|
Parenting
Today
May 12, 2001
Tomorrow is Mother's Day. For
the telephone companies, it is the busiest day of the year as children
call home to tell mother how much she means to them. My mother,
who will be 89 in June, still speaks to me constantly about her
mother, who died 51 one years ago. Her mother's love and devotion
have never been forgotten.
My sense is that modern mothers
are appreciated just as much by their children. Every Shabbat I
hear b'nei mitzvah praise their moms for their dedication and caring.
Yet there seems to be a nostalgia for the old style mother who spent
her time and energy hovering over her sons and daughters, scrubbing
her home and mothering her husband as well as her children. But
I wonder if the purported differences between mothers then and now
are so great. What strikes me about my mother's stories about my
grandmother is how similar in many ways she was to mothers today.
My grandmother was not just a housewife. My grandmother owned and
ran a bakery. Back then as today, one income was not enough. There
is another similarity to modern times: while the term "latch
key kid" had not yet been coined, I can't imagine that when
my mother returned from school, her mother was there. A bakery is
the kind of business where to do it right, you have to leave home
early in the morning and return late.
From what I have read, my grandmother's
role as a significant bread winner was far from unique among Jewish
woman of her day. The great Yiddish author, Isaac Bashevis Singer,
writes that his grandmother would travel from her shtetl to Warsaw
to buy small batches of manufactured goods. She then bartered the
goods for produce the peasants brought to the shtetl's central market
place. Read any novel about that period and you find working woman
depicted in a variety of roles. Some were street peddlers, selling
bagels and breads from baskets dangling on their arms. Some sold
clothes as either independent or small-scale contractors. Often
woman worked with their husbands in "mom and pop stores."
And, while we have an image of Tevya the milkman, it was often the
women who milked the cows and then drove the buggy loaded with the
milk to their customers.
Yet, while the Yiddishe momma
of the past, more often than not, was a working mother, nonetheless,
her life, in many significant ways, was far less complicated and
hectic than that of the today's mom. Mothers in our congregation
describe days whose closest analogy would be to running a triathlon
except their course, determined by their children's activities,
is to Hebrew School, soccer fields, music lessons and enrichment
programs.
When I ask parents why they have
allowed their lives and their children's lives to become overloaded
with activities, they say that they are just trying to give their
children as good a shot as they can at a solid future. Parents are
insecure about what lies ahead for their children. They know that
good grades and good SAT's no longer guarantee getting into the
best colleges. With the stakes so high, parents are pressing for
school to be more challenging, which in turn has resulted in more
homework, more testing and more tutoring. Especially in our area,
with its high standard of living, parents are worried that unless
their sons and daughters are pushed to succeed in every endeavor,
they will miss the top rung and, as adults, sink down into a standard
of life that is less than the standard with which they were raised
and that they have come to enjoy.
This line of thinking is reinforced
by the success of sports stars like Tiger Woods and Venus and Serena
Williams. Pushed to achieve by their very involved parents, the
message that comes across is that champions are made, they are not
born. Child rearing books concur. They tell parents that their child
must constantly be stimulated. As a result, parents think they can't
let up. Every minute of the youngster's day has to have a purpose.
A mother was quoted recently in Newsweek as saying that her one-year-old
spends so much time in the minivan she uses to transport her three
older children from activity to activity, that when he is not in
the van, he is somewhat disoriented.
Often, mothers are also putting
in long hours at their job. Corporate culture is demanding. Americans
are working harder than anyone else in the world, including the
Japanese. I am certain you have seen the mother who is cheering
her children on the sports field while conducting business on her
mobile phone. We have mothers working late at the office who are
correcting their children's homework by fax and e-mail. And even
if a she wants to cut back at work, she can't afford to because
often it takes two full incomes to pay for summer camp, tennis lessons,
tutoring and high taxes.
Reality being what it is, I don't
think any of what I have described is going to change. But I do
have a partial solution to the modern frenzy. Though it sounds counter
intuitive, I think mothers - and fathers too - should add an activity
to the week that ironically would make their lives less hectic and
more satisfying. The additional piece I urge for their lives is
prescribed in this morning's torah reading. It is called Shabbat.
Before you summarily dismiss this suggestion, thinking to yourselves,
"This is what I would expect to hear it from a rabbi,"
let me tell you, not just rabbis are advocates of Shabbat observance.
Sara Berman is a journalist living in Manhattan. She writes:
Since I was a child, my family's one overriding
tradition was a Shabbat dinner together every Friday night. And
now, with two children of my own, my husband and I have continued
this same tradition. There are religious aspects to these dinners
such as candle lighting and kiddush, but, in addition, what makes
these dinners so special is that we are all together to share
a meal, something that during my childhood and still today, is
difficult to find the time for.
Furthermore, Shabbat creates a dependable rhythm
in my life that not only reinvigorates my body and mind, but more
importantly allows me to live more freely during the other six
days of the week. I can expend energy knowing that there will
be a time to refuel. I am able to go a day or two without reflection
because I know there is an appointed time when I will be able
to take it all in. I am able to push harder and longer during
the week because of what is waiting for me on the seventh day.
While God's commandment to observe the Sabbath appears restrictive,
in reality, it is expansive. Shabbat is like the pause between
notes that makes the music far sweeter and richer than if played
uninterrupted.
Michael Steinhardt, a prominent
money manager for over 30 years agrees with Sara Berman. He has
written the following:
Having dedicated the majority
of my professional career to the investment world, my energy during
the work week was focused on making money. Did I know more about
a certain stock than the next guy did? Were my positions too small
or too big? What about the yen vs. the dollar?
For most of my 30 plus years
on Wall Street, I worked long days and long nights and was intensely
engaged in the process. But when the sun began to set on Fridays,
I could feel the tension begin to melt. I rarely looked forward
to any special event or dinner as much as I did to the dependable
dinners on Friday nights. As my kids liked to say, there were
"no excuses" for missing them. In retrospect, they formed
the core of my children's Jewish identity.
I caught up with my family
on Friday night. I heard about the bad teachers, the difficult
wrestling practices and the upcoming recitals. I had the opportunity
to look at each of my children and my wife -- as if it were the
very first time.
In my business, it was easy
to be consumed by the ups and downs of the market. When I look
back on my career, perhaps part of its success can be attributed
to my own intensity. But if that intensity hadn't been punctuated
by a period of rest and reflection, and if I hadn't been stopped
in my tracks each week in a way that forced me to prioritize,
I don't think I would have been able to keep working with the
same dedication. If the aim of Shabbat is to pause, to focus on
your family, to gain a clearer perspective, to feel a separation
in time and space from the work week, for me, Shabbat accomplishes
its mission.
And so this is the gift I am
offering to all mothers for Mother's Day and let me offer it to
fathers, too, after all Father's Day is but a month away. The gift
is Shabbat. It is a proven antidote to the mad pace of modern life.
It allows mothers and fathers to recoup the perspective and energy
they need to run the triathlon of the work week. It makes room for
the spiritual in lives dominated by the material.
Shabbat works its magic for me
and my family. I know it will work for you and yours. Try it. Shabbat
Shalom---and to all you momsHappy Mother's
Day.
|