Friday, January 4, 2008

Life Isn't Fair

It seems like life, sometimes, is one long journey in which you discover that life isn't fair and justice often is just a dream. We raise our kids with the idea that ANYTHING is possible--you can walk on the moon, become president, do anything you put your mind to. And, to a large extent, I believe that's so. But along the way, we all learn that life isn't fair. That poverty and racism or bad breaks or illness or . . . you name it . . . sometimes strike. That life metes out its own unfairness in often random fashion.

And so it is that I often look at my kids and want to delay that lesson. At the same time, I have brought them to the projects with me when I mentored unwed teen moms; they have wrapped Christmas gifts for girls as young as 12 having their SECOND baby. I have done this in matter-of-fact fashion. I have done it because I want to BE the change I want to see in the world, and I want them to believe that though life isn't fair, each citizen can do something--large or small--to even things out. To make the world a little more fair for a child with few chances to escape poverty. I model what I want my children to believe. I model what I want them to someday do themselves.

Like all human beings, I also model horrible days when I am a terrible and mean mother, when I am at the end of my rope, when I am crabby and overtired, and I just don't FEEL like doing five loads of laundry and sewing the new patch in the Ninjitsu uniform.

I suppose that's the "not fair" part. Sometimes, I'm June Cleaver. Sometimes? I'm more like . . . hmm. Psycho mom. (Though somehow I can't picture June Cleaver working in the projects.)

And in a funny lesson of life's not fair? Demon Baby is very underweight. He has what they term "Failure to Thrive." Thus he is to be given butter, fats, whole milk, pudding, ice cream . . . cheese, anything and everything to gain weight. If he wants ice cream and cheese for breakfast and will eat it, he gets it. He has sausage at as many meals as we can fit 'em in. And Older Son and his best friend were sipping diet soda the other day, heading into adolescence and concerned that they stay . . . more trim. And Older Son looked at Demon Baby eating butter on a spoon and said, "You know, life isn't fair sometimes."

And me? Walking four miles a day in the frigid cold right now to get fit, as a woman who looks, well, like a woman whose had four kids, I could only nod and say, "You're right. It's not."

6 comments:

Spy Scribbler said...

LOLOL, isn't that the truth?! Cool about the rocks!

I love to take walks at night. I live in this quaint little town. At night, you can stroll by all the shop windows in the square (which is really a triangle). A river runs through town, and the town is built around a waterfall. There's this little park by the river, and if you go behind the trees a bit, there's a tiny peninsula on the river, and on that tiny peninsula is a rock.

That's my favorite place to meditate. I stopped meditating when I stopped walking.

But it's not fair; my foot won't stop swelling up and I can't go on walks anymore. :-)

Erica Orloff said...

Spy:
Your town sounds so wonderful. I walk about four miles--and it's pretty, past houses and trees and so on, and there's a pond and one lake--but nothing quite so picturesque.

I am getting back into the walking routine. When the alarm blares, I have to say I sort of groan, but I am sure another week or so and I'll be used to it.
E

Sherry said...

I found you through ello at Random Acts of Unkindness...you were the first commenter on her latest post...and so wildly what my life is like...
This is apparently Buy A Friend a Book week and I just did that for my best friend...what did I buy her? "Diary of a Blues Goddess"...yeah, so very much what my life is like!! I had no idea you had a blog!!

Erica Orloff said...

Hi Sherry:
What a weird coincidence!!! I have two blogs . . . this and my writing blog. THIS is my insane life blog. THAt is my passionate writing one. :-)

I hope your friend likes the book! Thanks for coming by!
E

Barrie said...

I'm extra impressed if you're getting up to walk on your own. I swear there are days that I only make it to the gym because I know my exercise partner will lean on the horn in front of my house. :)

Erica Orloff said...

LOL. Well, as a mom of four, it's my only alone time. 5:30 a.m.
E