive diaper-bag, and a screaming infant who insists on being fed at the most inopportune times and must, despite what is happening around them, be kept on a specific napping schedule in order to not undo the stressfully enormous job of sleep-training that you have been working on!).  And that unselfishness obviously extends upward and outward into bigger and weightier things, from what kind of car or house you buy, to what career you are going to pursue that will both allow you to spend time with your kids but also provide enough for them.  Inevitably it often means sacrificing your hobbies, your passions, your relationships, sometimes your very happiness to make those things happen.  And we, the parents who are parents not only as a title or obligation but who are parents in our hearts and souls, do it.  And we do it every single day. 
I look at my kids and know, without the slightest doubt, that they are worth every sticky, crumb-covered second of it and I think most parents would agree.  Despite the hardness of it, no sacrifice is too big, whether it means giving up most of a meal you were starving for to feed them, or paying for a pre-school you can’t really afford, or sleeping on the couch outside a needy child’s room instead of in your own bed just so that you are there when he calls out for you.  Would I rather not sweep under the table three times a day or wash 1.4 billion sippy cups a week?  Sure, but it’s a small price to pay.  I would never, for anything, give up the extreme joy of smelling my son’s hair (even when it kind of smells like Play-Doh and cheese) or kissing my daughter goodnight (even when I am exhausted and irritable and she clings to me and tells me her room is just too scary to be in alone and could she please have one more story, a sip of water, softer pajamas, another song, one more hug, pleeeeease?).  It is more than worth it, of course.  We can only hope to find rational ways of balancing that giving with remembering that happy adults make better parents.  That sometimes, even when little kids don’t want you to leave, that going to Cardioflex class at the gym makes someone a better, healthier, saner mom.  Or like knowing that “no” is sometimes the right answer even if your high-pitched child disagrees.  Or knowing that giving kids every toy in the toy store won’t make them better people, but will actually only leave you broke and them spoiled. 
These are not the simplest things to figure out because that balance is not easy.  But I take heart in knowing that my happiness, my pride in their success as people and my success as a parent, very often overlap.  If I have to give up a few things, postpone my own goals or desire, or find the will to put my foot down on certain issues (“No, two-year-old, you may not chew gum!”), so be it.  Life is long.  Or long enough, I suppose, to live the selfish parts, bear the unselfish parts and find pride and happiness in all of those heart-squeezing moments that you otherwise would have to live without. 

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Catching Earthquakes


I’ve been trying to catch an earthquake,
before it hits and cracks the surface.
Trying to hold the fault line together;
stitch it up,
still the plates.
Don’t tell me it’s not possible.
I’ve caught one in the past;
stomped it out before it could devastate.
The last one that hit shook the world.
Because earthquakes don’t discriminate.
It tore down what was built,
flattened what was tall
cracked what was once solid.
But also, unexpectedly,
reformed the earth into something new,
created new peaks, transcendent pinnacles
where there had only been flat ground before.
So now I’m trying to withstand,
trying to prevail,
trying to endure,
the forces that are waiting to strike.
But there is something down there,
under the ground;
a tension of two opposing forces,
building pressure.
waiting to explode upward
and shake this place.
I’m trying to catch that earthquake
before it causes this to break.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Margaret Atwood's response

Through the incredible luck of having a generous and kind professor with great connections, I was able to send some of my writing to one of my favorite writers, Margaret Atwood.  Below is an email from her, responding to my story "The Lake," which was based on one of her poems.


Dear Jessica (if I may),
 
One of the most unexpected and meaningful gifts I have received as a result of my career as a writer has been the opportunity to read the work of other, younger writers as they embark on their own careers. I have always found such opportunities to be deeply refreshing for my own work and perspective, as well as simply a delightful reminder of the wide and deep river of talent that winds through the world of great literature and art.
 
Thanks to your efforts, and to those of your dedicated Professor writing on your behalf, I have now one more such opportunity to add to my life's list. The fact that your evocative, chilling, and deeply human story was inspired by my poem simply provides one more layer to my enjoyment (and has helped me return once more to that long-departed poem and see it in a new light, for which I am very grateful), although I hasten to add that your story stands very much on its own.
 
I don't know what your plans are for the story going forward, and as I told your Professor, I try to make no recommendations when it comes to unpublished manuscripts--we must each chart our own course down that river, after all! But no matter what, I am quite certain I will be reading more of your work in print, and greatly anticipate that opportunity as well.
 
Thank you again, and best of luck in your career ahead.
 
Sincerely,

Margaret E. Atwood

Monday, May 14, 2012

Words I Never Met


I built a tower out of words,
            some twenty stories high.
Many of them truths, though
            many more were lies.
I turned them into fortresses
            without a way inside,
a hollow box of letters where
            I thought I might reside.
No windows and no doorways
            to let the air pass through.
I was all set up to suffocate
            and be quietly subdued.

I built the words around me
            in secret, crippling ways.
They stared so harshly at me
            that I couldn’t meet their gaze.
The words began to all rise up
            and walk out on their own,
claiming life and substance they
            could not have found alone.
They shook and moved around me,
            blocking out my view
of all the better words
            which held their places, true.

I knew some words could heal me
            and rise up to define,
the purpose that had brought me there;
            the calm I hoped to find.
But not all words are equal.
            Not all words believe,
that they owe me anything.
            Those are the words that leave.
Some troubled me, some hurt,
            Some caused me to regret.
But perhaps the ones that are the worst
            are the words I never met.

Destination Unknown

Just saying hello. More to come!