Dina L. Relles

writer. editor. curious + common.

I resisted writing a post in honor of Mother’s Day; I really did. So many others are putting forth such beautiful words, like these and these. Why not leave it to these masterful writers to reveal the profundity, the meaning of the day?

But I recently discovered letters my mother had written (on a typewriter, no less!) to a close friend–before she became a mother at all. They were from her pregnancy with me, her first, and reflected on how she felt about motherhood as she stood at its threshold. She was young then, but thoughtful and articulate nonetheless. Growing up the daughter of immigrant Holocaust survivors and the younger sister of a handicapped brother, she was always precocious.

In the letters, among other things, she writes a great deal about her decision to return to work as an actuary after having me:

“I recognize that I’m responding to social pressure. I hate when people assume things about me–and so I hate when people assume that I’ll quit work. It makes me feel so simple, transparent, and common. So I’m challenged to prove something to myself and to my social sphere. — And I know that’s very immature.”

And elsewhere:  “I view it now as a great challenge to become a mother and maintain intellectual pursuits.”

As a child, I thought she knew everything, effortlessly. I assumed she always had the (right) answers at her fingertips.

Once, when we were drawing together, I recall admiring how my mother colored lightly, not pressing too hard on the paper, yet still filling the space. I was doing as most kids do–pressing as hard as I could, as if seeking revenge on the page. I remember that I tried, but couldn’t, mimic the soft confidence, the self-assured grace of her strokes.

While we were growing up, she always projected confidence that she knew how to do just enough, but not too much, to create something beautiful, to have her desired effect. She knew when to push and when to ease up. When to forgo perfection. When to let go.

But her letters reveal uncertainty. That she struggled with many of the same things I now do. There’s something profoundly reassuring about seeing your mom as a person, complete with flaws and self-doubt. As her child, I never fathomed that possible. As a mother, I’m grateful, comforted even, knowing that she–my beautiful, wise, fearless mother–had doubts about how to do it all.

We’re all figuring it out, one day at a time. We’re just trying to do our best. We don’t have all the answers, no one does, but we do what we can to make it work. To give our children a good life–full of love and security–and to feel happy and fulfilled while doing it.

We may second-guess and overanalyze; we may primarily see our failings, where we think we’re getting it wrong, all the things we could be doing better. Our children? They see their mother. They believe we have the answers; they know they have our love. And they love us, just as we are.

So happy Mother’s Day to all of you out there who are doing better than you think you are.

And to my own uncertain, yet fearless Mother most of all.

photo-62

It’s finally nice outside. I couldn’t resist. It was an evening last week when I had no dinner plan, so when the older boys clamored for a bike ride to the local playground, I was all too happy to concede. I quickly slapped some cream cheese on whole wheat bread, grabbed a bag of baby carrots, three cheese sticks, and a container of blueberries. Dinner of champions.

We were off. The older boys raced the two blocks—the four-year-old on his two-wheeler, the three-year-old keeping pace on his balance bike. I trailed behind, pushing the baby in the stroller, trying my best to keep up.

photo-53

We arrived just as the sun was starting to sink. The boys dispersed—even the baby took off toddling, showcasing his newfound skills. The ice cream truck paid a joyously ill-timed visit, and I treated the big boys to disgustingly drippy popsicles they managed to only half-eat before sacrificing the rest to their puddly fate. So much for carrots and blueberries.

We ran and jumped and climbed and swung. By the end of the visit, I had rocks in my pockets and no clue how they got there.

It was glorious.

It’s the only playground in the neighborhood that’s completely fenced in, with a single exit point. The only place I dare go with my three on my own. Still, it’s a gamble.

At one point, I was helping my middle son salvage his popsicle when out of the corner of my eye, I see the baby perched at the top of the tallest slide, poised to head straight down. Even for this hands-off mama, that wasn’t quite kosher. I ran over and just barely made it to his side before go time.

There were several near misses that night. Some close calls. I was spotting the baby as he climbed up the equipment “designed for 5-12 year olds” when another mom approached.

She was familiar. Until then, we’d done our best sideways glance dance. Years ago, we sat next to each other during my first visit to the local breastfeeding discussion group I would come to frequent with each of my babies. At the time, my firstborn was only 11 days old. Her daughter wasn’t much older. We became moms together. Since then, aside from the occasional playground run-in or sidewalk passing, we hadn’t had much contact. We were acquaintances at best.

As she neared, I could tell she was about to say something. I mentally prepared myself. Here it comes. The judgment. Some snide, passive-aggressive remark about how I’m lucky the baby hasn’t cracked his head open yet.

Instead, she simply gestured at her (only) daughter and offered,

I’m tired with just her; I don’t know how you do it.

I was touched.

I don’t know how YOU do it, I reply. I often wonder how moms of one have the energy to be their child’s sole playmate day in and day out. At least I can step back and let the kids entertain each other.

She went on to praise how I jet back and forth among the kids, keeping them all safe.

It’s all hard, I say. Whether you have one or three. All of it.

As she runs off after her daughter, she calls back, You’re doing a great job. So is she.

You never know what’s going on with someone. You don’t know that my husband is working nights. You don’t know how desperately we all craved fresh air after the winter we’ve had. Or that sometimes it feels as though I’m barely hanging on by a thread…

Or, more likely, you totally know. Because if you just take a moment, you can put yourself in my shoes. We’re all mothers, and we can do that for each other. At least that. We can relate.

We can exchange knowing glances as we chase after our toddlers; we can share cheese crackers and half-conversations while we push our youngest on the swings; we can keep an eye on each other’s kids while we take one to the bathroom; we can run after one another when a kid leaves behind a lovey or prized possession; we can cut each other some slack as we witness the massive meltdown at the base of the slide; we can swap hurried phrases of empathy and encouragement…

We can remind each other that we’re doing the best we can. And that it’s more than enough.

It’s all hard. Thank goodness we have each other. And our judgment-free zones.

photo-54

IMG_4159

I had just returned to work from maternity leave. My baby was six months old, his older brother just over two. I was taking a much-needed break from contentious negotiations to eat with my colleagues-turned-friends in the law firm cafeteria–until a senior partner crashed our lunch. With the manufactured confidence of a corporate lawyer, he spouted misguided theories about childcare and Jewish naming rituals. Over the beloved bi-monthly burrito special, I found myself put on the defensive. Among litigators, even casual conversation can fall prey to courtroom-like conflict. I hadn’t missed this.

Once I had a baby (or a breast pump) waiting for me, I had far less patience for the adversarial nature of my work—for the pissing contests and discovery disputes that wasted our time and our clients’ money. Wouldn’t it be nice, I thought, if we could all just divulge our bottom lines from the start and come to a cordial resolution so we could get home and have dinner with our families?

Truth is, we could all stand to litigate a little less. And love a little more.

Not long ago, an SUV scraped our car’s back bumper on the morning of the Pancreatic Cancer 5K. The area was a zoo. Parking was nowhere to be found. I was squatting a spot in a bus zone with a sleeping baby in the back seat while my husband did the walk.

I hear the crunch.

I exit my car.

I (and she) automatically assume our guarded, litigious personas:

Me: We should exchange information. You scratched my car.

She (defensive, frazzled, exasperated): I’m supposed to be doing this walk and I can’t find parking anywhere and I’m late…The words keep tumbling out, nonsensically.

She dismounts, tries to take pictures of the “damage” with her phone, asks permission to touch my car…I’m nervously calling my husband because despite posturing as a fierce litigator by weekday, I never know what to do when confronted with these situations in my personal life.

And then I saw it. A car seat in the back of her SUV. She’s a mother. A human.

I take a closer look – at the scratch and my attitude – and immediately soften. Sure, some paint came off. But it’s nothing. And even if it’s a little something, it isn’t worth whatever litigiousness is about to follow. It’s superficial damage. And I made the conscious decision that I didn’t want it to extend from the car to my frazzled fellow mom.

Forget about it, I said. From one mom to another, stop frantically trying to fish your insurance information out of your oversized purse. I’m not going to do anything about this. I don’t care enough about my car. It’s not more important than letting you be on your way and just putting all this behind us.

The second I changed my tune, a huge weight was lifted – off both our shoulders. I could stop putting on a front. She let out a marked sigh of relief and shared that she has a three-year-old son at home. They love the Please Touch Museum near the race site. We’re going there later, I offer. We’re both debating the merits of public versus private school for our children. She’s downright lovely. She’s incredibly grateful. I tell her to “pay it forward.” She insists, “believe me, I will.”

Maybe I’ll pay for it later. But I’ll do so gladly to avoid the back-and-forth, the finger-pointing, the suspicious affect, the preservation of “evidence,” the coy demeanor. All that angst and tension. We let it go. And we were both better for it.


I want my sons to grow up to be nice guys. The kind who treat others in a way that would make their mother proud. The other day, while my three-year-old was diligently faux vacuuming the living room, I caught him innocently, but repeatedly, exclaiming, Shoot! Shoot! Shoot! as the vacuum bumped into nearby furniture. He heard it from me. PG expletives often escape my mouth as I angle our massive minivan out of our impossibly small city parking space, sweat and stress mounting.

But these days, I’m trying to bite my tongue. Or at least think before I speak. Not to curse at the cabbie blocking the roadway. Or mutter under my breath when the grocery checkout line creeps along ever so slowly. Not to let daily frustrations or inconsequential inconveniences incite my inner litigator. I’m trying to not focus so much on getting even as just letting go.

I’m trying.

Because my sons are listening. And I’d rather teach them love than justice. That often it’s better to be kind—or at least quiet—than right.

I wouldn’t say I’ve lost my fight; I’ve just found what’s worth fighting for.

photo-43

 

DSC_7329

Beginnings are hard.

I took a birth doula training session last week, and at times, I was acutely aware that I don’t quite fit in. I’m a former litigator. I’m feisty. I’m pragmatic. I’m not opposed to modern medicine. I’ve had three C-sections. And I’m at peace with that. It’s not always sunshine and rainbows over here.

I struggle with what I could possibly have to offer; I recognize that familiar self-doubt that greets me at the start of anything—that fuels me to want to work (too?) hard to get to the point where I’m good, not new. I resent that that drive is infiltrating this new path. This is supposed to feel right.

Can I do this?

But then.

Then I read this.

Then I run into a mom during preschool pickup who asks me to write her an e-mail assuring her that she’ll be ok as a mom of two—that things WILL (of course) get easier. She’s three weeks postpartum. She’s picking up her toddler, one of her hands holding his while the other carries that god-awful heavy car seat. In it, her perfect newborn is protected from this “spring” weather we’ve been having.

She’s a rockstar. But somehow it helps her to hear me say that. Nothing means more.

And she’s not just any mom.

She’s The Mom.

The Mom who helped me realize I wanted to do this in the first place.

You know how you have those conversations that unintentionally shape who you are? That leave a profound impact? That just…stick? Usually, you don’t see it coming.

For me, it was in a parking lot. Almost exactly one year ago. At the time, we were relative strangers. I had my four-month-old strapped to me in the Ergo carrier, and I was on my way to a parenting discussion group after dropping off the older boys at school.

She had just lost her second pregnancy at 26 weeks. There we were, crossing paths. Something made us stop and talk. She opened up to me. I don’t know why. Neither did she. But I will be ever grateful. And even though it wasn’t her intention at the time, by telling me her story, she helped me.

She let me be there for her. She let me try to find the right words, and find when there were no words at all.

She let me comfort her. She let me show her she already had the strength she so desperately sought.

Listening to her that morning, I realized that’s what I want to do—listen. Be there. For women who are pregnant, or struggling to get pregnant, or were pregnant but then all of a sudden weren’t anymore. For women as they are becoming mothers, or struggling to figure out how to breastfeed, or how to feel comfortable not breastfeeding, or how to hold and soothe their newborns, how to get them—and themselves—to sleep, how to trust their instincts, how to grow into this new identity…as Mother.

And beyond…how to mother in the context of the rest of their lives, how to juggle a job along with it all, how to negotiate new relationships with partners, with parents, how to embrace the joyful chaos of managing multiple children, and maybe a career, and maybe challenging family dynamics, and maybe…maybe…you just need someone to help. To listen. To hold your baby and give your arms a break. To tell you you’re doing alright. That you’ve got this. To be that objective outsider who knows you’re doing better than you think, that you’re going to be ok, even when it may feel far from it. To be your inner voice when it feels like your insides are turned out. To help you see the magic in all the mystery–to find the beauty in this new path. Even if it’s paved with self-doubt.

We parted that morning, that Mom and I, and I walked quickly on to my parenting discussion group, giddy with purpose.

We need each other. We all need someone. We can’t do this alone.

I want to be that OTHER—another person, another pair of hands, another voice, another reassuring presence. I will be your company. I will be your confidence.

Everyone is a different kind of doula. Everyone is a different kind of mother. And there’s a doula for everyone.

I want to be there when that mother is born. Telling her she’s everything she needs to be, everything her child needs.

Just as she is.

IMG_0191

photo-45

As you may have guessed from my latest Scary Mommy post, there is little I love more than the kindness of strangers.

So I’m setting out to create a new category on this blog dedicated to chronicling the random acts of kindness that help you get through the day, make you feel better about humanity, or at least put a smile on your face. Small acts that have a big impact. Ways we’re making the world smaller. Maybe if we document how much of this is going on, we’ll start to notice it more, because we’ll be looking for it. Maybe we’ll even start to do it more, because we’ll be thinking about it.

I find that carting my brood around town often lends itself to opportunities for others to help me navigate through my day. But we ALL have those opportunities–both to give and receive kindness. Expecting nothing in return.

So, dear readers, tell me random acts of kindness that either a stranger or friend did for you—or that you did for someone else. Share your story in the comments section (below) or reach out to me directly via my Contact page (above). Then I will compile & share on the blog (feel free to request anonymity). Tweet about it and use the hashtags #strangerthings or #makingtheworldsmaller. Maybe this’ll take off and become a regular (weekly? monthly?) CKCT series, “Stranger Things,” or maybe it’ll be a big ol’ flop. But, like most everything, it’s worth a try! (And if nothing else, I love a good pun.)

I’ll kick us off:

  • Last week, a man on the street stopped and asked me if I needed help as I unloaded items from my car to be donated to a thrift store.
  • The woman behind me in line offered to let me use her Rite Aid card to get a discount on my Mr. Clean magic eraser sponges.

(See? They can be really small things.)

  • Another mom offered to walk my preschooler from the parking lot in to school so I didn’t have to unbuckle and unload my two little guys, who were headed on to a joint doctor appointment.
  • My neighbors, four days postpartum with their fifth child, offered to store some of our stuff or host some of our kids during house showings. (We didn’t take them up on it!)
  • My incredible handyman paid a special emergency visit at no charge on the frantic morning of our first house showings when, inexplicably, the powder room door got locked from the inside !

So let’s do this. Let’s get out there, see the good, and be good to each other. …And then tell me about it 😉