Thursday, August 15, 2019

Anxious as a Mother

The other night, Quinn came home from a monthly dinner with his preschool friends and their families, visibly upset, tears pooling in his enormous blue eyes. I pulled him in for a hug and asked what was wrong.

I’d left dinner early to get Noelle to bed, and wondered if I’d missed an incident. As soon as his head was against my chest – when did he get so tall? – his body shook in sobs.

“Oh, buddy, what is it?” I asked. 

“I just don’t want people to keep dying,” he said. 

I racked my brain. Who had died? Had we talked about death recently? We’d just returned from a nine-day trip to Seattle to visit my best friend and her family. Her daughter, my 14-year-old god-daughter, was diagnosed with melanoma in May. That is a whole other post because FOURTEEN ARE YOU KIDDING ME, but two surgeries later and doctors have declared her cancer-free. So we’d talked a little about cancer -- it seems we always talk a little about cancer -- but not about death.

My big-hearted boy
“What brought this up?” I asked Quinn. 

“I’ve been thinking about it since that magazine I read in Seattle,” he said.

What magazine? I wondered. I still don’t know. 

He could see I still looked puzzled. “It was a medical one about people donating their organs, and I just wish people didn’t have to die. I want them to drink from the cup in Indiana Jones.” 

“Remind me what happened in Indiana Jones?” I said. I’d been chatting with Alana on her deck for half the movie, watching the late summer sunset while he’d watched the movie with his cousins. 

Movie night
“There are several cups, and lots of them are deadly poison, but one is a potion that lets you live forever," he explained, his eyes lighting up. "Why can’t we find that and give it to everyone we know, and the people we don’t know, too, so no one else has to die?”

“I don’t know, bud,” I said. “We haven’t figured out how to do that, yet. But hopefully it’s not something we need to worry about for a long, long time," I tried to put an optimistic spin on it, even as I wondered whether I caused this. Is it because he sees me upset about losing friends to cancer? Is it because I had cancer, and his grandpa died of cancer before he was born? Is it because I have other anxieties and fears I'm working through as we speak? Is it just a normal age-appropriate fear that has nothing to do with me? 

And then he surprised me. “I wish I could talk to God about it,” he said.

We are not a particularly religious family. To put it lightly. Chris and I were both raised Catholic, but have stepped away from the church – and any organized religion, really – at different points in our lives. My leaving came more recently, a disillusionment after my cancer diagnosis that I haven't quite figured out how to reconcile.

I don't think I got better because I prayed harder, but I still value the power of prayer. I also respect that millions of people find solace in their churches and church communities. If my son needed this, I would support him.

In parenting, I sometimes have to observe silently and allow my kids to discover their own particular beliefs about how the world works. My job is to support them in a safe, loving, accepting environment as they make sense of this universe in their developing brains. 

So I responded, “Well, you can talk to God, if you want."

"I can?" he asked, like I'd just shown him how to time travel.

"Of course," I answered. "He may not answer back, but we can talk to him. Would that help, do you think? Should we pray?”

“Mmmhmmm,” he answered, and suddenly he seemed so much younger to me than the big kid who just started third grade. 


Of course he needs something external to give him hope and promise that all his worries might be okay, I thought. I don't always have those skills as an adult, and I go to intense therapy every other week. 

I tried to remember how to pray. 

Now I lay me down to sleep. No, too morbid. I asked Chris if he could remember the non-terrifying version of that one. “Nope, that’s all I knew,” he said. 

Ok, The Lord’s Prayer, then. “I used to start with something like this,” I said to Quinn, “something I knew by heart and could repeat every night.” And we went through it, line by line, a matter of rote memorization to me, unfamiliar to him. We finished and he asked a lot of questions about forgiving trespasses and the meaning of temptation.

Am I doing my kids a great disservice by not taking them to church? Why is being an adult so tough?

On Father’s Day, I’d taken both kids to a Mormon Church service. Chris was in Tanzania, and Quinn had requested to go to church where a couple of his friends go. Arrangements were made, we dressed up in our Sunday finest, and listened to the service about a father’s love for his family. Quinn’s friend’s dad gave the sermon, and teared up as he spoke about his dad always being ready to play ball with him, even when he was still in his work clothes and it was still 100 degrees outside. He’d roll up his sleeves and they’d head to the backyard. Such a simple act of love. I thought of all the ways dads show their love, of my own dad, and I wondered if Quinn was absorbing this or just happy to be sitting with his friends eating peanut M&Ms. 

Back to our praying. I recommended that he start with something easy to remember, and then go through what he’s grateful for. “It can be really helpful to think of all the things you’re thankful for. It always makes me feel better,” I explained.


“Everything,” he started. Oh, this boy. My heart. His enormous one. “I’m grateful for my family and friends, for Noelle, for food, our house, clothes, school…”

“For your powerful brain that lets you learn,” I added. “I’m thankful for you,” I said. “And my health.” I was holding him, lying next to him on his bed, our heads resting on stuffed animals.

“I’m thankful for our cars, for our pets…” 

“Yep,” I said. “And then from there, you may want to ask God about what it is that’s bothering you, or what it is you want. When I was little, I would ask God to protect my family, keep soldiers safe and bring them home, make sure children around the world have food, that kind of thing.”

“But what about why we came in here?” he asked. “I want to ask God to stop people from dying.”

Oy.

Our conversations about this have continued for several days now. We've talked about how to cope with our fears, even when we know they won't go away completely. How to use deep breaths and meditation to make the tightness in our chests feel less constricting. We've talked about how I go to therapy, and why that helps.

About how I try to give back to my community in the cancer world to honor those who have died. How Chris aims to be a good dad to keep the memory of his parents alive.

We've talked about how everyone dies, so that what's important is making this life count, and remembering that we are here today.

I've promised him that it is always worth it to love so big, even if it means occasionally losing big, too. To not let his fear shut down his willingness to open his heart.

We've talked about the importance of movement and laughter and, yes, prayer. We've journaled together, written a short story about overcoming fears and finding courage, and have tried dance parties in our kitchen.

But he is just like me in this way. We feel deeply. His empathy knows no limits, as far as I can tell. I only hope we can work through his anxiety a little earlier in life than I started figuring out how to approach mine.

Oof, parenting is exhausting and all-consuming sometimes. (All the time.) AND I HAVEN'T EVEN MENTIONED THE TODDLER.

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