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Allison Tate

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The Mom Stays in the Picture

Posted: 10/06/2012 12:30 pm

Last weekend, my family traveled to attend my oldest niece's Sweet Sixteen party. My brother and sister-in-law planned this party for many months and intended it to be a big surprise, and it included a photo booth for the guests.

I showed up to the party a bit late and, as usual, slightly askew from trying to dress myself and all my little people for such a special night out. I'm still carrying a fair amount of baby weight and wearing a nursing bra, and I don't fit into my cute clothes. I felt awkward and tired and rumpled.

I was leaning my aching back against the bar, my now 5-month-old baby sleeping in a carrier on my chest (despite the pounding bass and dulcet tones of LMFAO blasting through the room) when my 5-year-old son ran up to me.

"Come take pictures with me, Mommy," he yelled over the music, "in the photo booth!"

I hesitated. I avoid photographic evidence of my existence these days. To be honest, I avoid even mirrors. When I see myself in pictures, it makes me wince. I know I am far from alone; I know that many of my friends also avoid the camera.

It seems logical. We're sporting mama bodies and we're not as young as we used to be. We don't always have time to blow dry our hair, apply make-up, perhaps even bathe (ducking). The kids are so much cuter than we are; better to just take their pictures, we think.

But we really need to make an effort to get in the picture. Our sons need to see how young and beautiful and human their mamas were. Our daughters need to see us vulnerable and open and just being ourselves -- women, mamas, people living lives. Avoiding the camera because we don't like to see our own pictures? How can that be okay?

Too much of a mama's life goes undocumented and unseen. People, including my children, don't see the way I make sure my kids' favorite stuffed animals are on their beds at night. They don't know how I walk the grocery store aisles looking for treats that will thrill them for a special day. They don't know that I saved their side-snap, paper-thin baby shirts from the hospital where they were born or their little hospital bracelets in keepsake boxes high on the top shelves of their closets. They don't see me tossing and turning in bed wondering if I am doing an okay job as a mother, if they are okay in their schools, where we should take them for a vacation, what we should do for their birthdays. I'm up long past the news on Christmas Eve wrapping presents and eating cookies and milk, and I spend hours hunting the Internet and the local Targets for specially-requested Halloween costumes and birthday presents. They don't see any of that.

Someday, I want them to see me, documented, sitting right there beside them: me, the woman who gave birth to them, whom they can thank for their ample thighs and their pretty hair; me, the woman who nursed them all for the first years of their lives, enduring porn star-sized boobs and leaking through her shirts for months on end; me, who ran around gathering snacks to be the week's parent reader or planning the class Valentine's Day party; me, who cried when I dropped them off at preschool, breathed in the smell of their post-bath hair when I read them bedtime stories, and defied speeding laws when I had to rush them to the pediatric ER in the middle of the night for fill-in-the-blank (ear infections, croup, rotavirus).

I'm everywhere in their young lives, and yet I have very few pictures of me with them. Someday I won't be here -- and I don't know if that someday is tomorrow or thirty or forty or fifty years from now -- but I want them to have pictures of me. I want them to see the way I looked at them, see how much I loved them. I am not perfect to look at and I am not perfect to love, but I am perfectly their mother.

When I look at pictures of my own mother, I don't look at cellulite or hair debacles. I just see her -- her kind eyes, her open-mouthed, joyful smile, her familiar clothes. That's the mother I remember. My mother's body is the vessel that carries all the memories of my childhood. I always loved that her stomach was soft, her skin freckled, her fingers long. I didn't care that she didn't look like a model. She was my mama.

So when all is said and done, if I can't do it for myself, I want to do it for my kids. I want to be in the picture, to give them that visual memory of me. I want them to see how much I am here, how my body looks wrapped around them in a hug, how loved they are.

I will save the little printed page with four squares of pictures on it and the words "Morgan's Sweet Sixteen" scrawled across the top with the date. There I am, hair not quite coiffed, make-up minimal, face fuller than I would like -- one hand holding a sleeping baby's head, and the other wrapped around my sweet littlest guy, who could not care less what I look like.

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Based on the tremendous response we've seen to this post, we're challenging moms everywhere to get in the picture. Read some of the most moving reactions here, and submit your photos to the gallery below.

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Last weekend, my family traveled to attend my oldest niece's Sweet Sixteen party. My brother and sister-in-law planned this party for many months and intended it to be a big surprise, and it included ...
Last weekend, my family traveled to attend my oldest niece's Sweet Sixteen party. My brother and sister-in-law planned this party for many months and intended it to be a big surprise, and it included ...
 
 
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07:01 AM on 12/05/2012
"I am not perfect to look at and I am not perfect to love, but I am perfectly their mother."- Allison Tate
12:01 AM on 12/05/2012
This article reminded me of a family we saw this summer on vacation:-( A mom and dad and their beautiful 3 sons, However, mom was taking all the pictures! I believe they were from the UK and this was in Seychelles! My husband and I had our then 8month old son with us but we still offered to take a picture of the whole family and my husband actually started walking to take the camera from the mom, she shouted "NO,I'M NOT WEARING MAKE UP" so she didn't want to be IN ANY of the pictures!!! May I add they were all dressed up except her? I hope somehow she reads this!! Moms need to be in the picture, especially a family one:-)
01:32 PM on 12/01/2012
Thank you, this is important and touching!
09:09 PM on 11/28/2012
This is the GREATEST!!!! I LOVE LOVE LOVE IT!
09:05 PM on 11/28/2012
My mom passed away over 23 years ago. She hated having her picture taken, so most of the pictures I have of her are with her hand in front of her face, her turning away, or the back of her head. I really wish I had more pictures so I could remember her more. Please - no matter how awful you think you look - your kids will one day cherish every photo they have of you, whether you had makeup on or not, whether you were having a good hair day or had oatmeal in your hair. They don't care. They love you. Trust me. Get in the picture.
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Peosmom
04:47 PM on 11/28/2012
What a great post and reminder about what being a mom means. I vow to get in the pic more often too.
02:42 PM on 11/26/2012
So beautiful and so true. My mum died a little over a year ago, and I treasure every single one of the pictures I have of her even the ones when she looked her worst in the hospital bed with a beautiful smile on her face. I am carrying the tradition forward and my family and I have a family picture every year, not just to show how much my 10 and 8 year old have grown, but also to show how my husband and I have changed and matured. Good for you for getting into that photo booth, and believe me, you are beautiful because of what they have brought to you, and the love you have for them.
02:38 PM on 11/26/2012
So beautiful and so true. My mom died a little over a year ago, and I treasure every single one of those pictures even if she wasn't quite happy with how she looked. And I am following that tradition with my now 10 and 8 year old. We have a family picture every year, not just to see how they grow and change, but to see how my husband and I mature along the way as well. Good for you for getting in the booth with your little ones and you are beautiful because of all those changes they helped make in you.
02:16 AM on 11/26/2012
First, you look adorable and a half.

Second, amen sister! i'm always behind the camera and often when I'm in the picture, i'm not dressed to go out for the weekend. But the kids don't and won't care. they will see us with their hearts forever.
02:03 PM on 11/20/2012
I read this article in its entirety today after seeing you on a talk show. I am a new mother to a beautiful 3 month old! I am taking on the challenge to be the mom in the picture...I don't have very many pictures of me and my mother as a young child and even now, I am trying to be more diligent at getting pictures of us together! Family is about as important as it gets. I am still trying to loose that extra baby weight and don't always get the time to shower or make myself presentable but like you said my daughter is never going to care about that she is just going to care that she has that memory with her mommy!!
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Allison Tate
04:05 PM on 11/20/2012
I still need to lose my baby weight too. If I wait until I lose the baby weight, I could be waiting a long time to get in pictures! I tell myself that I would never want my daughter to stay out of pictures because I don't care what she looks like, she is beautiful to me. Goes both ways. Good luck in motherhood!
10:57 PM on 11/17/2012
I read this for the first time today. I am also never in the picture. I never thought about how selfish this is. It is too late for my 26 year old daughter and 22 year old son, but I have been blessed with another chance. I have an 8 year old daughter who will, from now on, see me beside her on the first days of school, congratulating her after Christmas programs and just hanging out with her. My older kids have far too few of these childhood pictures that include me. I have never even taken a family portrait. I always keep it to just the kids. I regret that. I had the rare opportunity to do it a few years back when all the kids were here to celebrate the holidays. We were all together and it was wonderful. We had a beautiful picture made, but sadly, I insisted on "just the kids" in the portrait. From this day forward I will remember this article and be reminded of my importance in my children's lives. No longer will I worry about my hair, my weight or the lines on my face. I am a fifty year old mother of three fantastic kids and I want our family pictures to show it!!! Thank you so much for writing this. I am forever changed.
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Allison Tate
09:11 PM on 11/19/2012
Wow, thank you for such a heartfelt response. I hope that when you take that picture you will send it my way!
05:37 PM on 11/17/2012
I read this article months ago . . . . . today was family picture day and the whole time I was getting ready, I was remembering this article and how I needed to be "in the picture". You managed to put so many of my thoughts and emotions into words and I thank you for this gift. You have given me the drive . . . . . even without the confidence! THANK YOU!
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Allison Tate
09:10 PM on 11/19/2012
I am so glad to read this. I was in the holiday pictures this weekend too, even though my hair was not cooperating and I was as flustered as could be! Good for you!
05:34 PM on 11/17/2012
I read this article months ago . . . . . . today was family picture day and the ENTIRE time while I was getting ready, reminded myself that I needed to be "in the picture" . . . . thank you for this gift and putting all of my thoughts and feelings into words and helping give me the drive, even if I don't have the confidence!
04:45 PM on 11/16/2012
Being a Mom is one of Gods Beautiful Gifts from him:)!
09:59 AM on 11/15/2012
Thank you for sharing this article:) & reminding me of whats important!!! I vowe to be in very picture w-my twins.