Parents – September 2019

(sharon) #1

CONFUSION f lickers across people’s
faces when I tell them I’m moving back
to my hometown of Philadelphia.
“For work? Your husband’s job?”
“Nope.”
“But San Francisco is so lovely,” they
mutter. “The beach ... the palm trees.”
Yeah, yeah, yeah. San Francisco has
the ocean, a seemingly endless number of
wineries, and weather that is so consistent
you never even have to talk about it.
Going home again wasn’t my plan. I
was (and still am) the kind of person who
scoffs at the “big-city girl goes home” plots
in Hallmark movies. My fantasy adult
life involved moving away from home and
setting down roots in a new place.
“I’m moving to be closer to my mom,”
I tell people when they ask why I’m
traveling thousands of miles from where
I had my son and bought my first house,
from the place where my husband has
lived for the last 20 years.


My mom. Those words catch a little in
my throat. If you’d told me at any other
point in my life that I’d move my small
family to be closer to my mother, I would
have suggested you get your head checked.
She was never the mother of the year.
I’m not sharing anything she wouldn’t
tell you herself. When I was growing up,
she was often depressed, anxious, and
codependent on my difficult father. My
mom was there for me some of the time,
but at others, she was hardly present at
all—emotionally or physically. I was often
terrified to bring friends home because I
never knew if she’d be manically happy or
passed out on the couch watching Oprah.
Her clinical depression was so bad that
she nearly didn’t make it to my wedding
four years ago. And the most difficult part
was that she didn’t even seem to care.
But my mom is a different person now.
She found the right mix of medication,
therapy, and lifestyle changes to become

It’s Time to Forgive

My Mom

She wasn’t there for me when I was growing up, but she’s
ready to be the grandmother my son deserves.
by JO PIAZZA / illustration by MELISSA LEE JOHNSON

healthier. She wants to be a part of my
life. She desperately wants to be a part
of my son’s life. And my heart explodes a
little when I watch her with Charlie.
She may not have been built to be the
world’s best mom, but she has everything
it takes to be a varsity-level grandmother.
She loves nothing more than to chase
squirrels with Charlie, show him how to
squeeze mashed yolks into a deviled egg,
mix pancake batter, and draw him pictures
of dinosaurs. My kid has an endless
appetite for badly drawn giant lizards. And,
honestly, I hate drawing giant lizards.
My life in San Francisco was pretty,
and it looked great on Instagram. But we
struggled every day to make it in a city
where we had no family. Child-care costs
were upwards of $4,000 a month, without
a weekly date night. If one of us got sick,
our well-oiled machine of part-time day
care, nanny share, and babysitters fell
apart, and one of us fell behind at work.
I’m not saying my mother is the solution
to all our child-care needs, but she’s part
of the village of family and friends we will
find in Philly. I’ve never been a person who
is very good at asking for help. But as we
try for our second baby, as I struggle to
maintain my career as an author, and as my
husband works to build his own company,
I’m ready to admit that we need it.
I had to let go of a lot of baggage and
residual bitterness so my son could have
the grandmother he deserves. I still look
at the earrings my mother-in-law gave me
on the morning of my wedding and think
about how my own mom didn’t come to
see me before the ceremony. I still think
of the times she forgot to pick me up from
after-school care and the lacrosse games
she never made it to in high school.
But then I look at the cows she painted
on the wall of her guest room the day after
Charlie learned to say “moo.” And I think
about the toddler bed she bought and put
together so he can sleep over when I have
to go to meetings in New York.
Becoming a mother means letting go of
fantasies about how your life should look.
I thought my perfect mom life included
a beach, palm trees, and sweater weather.
It doesn’t. It involves forgiving my mom,
asking for help, and going back home.

Jo Piazza’s most recent novel is Charlotte
Walsh Likes to Win.

PARENTS 116 SEPTEMBER 2019


MOMÑThe Heart of Parenting

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