How Do You Explain Parenthood?

I’ve tangled with this issue for a while, the impossibility of describing what it is to become a parent.  It’s much like explaining three dimensions to a two-dimensional being, or explaining quantum physics and multi-dimensional space-time fabric to a drunk frat boy.  Maybe it’s my insatiable need to be understood, to translate complex ideas into understandable prose, but I have to try.  So here goes.

Humans are naturally self-centered.  You feel this especially as a child and act accordingly, which is why childish behavior is congruent with selfish behavior.  Moving into adulthood some people can transcend selfish desires and become very giving people.  These are the advanced souls who hand out food at homeless shelters, sell all their belongings to move to India and build wells in dusty villages, and volunteer at animal shelters.  But these people run against the grain and most of us still worry about ourselves first and everyone else second.  Don’t feel guilty, this is an instinct for self-preservation and a fact that you live in your own head.

Then you have a baby and everything turns upside down.  Babies are tyrannical in their selfishness.  They never care if you’re tired, sick, or unhappy.  They are pure Id, demanding and devouring without cease.  This is when the transition hits you like a kick to the gut:  you’re in charge of someone who doesn’t care about your needs.  Either you dig down deep and find the Provider in your soul, or you become one of those horrifying neglectful parents we see on the news.  Amazingly, most people find it in themselves to release their white-knuckled grip on self, and whoa baby, when you do it’s an incredible rush.  Your soul has done the most basic thing known to life in the universe:  subdivision and growth.  It happens on a cellular level and when you’re raising your own child you feel it intrinsically.

So what’s it like to be a parent?  Maybe it’s pet ownership times a thousand.  It’s also stress times a thousand.  I’m like a border collie now because I can never rest until my lamb is safe and under my watch, and I know my task until I die is to protect and nurture.  Maybe that little high school project where you carry an egg around for a week isn’t that far off the mark.  But in real life the egg keeps growing and amazing you.  My daughter is an unfolding lotus, and I’ll sit in the garden of my life watching this flower until I close my eyes for the last time.

Parenthood is putting yourself second.  Parenthood is the exhilaration of flight.  Parenthood is growing up again.  Parenthood is drinking from the cup of love and knowing it will never empty.

Writer, architect, father, husband.

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4 comments on “How Do You Explain Parenthood?
  1. Babs says:

    You nailed it! How lucky that little girl is to have parents that think like that too!

  2. Anne, what a beautiful and thought provoking post!

    My daughter had a baby a few months ago and she has def changed! She suddenly understood what it truly meant to be a mother and our relationship grew.
    Being a grandparent is different again. You watch as your offspring makes mistakes, but say nothing unless asked.

    As for pet ownership…it’s amazing how many parents still put their pets before their new born baby.

    Is the little one in the photo above yours?

    PiP

    • psoutowood says:

      Thanks and yes, that’s my girl. I’m curious where you got ‘Anne’ from, though. I’m a guy and you can see my picture in the ‘About’ tab. I wonder if my writing belies a more feminine side? I have been dotting all my i’s with hearts recently…;-)

      • 😳 I called you Anne because I thought you were
        http://handmadebyannepotter.wordpress.com/
        I thought her blog look different along with the writing style, but people change themes and names so sometimes it’s easy to get confused! LOL

        Thank goodness I am not going mad and you are someone different! I was wondering where the baby came from…hence my question as to whether it was yours.

        I am really sorry by the confusion!

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  1. […] this one example, in a post I wrote about parenting:  “My daughter is an unfolding lotus and I’ll sit in the garden of my life watching this […]