Oops, Wrecked the Baby
Laughing, knocking on wood, and other parenting tips
November / December 2003
Nina Utne Utne magazine
When Sam, my firstborn, was a baby just learning to roll over, I
was halfway down the stairs one day when I remembered something I
had forgotten. I put him down on the landing and ran back up. But
he was too quick for me. I can still feel the sickening realization
that accompanied his body thudding down the steps. Afterwards, once
Sam's hysteria and mine had subsided and it was clear that he was
fine, Eric, my husband, made a crack that has been part of our
family lore ever since: 'Oops, wrecked the baby.'
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Our cover story on raising children who are engaged and
passionate about life (page 66) makes me think about my own
experience as mother of three boys and stepmother of one. About the
inevitability that one way or another, the baby will be wrecked
time and again, despite our best intentions. About how we can't
make our children's lives perfect and how we can never wholly
protect them.
In the face of that profound helplessness, I adopted two
beliefs: that my children have guardian angels who are more
vigilant than I could ever be, and that they had chosen the
circumstances into which they had been born. My belief in guardian
angels was a purely pragmatic choice, based simply on the
recognition that I could become a world-class worrier and that the
resulting overinvolvement in my children's lives wouldn't do anyone
any good. So I delegated the bulk of my worries to hypothetical
angels. And though I think the concept of consciousness evolving
over lifetimes makes sense, I'm about as interested in remembering
the details of past lives as I am in remembering what I had for
dinner last Tuesday. But for the purposes of motherhood, admitting
the possibility of reincarnation relieves a certain amount of
guilt.
Also, I knock on wood a lot, and I have persuaded myself that my
head counts as wood.
Having witnessed three out of four children pass through
adolescence and into young adulthood (one more to go, knock wood),
I have come to a few conclusions. We are animals, healthy ones if
we're lucky, and a lot of parenting is in our instincts, in our
bodily knowing. For me, the blessings of having uncomplicated
pregnancies and giving birth in an empowering way gave me the
initial confidence to follow my instincts as a mother. Perhaps most
of what we are as parents is communicated physically and
energetically -- our confidence, or lack of it, in ourselves and in
our children is the water they swim in. Even now, animal that I am,
I have to touch my children to really know how they are. Luckily,
they are all suckers for back rubs.