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Lee Woodruff

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Too Old To Be A Mom?

Posted: 05/09/2012 8:37 am

Just this morning, I did the thing experienced mothers aren't supposed to do. I lost it on my daughter. She's 11 and I'm 52. That makes me the adult. In fact, last year I was the oldest living mother in elementary school. I should be a total ball of zen-nicity. Yet suddenly I was going all Linda Blair after a morning of protracted nagging.

Perhaps this rings a bell? "Hurry up -- get dressed -- brush your teeth, your hair, your tongue -- shoes on -- backpacks packed...move faster. Go!" You've been there. No expanded vocabulary required, just sixth-grade level word retrieval. And yet opening a can of whoop ass can feel satisfying sometimes. Like binge eating foods dipped in Marshmallow Fluff.

Wasn't it supposed to be a blissful experience entering motherhood again at 40? Wasn't I supposed to have more patience and understanding about "the long haul" and "how fast it all goes" with my twins? And yet here I am, shrieking as my hormones retreat, as snappish and churlish as one of those cringe-worthy, reality-show teen moms prevented from a night of clubbing by their colicky unwanted off-spring.

OK, maybe it's not quite like that with me. That was a tad dramatic. But as I swam my laps this morning trying to re-balance, I wondered idly if I really was too old to have kids this young? Was biology nature's way of saying, "you won't have the energy for this in a few years?" And yet how many of us are successful at making life fall in line with the perfect time to marry, procreate or change careers? Is there ever a perfect time?

I smile gently at the young women who emphatically tell me when they want to marry and how many kids they will have. I long ago learned that we don't write that script. The friend with the repeated miscarriages knows that, the couple that can't conceive, the mother who loses her son to a brain tumor, the wife whose husband up and leaves. The greatest part of life is our ability to dream big, but most of us are unprepared when things go awry or when dreams don't come true.

When our first attempt to become parents at age 31 resulted in our son, my husband got on the bus to fatherhood with extreme speed. He was thrilled and so was I, but then again I knew it wouldn't change his life in nearly the same way that it would change mine. But when our children didn't come in the intervals we planned, when there was a loss and then a dry patch and then some sorrow, we were blindsided when the bad thing happened to us. And why shouldn't it have? What made us any different from the family down the street? It's not human nature to always feel so generous, though. The fickle finger of fate and the Ouija board are supposed to land somewhere else for the hard stuff.

When my twins were born at age 40, our "Team B" as my husband calls them, I resolved to work less and Mom more. I would be the chilled-out mother I never quite got to be the first time around with the older two because I had been so concerned with trying to balance it all. And while it didn't exactly happen that way when the girls were born, (chilled isn't an adjective normally associated with Moms of multiples) I learned to relax into my choices, to stop trying to mute the working part in front of my stay-at-home friends or dial down the mother part in other facets of my life. I learned to accept that I am a person who likes her sack stuffed really full. What other reason could there possibly be for continuing to stuff more in it? Saying "yes" mostly felt better.

There is no question that as an older mother I have more patience than the 31-year-old I once was who never thought she'd be spontaneous again. A six-year gap between Team A and Team B equipped me with a fish-eye lens. I don't sweat the small stuff and I do try to cherish the ride a bit more. On my second chance, I didn't want to talk about mucus and homemade baby food, I wanted to discuss my middle-agedness, my politics, the struggles of aging parents and husband's snoring. I was never great at board games or watching Dora videos with my older kids and this time around I didn't feel the need to pretend. I am no longer half-way apologetic or conflicted about working when I'm focusing on being a Mom. I regularly absorb the whiff of envy from friends when I spend a night away in a nice hotel with room service and first-run movies. I'm proud of my ability to earn my own wage at a career I love, even as I miss a few soccer games and a basketball tournament or two.

Motherhood is a selfless business. And like so many parts of being an adult, there are repetitive parts, as same-old as emptying the dishwasher or folding laundry. No wonder we grumble or watch our heads spin at times like a bobble-head on a dashboard. No wonder we lose our tempers. We all do. There are some who will swear that the right time to have children is when you are younger and full of energy. But in my 20's I would have been too selfish, less patient, yearning to accomplish things yet un-named. I would have resented the recalcitrant child, the ungrateful eye roll or lip curl that soaks through their very being because that's precisely what they are programmed to do. Anna Quindlen, one of my all-time favorite writers, says that "sometimes taking care of children full-time feels like a cross between a carnival ride and penal servitude." Do any right-minded adults really enjoy a two-hour marathon of Candy Land or repeated rounds of Lego towers? Be honest.

Still, I wouldn't trade this for anything, even as my friends with their newly childless homes are crowing about their lack of schedules and the fabulous sex they are re-discovering with their husband (yes, their husbands!). I'm still packing lunches and right now boys are still just something to giggle about behind cupped hands. I know that's about to change. We've just had our first discussion about shaving legs and puberty lurks in the bathroom corners. I can smell it like basement mold. Most days, the can of whoop-ass aside, I feel incredibly lucky to be experiencing this second wave of motherhood. The first chapter feels like a temp job in retrospect. Time wrinkles and buckles, telescoping as the calendar flips ever forward.

There will only be a short time left when they will ask me to crawl in bed and cuddle, a limited time they'll still believe I might have something important to contribute in the way of advice. But they'll be back. Yes, they'll come crawling back someday on their bellies as I did when I had children of my own. I take comfort in that. It's already happening with my older two, the slow subtle gravitational pull of interest in what perspective their father and I might have to offer.

I'll be 60 when the younger two go off to college. And Lord, that used to sound ancient. Now I can picture myself like one of those old Euell Gibbons ads for Grape Nuts as he leaps around the outdoors, brown as a berry. I may be gnarled and gnarly, but I'll be at graduation day standing as proud as the 40-something parents. That will be me, the one doing the Bronx cheer. I'll be celebrating and mourning in equal parts, not only for the days to come, but for the unsung ones that have flown by.

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Just this morning, I did the thing experienced mothers aren't supposed to do. I lost it on my daughter. She's 11 and I'm 52. That makes me the adult. In fact, last year I was the oldest living mother ...
Just this morning, I did the thing experienced mothers aren't supposed to do. I lost it on my daughter. She's 11 and I'm 52. That makes me the adult. In fact, last year I was the oldest living mother ...
 
 
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12:13 AM on 05/14/2012
Happy Mom's Day to all you "older" mommas out there - and if you're reading this, you probably fall into that category!

I'm a proud "older" mom who had her first at 40, and twins at 48. At 50, I don't feel a day older than I did when I was 30. I know from experience that, if you choose to embrace it, having young children in your 40s can truly help to keep you young. Instead of being at a place in my life where I feel like I'm winding down, I have more incentive than ever to keep myself mentally/physically healthy.

Motherhood is an incredible thing - regardless of what age you begin your journey.
10:54 PM on 05/13/2012
At Whole Foods the other day I noticed, once again, an increase in procreation going on. And, of course, while shopping at the lower scale HEB grocery store, some were birthing in the aisles. Just endless disposable labor, cannon fodder, and consumers. We're going over 340 million, looking at 500-700 million in the next 60 years. That's not a problem, that's lights-out for much of the plant, mineral and animal kingdoms within our borders. What about the animals and water and trees and our national security and quality of life? You can follow the movement of people across the globe throughout history impelled by the felling of the trees. The British came here, primarily for the hardwoods. I loved my mother, too, but she wasn't blithely birthing.
07:00 PM on 05/13/2012
Lee, I loved reading your post - thank you for sharing. I had my first child when I was 40 and twins at 42 so at age 43, I had 3 kids under the age of 3 - and my husband is 10 years older. I think there are unique rewards and pitfalls to having kids at any age. We tell our kids that they are benefitting from having parents who are experienced and wise; one of the downfalls is that we are a full generation older than the parents of our kids' friends so we find that we are excluded from the situational friendships that naturally form when people are experiencing lifestages together. Having our kids has been a wonderful adventure and I love now being in on popular culture references for the first time in about 3 decades. We fully recognize that we won't be the parents who get calls to help their kids move apartments full of furniture, but we are the kind of parents who recognize the value of sitting down to a meal together, and of sharing our family stories and of recognizing our kids' unique talents, and helping them find avenues to explore their interests. While I am far from anyone's definition of a perfect mom, I am a far better mom at this age than I would have been if we would have had our kids 10 or 15 years earlier.
06:29 PM on 05/13/2012
My child is 10 and I am 54. Can relate and my son is the JOY of my life!
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Justgot2thinking
I'm a Mom, a Grandma and a nice person.
06:20 PM on 05/13/2012
My youngest daughter was born when I was 48 and my son when I was 50. I didn't meet them until they were each 2 1/2. I adopted! I have an older daughter, my first bio, who is about to be 44 and my now middle daughter is going to be 41 at the end of the year. I have 5 grandchildren: 21, 19, 15, 12, 9. Another is on the way. It's much harder in a lot of ways to Mother because I'm not a 20 year old anymore. I really don't fit in with the other Mother's. They don't understand me. Teachers couldn't be any different from my time and my older children's time. Instead of "teaching", they now just give our information. Nothing is really "taught". If you don't get it they move on anyway in order to put out more information! It's a Big mistake and the kids are already showing it in the low test scores. They are using "negative" reinforcement, like they do in jails. Teacher's don't take the time to get to know the kids and can make major mistakes in what's really going on with a child. I've seen learning disabilities that were treated like the child was "bad" and instead of getting help and understanding they were punished! I see it all the time. Teacher's don't want to take the time to "teach", it's too much trouble. That's the worst thing that has happened since I had my first children.
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Gabrielle Rossi
Jesus Christ is my lord and saviour
05:07 PM on 05/13/2012
I don't know what the big deal is about this article. I'm 50 and have an 11 year old son. There are many, many people into their forties having kids.
04:44 PM on 05/13/2012
Happy Mother's Day!
I had my first two in my early twenties, I didn't feel held back nor did I resent them. They were my light, my entertainment, and the reason I pushed myself early into success so I could give them the life that I struggled to have. I am looking at a milestone birthday later this year with a toddler. The differences? I have more to baby proof, I have less energy but more patience, and I am just as glad to have my toddler as I am to have my teenagers. Life is what you make of it. I don't see the article as "complaining", I see it as taking the good with the chaos.
04:12 PM on 05/13/2012
This story makes mom sound like a braggart hero of some kind,get real almost anyone can beat that story. My brother who has ten kids with a grandson the same age as his last daughter. Mom and dad both worked while raising these 10. Me I had 5 . 4 c-sections in 2 years having 3 children 1 major c-section when i was 6 months pregnant with #2. In the next decade I had one in 80 and the next in 83. Oh I worked to and did pta, softball, baseball,football and wrestling. Are we the greatest, I don't think so,we just did what came naturally mother and father hood.
07:04 PM on 05/13/2012
I find your comment offensive - you are the one who chose to share your family history in a way that makes motherhood a competitive sport. I assume all of your kids are healthy - give them a hug and be happy for someone elses' happiness without the attitude of one-upmanship.
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Adam Dray
There's a snake in my boot!
03:57 PM on 05/13/2012
Oh big deal! Do we have to write about every little fricken thing these days? People do and HAVE DONE this for YEARS!! Being an 'elder' parent to children is NOTHING new, and NOTHING to self fluff about as if you're something uniquely special for producing a unit while collection social security!
07:08 PM on 05/13/2012
Why are you so crabby - are you a parent and if so, did you get tp experience parenthood after age 40? I did and it is a unique experience and I find it incredibly interesting to read somone else's experience. If this is so unappealing to you, go find a topic that does interest you, but don't criticize Lee.
11:59 PM on 05/13/2012
Agreed - There are literally hundreds of other articles you can choose to read here on HP. Buh bye. Adam....
03:55 PM on 05/13/2012
My mom was 42 when she had me. I'm now 17.
03:50 PM on 05/13/2012
Congratulations and the best of luck...it's a great life isn't it? I don't know if I am the oldest father in elementary school or if we hold a record of some kind but it really doesn't matter anyway. I am 77, my wife 57 and our daughter is 7. Most of the Moms at elementary school are young enough to be my granddaughter. Our daughter is an aunt to my granddaughter who is now 26. It has been a lot of fun just figuring out how the relationship boxes fit in our family. I also found out just how different elementary school is now compared to when I went and I am sure learning a lot about her school work. I have four other kids, the youngest of whom is 60. Right now I have six grandchildren and would have had eight, but two of my grandsons were killed in an auto accident when they were 17 and 18 just 10 years ago, through no fault of their own. As I said above, "it's a great life" and I am grateful to have been given a second opportunity to watch our daughter grow day by day. With my four other older children, I didn't get much of a chance to see them grow up as I was working two and sometimes three jobs back then. The youngest of those four recently adopted her second little girl from China. So, God bless and the best to you.
05:15 PM on 05/13/2012
You have the greatest ablilty to also see how we have changed both good and bad with the education and lifestyle we give them. With your life, and memories you have the ablilty to directly pass down that information to the future in a way that most parents don't. May your daughter continue to be blessed and guided by the lessons you have learned and the events you have witnessed in your life.
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Silvia Squirre
03:48 PM on 05/13/2012
I'm 53. If I ever get married, I still might adopt - or inherit someone else's brood. I never wanted any of my own. But that kid I adopt is going to be well out of diapers and able to attend school when and if I do get them.
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emmasdolly
03:48 PM on 05/13/2012
I had my son when I was 20. He's 32 now and I have a 9 year old granddaughter. I'm 52 and wouldn't want small children of my own at this point. That's what grandkids are for!
03:45 PM on 05/13/2012
No big deal, my son was born when I was 40 and he is 13 now. She is married with older children to help around the house, I am a single mom doing everything and loving every minute of it. When I tell people how old I am they don't believe it. Having children later in life just means you stay young ar heart and very active!
03:44 PM on 05/13/2012
My girls are 20, 14 and six. At 49, I know I'm not the oldest mother in my daughter's kindergarten class, but I think I'm in second place. The mother that I know is older than me is 50. Her sons are 30, 28 and 6. In fact, in a class of 26 students, there are 10 of us mothers who have at least one child in their teens.

I keep hearing that forty is the new 30, and I agree. More and more women are giving birth at a later age. I predict that in a few years it will be the mothers under 40 at their kids' high school graduation who will stand out, rather than us older ones. Raising kids is tiring at any age, but at least, with this last one, I've had extra hands available to help.