This post was originally published on City Dads Group where they inexplicably welcome my meanderings. If it seems familiar, that's why, that or I already wrote something similar eight years ago... and yes, I could look into that, but, I don't want to.
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I’ve heard parenting described as a
vocation where the goal is to work yourself out of a job. Seems pretty accurate
to me.
As a longtime stay-at-home-parent, I
see myself doing it all the time. In fact, as I write, the washing machine is
spinning noisily and the dryer is droning away, and I didn’t start either of
them. My 14-year-old twin sons are doing their laundry today, a job I did for
them for years. I showed them the ropes a few months ago and now, begrudgingly
and with a bit of prompting from me, they’ve been doing it on their own.
Late last week, I found one of them
riding the lawn mower, finishing the last part of our long backyard. The other
will do it this week. There’s a lot to learn about mowing and there is an
inherent danger in it, so I had been reluctant to show them how. But this year,
I figured they are both tall and strong enough to wrestle the old Cub Cadet around
the yard. I’ll show them how to do the trim work with the push mower in the
coming weeks.
This morning, I woke up — later than
usual — to the smell of sausages and potatoes. I went into the kitchen to start
my coffee but I couldn’t tell if someone had made breakfast. The counters were
wiped, the dishes in the machine, even the frying pan was hanging clean and dry
on the rack. I thought maybe I hadn’t smelled right or something.
I asked the boy on the Nintendo
Switch in the living room if he’d had breakfast. He had, and for the first
time, had cleaned everything up.
Perhaps some of you are thinking to
yourself: Damn straight, ‘bout time they pulled their weight around the old
homestead. Yeah, I get that, But, and I might be criticized for this, I didn’t
have children to do my work for me. An acquaintance of mine called me late one
night decades ago to tell me his toddler had gotten him a beer from the
refrigerator. He’d, uh, trained her, I guess, to do it and he thought it was a
hoot. I still know the daughter and she stopped getting his fucking beers when
she turned 12 — they were never close.
There are, I’m sure, dozens of other
examples just like these of me working myself out of jobs. I’m OK with it, of
course, but there is another description of parenting that I’d like to share
with you: Parenting is just one long damn goodbye.
I always thought of doing my boys’
laundry as something I was supposed to do for them not because of them. Did it
overwhelm me at times? Yes, but not often. Mostly, it was just another chore, a
part of my job, just labor. I’d set timers for when a load was done, I folded
on a custom-built folding table just beside the dryer, left-handed boy’s stuff
on the left, the other’s on the right. I’d stand and fold and pair and pile and
… think.
I can’t begin to tell you how much
you can learn about your children from doing their laundry. You learn what they
favor, what pants and shirts, what socks are worn most often – that kind of
thing. But, there’s a bit more. All those loads of laundry gave me a sense of
how good life has been to them, to us. Jeans with holes and grass-stains,
mended and scrubbed, are a reminder that they are healthy, that the yard is
green and long enough to shag flies. A fruit-punch stained white shirt is from
a birthday party at the laser tag place. A blood stain on the collar of a gray
hoodie is from cut on the forehead from a killer tube ride at the lake. I
wasn’t folding clothes; I was folding memories.
When they were really little, two
years old maybe, I’d take them for rides on the tractor without the mower
engaged. We’d laugh and curve around the yard, them marveling at the wildness
of it all, me at their delight in it. As they got older, I remember them
watching me mow and feeling like a mounted knight, a sweating hero for them in
the blistering August sun. In fact, there’s a picture of one of them, watching
me go around the yard, standing on the porch with a shoe in his hand, hoping
for a ride. A few years later, the fascination with it faded, but I still
remember their little faces watching me. It felt good.
Today, as I look upon backyard from
the dining room table, thinking about laundry and tractors, they are making
lunch for themselves. More a raiding party, really. They are heating leftovers
and adding this and that, improvising as one does in the kitchen. I watch and
listen and think back to a time when I made every meal for them, never really
imagining a day when I didn’t have to.
One long damn goodbye. Goodbye to the closeness I felt to them, handling all those
clothes, steeped in dirt and stains and memory.
One long damn goodbye. Goodbye to knowing I’m watched, appreciated, needed. To
feeling like a hero, a man, a father on my gas-powered steed.
One long damn goodbye. Farewell to cooking every meal, preparing every snack,
packing every lunch, buying every banana, pear and apple, roast and chop.
Maybe I should, but mostly I don't.