As all we Mothers here know, motherhood can be really taxing. This is because micromanagement can be really taxing, and motherhood necessarily involves micromanagement. Motherhood involves more than micromanagement, of course. Mothers must impart to their children the big picture: convictions -- and the values and morality that arise from them that become the basis for character and integrity. But that’s not at the expense of micromanagement. Our drills are probably similar: Make your bed. Get dressed. Your shirt’s on backward. Finish your breakfast. Take your vitamins. Turn off your screen. Find your shoes. Brush your teeth; wash your hands; comb your hair. Flush the toilet. Let the dog out. Put your homework in your backpack. And all this before 8 am. Before most people have made their coffee, you are ready for a coffee break.
When a mother keeps this up day after day, month after month, year after year, she develops a kind of sixth sense about her children. She knows them better than they know themselves. She knows what they will do before they do it. She knows what they will say before they say it. She knows what mistakes they will make before they make them. Because she’s been there every step of the way. In this way a deep kind of intimacy forms. There are different kinds of intimacy, but one definitely comes of a mother’s micromanagement of her children. Doubtless this applies to other forms of caregiving as well. If you want to achieve intimacy with someone - care for them.
Yes, motherhood can be really taxing, because micromanagement can really be taxing, but that’s not the hardest part about motherhood. The hardest part about motherhood is letting go of the intimacy that forms as a result of it. Because children grow up. And as they do a mother must let them do for themselves as much as they can possibly do. She must give them as much independence as they can possibly handle. She must let them fend for themselves as much as they possibly can. Because a mother must
prepare her children to grow up and
to shoulder the burden of existence.
Letting go of intimacy is hard enough in and of itself. This is because intimacy is integral to contentment and fulfillment and its loss potentiates loneliness and emptiness, but letting go of intimacy so that children may shoulder the burden of existence? That is all the harder because it involves risk to her children. This goes against a mother’s very biological instinct. A mother’s biological instinct is to protect her children, at all times and at all costs -- with her life if needs be. What mother would not give her life for her children? Keeping them under the wing is not nearly as hard pushing them out of the nest.
But the alternative is worse. I’m no fan of Sigmund Freud, but he did get the Oedipus Complex right. It describes the mother who refuses to allow her children to shoulder the burden of existence. She makes her children weak and dependent and fearful, never fully and rightly formed, because shouldering the burden of existence is required for that. And this, so that she can in one way or another prey upon them.
No, as hard as it may be, she must push them out of the nest, knowing that life can be dangerous and deadly. And it is particularly hard for mothers whose children grow up and shoulder the burden of existence by placing themselves in harm’s way so that the burden of existence may be more bearable for the rest of us - men and women of the armed forces, fire fighters, police officers, international aid workers. As a mother, I can hardly imagine what they must endure. It would be like the full reality of life, from which we can and do largely insulate ourselves, staring you in the face at all times. No, I can hardly imagine it.
But I know someone who could -- someone who could more than imagine it; someone who lived it. She happens to be the most famous mother in the world - Mary, the mother of Jesus.
Mary knew from the even before his birth that there would be something unique about her son, knew that he would be the recipient of special divine favor. And as he grew to manhood he proved it. He spoke God’s truth and enacted God’s power through his miracles. How great must have been her maternal love.
But she didn’t know the fullness of it. She didn’t know that it was his chosen destiny to die on a cross to reconcile God to humanity and humanity to God. She didn’t know because he didn’t tell her. He told his disciples. And a few others discerned it. So why didn’t he tell her? It can only be because he knew it would have been even more agonizing for her if he had. How could she live with such knowledge? Nonetheless she could not escape standing at the foot of his cross, witnessing her beloved son shouldering the burden of existence so that the burden of existence would forever be infused with divine light. Yes, Mary can relate to all mothers and we to her.
My father once took me to see a sculpture by Michelangelo called the
Pieta. He told me I might be standing before the greatest sculpture that humankind has ever produced. It depicted Jesus, deposed from his cross, his lifeless body cradled in Mary’s arms. Michelangelo’s technique was flawless -- pure genius, because it’s Michelangelo after all. But I think the reason my father thought the sculpture was so great is because it captured the deepest meaning of motherhood.
You know sometimes, even on this day, especially on this day, we tend to trivialize motherhood. We imbue our mothers with nostalgia and sentiment. And that’s ok. That’s just what happens on holidays. But we must not forget that the deepest meaning of motherhood is found in her self-sacrifice, and as this is the case mothers reflect the face of God out into the world. Rudyard Kipling got it right. He wrote,
God could not be everywhere. Therefore he made mothers.
Amen.
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