Archives for posts with tag: empathy

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2:50 a.m., I was shaken out of my slumber. I felt jarred but quickly recognized the  rhythm of the tiny hand pats that disrupted my dreams. I lift the eye mask from my eyes, shifting it to my forehead. My eyes focus, as well as they can in a dark room without my glasses.

My three year old is the patter. A tender aged child.

“Mama. I need water” he mumble-whined. It’s his special middle of the night voice. It sounds muffled and far away. But I know it anywhere. This wake-up call is not a rare occurrence. At the minimum he does this once a week. Sometimes more.

“Mmm. Ok.” I murmur. Still asleep. I take the ear plugs from my ears and place them on my nightstand.

Gathering myself I sit on the edge of my bed. His little body against my knees.

“Ok. Mama get you some water. Then we go to your bed?”

I scoop him up in my lap. His face nestled in to my neck. It’s their spot. Always the right side of my body. The crook between my neck and shoulder seems perfectly molded for my children’s faces. No matter their size.

“Do you want one of your water bottles?”

“Yeah mama,” still his middle of the night mumble-whine.

“Ok. Let’s get you one. Then mama put you in your bed.”

“No, mama. I go sleep in your bed.”

I’m silent this time. Knowing better than getting him all worked up. The less we talk about it the better. It’s what works for him.

Carrying his 33 pounds, groggy across the house, I fumble through the dark kitchen cabinet and find a water bottle. No lid. I set him down on the ground and sigh. Squinting, luckily I remembered my glasses, I rummage through the clean dishwasher. Finding the straw and lid. Relief. The sound of water hitting the plastic fills the silence of the 3am kitchen. The city is eerily silent at that time. The cacophony of city sounds silenced
I hand him his water bottle and scoop him up. He finds his spot. Soft skin against mine. His breathing vibrating through my body.

“No mama. I sleep in you bed,” he noticed I took a different path. The path to his room.

“Mmm you’re a big boy. You have to sleep in your bed sweetheart,” I wonder in my head if I should just bring him with me. No. The doctor says to put him in his bed. I have an arbitrary cut off time. 4 a.m. If it’s after 4 a.m. I will just scoop him up and snuggle for a bit. He didn’t make my made-up cutoff.

I rock him. I sing to him. I reassure him he’s ok in his bed. Slowly I make our way closer to his pile of plushies and blankets.

“No. Mama. No. I sleep with you!” He continues his lament. My heart aches to cave. But we’ve already started. He’s in his bed.

“Mama tuck you in. Want another song? Which one do you think?” No answer. I sigh and pick rock-a-bye-baby. I don’t like the ending to that one. But it’s the first song that entered my sleepy brain. His eyes get heavy and close. I know he’s still alert though. I rub his face.

“Don’t go mama”

I sing one verse of the ants go marching. Then I kneel down next to his bed. Settling in. I’ll have to wait until his breathing slows and his eyes stay closed.

Every few seconds they flutter open. Checking in. The check-ins begin to spread out.
I sit there watching his face. My own eyes heavy. They keep shutting. But I know. I must wait. I sit until the breathing slows and eyes stay closed.

Back in my own bed, I keep hearing “mama” In my head. And my tired mind wanders to the children in Texas. The tender aged ones especially. Who are waking up scared and thirsty and seeking the comfort of their mama’s arms. And they’re not allowed. The caregivers aren’t even allowed to hug them.

Tossing and turning I finally fell back asleep. It was restless and sweaty with some nightmare where I was trying to escape some unknown villain.

Pat pat pat. I am jarred awake, yet again. I pull my eye mask off, for the second time in hours. A taller form hovers over my bed. My seven year old. The sun beams around the curtains.

“Mommy? I had a nightmare.”

Silently, I scooch over and pat the outside of the bed. I catch a glimpse of a small smile that spreads across his cheeks. His mind is settling. He has me. He crawls in, and buries his face in my pillow, inches from my head. I wrap my blankets around him and bring my hand to his head. I run my fingers against the grain of his freshly buzzed scalp. I like the scratchiness of that.

Again, my mind wanders back to the mothers whose children are being held in tent cities in hundred degree heat. I bet some of those mothers like how it feels when they run their fingers through their child’s freshly buzzed hair. I bet their seven year olds would still seek their comfort when they have a nightmare. Except now they are all living a nightmare and cannot manage to get into each other’s arms. Because, the American Government has separated them.

I feel blessed and heartbroken. I get to comfort my boys when their sleep is disrupted. The children at the border, their whole world has been uprooted and changed and disrupted and the very simple act of laying in their parent’s arms has been stolen from them too.

I work for a refugee organization. I have been there for over a year now and it is the greatest pride of my life. The thing is, no parent would choose to uproot their family and flee across hundreds and thousands of miles to an unknown future, unless the place they were living was absolutely terrible and unsafe. The idea of making that arduous journey while not knowing where exactly you may end up, is a beacon of hope compared to the circumstances that triggered the need to flee.

There is no luxury of planning this trip. There is no Traveolicity for refugees. They don’t have the option of seeking asylum from the comfort of their home, sitting on their Crate and Barrel couch with their laptop on their lap. That is not the situation. They are trying, with all their might, to save their children’s lives.

That is how these families end up here. That is why these families end up here. They seek safety and a better life for their children. I dare anyone who has children and thinks separating parents and children is acceptable, to consider that. Consider what you would do if your choices were, watching your children suffer or fleeing to a country that used to plea, give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door!

I challenge you to consider. I challenge you to empathize. I challenge you to care. I challenge you to imagine how it would feel if you couldn’t comfort your babies when they cry in the dark.

The rather hot button topic of what occurred at the Cincinnati Zoo last Saturday has been weighing on my heart since Monday morning. I have to admit I was a little oblivious of what had happened until then. Alexander woke us up Monday morning bright and early and very hysterical. Upon calming him down, we slowly started our day. That included lounging on the couch after he wiggled his happy way off my lap to go play with his toys. I decided to put on the news.

I heard a brief preview of what they planned to speak about after the commercial break. My husband sat to my left. Immediately I got a bit snippy about it. They couldn’t tranquilize him? He had been more apprised of the situation and began explaining things to me. I have to admit that my initial reaction may have leaned a bit toward the masses reaction. Then I opened my ears and my heart and listened carefully to the whole news story.

I sat on my couch in my pajamas and glasses. Sipping my coffee. Watching my very precocious and often mischievous 20 month old play with his things, often stopping to give me his sly little grin. I heard the story. I heard how he had been told just moments before that he could NOT go play with the gorillas. (Here is an account from an actual witness) And then in the blink of an eye he was gone. 15 feet below in a pit with a male Silverback Gorilla, who by all accounts, regardless of intention, was still whipping that small boy around. I turned to my husband and tried to say, “that would be Alex. Alex would do that.” I couldn’t. The words stopped in my throat. The tears came to my eyes. I physically ached in my chest. I hurt for that mom. I lost my breath for a moment. That could be Alex. He would do something like that regardless of my stern warnings not to. Jackson would likely never. Even at Alex’s age. Certainly not as the 5 year old he is now. He has always been more inclined to follow my rules. I discovered months ago that I am dealing with the horse of a different color when it comes to my sweet baby boy. I have to parent differently.

Yesterday I had to stop at Walgreens. Alex did not want me to hold him the entire time. He wanted down. He is a wanderer. He is a fast wanderer. I was waiting in line. Within the 10 minutes we were there he bolted from me 4-5 times. One of those times we were near the exit and I was trying to pay. I had to chase after him before he made his way out of the automatic doors. I then attempted to physically restrain him between my two legs so I could finish paying. He broke free. This time taking off towards the back of the store. I again, had to stop what I was doing to chase after him. The mom in line behind me smiled and laughed. I said “He is a wanderer.” As I scooped him up into my arms. She smiled and said “I remember those days.” Her older maybe 8 year old daughter closely at her side. Alex then dropped a sticker he had been clutching in his pudgy little hand for the past 30 minutes. She immediately bent down to grab it for me and hand it back to him. As I was clearly trying to wrangle him in and get him to listen as best I could. I don’t let him run free. I tell him over and over and over and over that he HAS to listen to mommy and he HAS to stay with mommy. He has two choices, stay with mommy on the ground, or in my arms/cart/stroller. He smiles and runs away. Some kids are that way.

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Alex. My bright, mischievous, brave 20 month old.

If you know me in person, it is fair to say I am not a neglectful mom. You may have even picked that up through following this blog or even my Instagram account. I have committed fully to being their mom. Maybe sometimes to the point that I do get burnt out, but yet here I am. Recently I was very sick and my husband offered to put the boys to bed without me. They both wanted me to come up and help. Jackson said “It’s fine, she will hear us crying for her and just come up anyway.” So even my very bright 5 year old sees me for who I am. A workaholic. They are my life, my job, my world, my very breath that keeps me alive (and often drives me crazy). So when Alex has wandered off for a brief moment and I happened to be in the middle of something else, paying, talking to Jackson, or any of the other million tasks I am balancing in one day, does that make me a neglectful mom? Does every other parent out there never ever take their eyes off their precious porcelain offspring? Have they never looked away for the briefest of seconds only to find their human being child with an active brain has made a decision for themselves regardless of all of the parenting they have done over the years? And the non parents, don’t even talk to me. As Ygritte would say “You know NOTHING Jon Snow.” Seriously, non parents should not judge what an actual parent has to go through with their child on a daily basis. You have NO idea. I had none before I had children. I admit that. Accidents happen. We balance life and children and pets and cleaning and interaction with other people in public and sometimes things happen. I have had bad parenting moments where I think “holy shit. I will NEVER forgive myself.”

There I was sitting on that couch. My heart aching for the whole situation. Then reading up further to try and learn more. I saw the angry cries for harm to come to the mom. I read people calling her a bitch. I felt a rush of anger myself. Anger towards the people who are so hateful. I am saddened that an endangered creature lost its life. I am more happy that a little boy didn’t lose his. I am empathetic towards that mom. Because being a mom is literally the hardest thing I have ever done. It takes a lot out of you every day, no breaks. You do so much as a mom. I wanted to hug that mom. I wanted to tell her that I am so happy her boy is alive. I wanted to tell her I am sorry that people are so cruel. I wanted to ask these people where is their outrage for people hunting these majestic creatures in the wild to eat them? Or the outrage for the NATURAL habitat loss? Are you as angry about that? Or just over the fact that Harambe lost his life while in captivity, a life that arguably was no life at all? Are you going to call for petitions to end the poaching and habitat loss? Are you going to call for petitions to help save them from Ebola? The link has some information about the real threats to Gorillas. Where is your outrage for the injustice that led to them being endangered animals? Or did you just wake up feeling like “today I could really go for some mob mentality?”

I am not perfect mom. Truly. I do dote on my boys. I am devoted to them. My world revolves around them. Sometimes they are all I have to talk about because I am literally with them 24/7. I have a wanderer, as I call him. I don’t know what he will be like when he is 4. I hope that we have worked through this a bit by then. I cannot guarantee that. He has a wild side. He is adventurous. He has little fear. He goes for things he wants when he wants them. He is incredibly smart and understands the world around him. He has a sly grin that lets you know he is about to do something you are not going to agree with. He is only 20 months old. So from one mom with an inquisitive child to another, I want to hug you. I want to tell you I know mistakes happen. I know you didn’t set out to go to the zoo and have your child end up in a gorilla exhibit. I don’t think you’re a bitch. I don’t think you should be thrown in jail. I empathize with you.

I came across this in my IG feed and it seemed fitting for what I have been grappling with since Monday. The world would be a kinder place if we all took a collective deep breath and remembered this.

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