Thanks, Mom, for telling me no
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LOLITA HARPER
My mom was totally uncool. It seemed as if I was the only junior at
Woodbridge High School that had to be home by midnight and my mother
called the parents each time I was invited to spend the night
somewhere. Ugh.
I swear, she had it in for me. She was destined to keep me home,
lonely, bored and unpopular.
My mom did not understand fashion. She never bought me those
awesome, tapered-leg Guess jeans that zipped up on the sides. I was
the only girl at Lakeside Middle School who wore generic denim.
I swear, she just didn’t understand why a 12-year-old desperately
needed a $65 pair of jeans.
My mom never bought me Cookie Crisp cereal for breakfast. It
seemed as if I was the only kindergartner who didn’t come to class
hopped up on sugar, only to crash from my high right around nap time.
I swear, just once, I would have loved to have been able to have
dessert for breakfast.
In the years and decades to come, I learned that it wasn’t my
mom’s job to be cool or to be my best friend. It wasn’t her job to
make sure I was up with all the latest fashion trends and put us in
the poor house just to make me look good. It was her job to raise me.
And all those unpopular rules she placed on me helped with that goal.
I’m sure there were times when it might have been easier for her
to bend the rules and save a few knock-down, drag-out arguments -- to
have her daughter think she was “the coolest.” But, to her, it was
more important that she uphold the rules of the house, which were
created out of a belief that they were the best for me and our small
family of two.
“Nobody else’s parents do this,” I would say, in a fit of rage.
“That’s because nobody else’s parents love you as much as I do,”
my mom would answer back.
“I hate you,” I would scream and slam the door of my bedroom.
I’m sure the words felt like a slap in the face, especially
because her actions were done out of love and I was responding with
venom, but she was unbending. And so was I -- proving that the apple
doesn’t fall far from the tree -- and I got into my fair share of
trouble. I am convinced it would have been tenfold had my mother not
been so strict.
But it wasn’t the trouble that she kept me from, or didn’t keep me
from, that was so important. It was the lessons in parenting that she
taught me that I hope to instill in my son. It’s easy to be a “fun”
parent, it’s much harder to be a good one.
Consistency. Tough love. The courage to walk your talk. I learned
them from watching my mom.
Even though my son is only 4, I already feel a great pressure to
keep him happy and, as silly as it sounds, to have him like me. It is
hard to come home from a long day at work and have to spend the
majority of the evening bickering about having three pieces of
Halloween candy, rather than the two-piece limit previously enacted.
It would be much more peaceful to give him the third piece and end
the argument (Yes, my 4-year-old can argue -- well. I wonder where he
gets it from?).
When I am tempted, or worse, when I find myself giving in, I am
reminded of what a better mother would do. I am reminded of what my
mother would do. My son needs to know who the parent is and if he
doesn’t like it, he needs to know that it is done out of love. And if
he still doesn’t like it, tough -- he will someday.
My mom and I went through seven horrible years, in which I tested
and she stood firm. From the age of 13 to 20 we yelled, cried and
fought. For seven years I stressed my poor mother out. We rarely
spoke after I left for college and it wasn’t until I learned I was
pregnant that we became close again.
Something about being a mother made me appreciate my mother
100-fold and now, I don’t know how I could have ever taken her for
granted. Even when she was waiting tables, cleaning houses or going
back to school she made sure our house was clean, our meals were
cooked and we still had fun, yet inexpensive excursions, such as
trips to public beaches or parks.
As I run around my apartment, like a chicken with my head cut off,
trying to figure out how to get lunches made, faces washed and the
laundry done, I realize just how great a mother I had.
Thank you, Mom, for truly being the best. Thank you for standing
your ground. Thank you for being such a great role model.
It cost us seven years of hell but now we really are best friends.
Now that we are both adults, we are capable of having a “girlfriends”
relationship. In my youth, her job was to raise me. Now she has the
luxury of sitting back, admiring the job she did, and learning from
me, in return. We try to sit down for wine, dinner and conversation
as often as we can.
And unlike my teen years, when I wanted to be as far away from her
as possible, I now live two blocks away from her -- and can’t imagine
it any other way.
* LOLITA HARPER is the Forum editor. She also writes columns
Wednesdays and Fridays. She may be reached at (949) 574-4275 or by
e-mail at [email protected].
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