Friday 20 December 2013

Mums in need of Mums

At what point do we cease to be our parents’ children and start mothering them?  If the various sociologists are to be believed, the cycle of life takes one from baby, to child, to teen, and eventually to adulthood, but somewhere along the way, the adults start retrogressing; mid-life crisis is very similar to the teens. Eventually our parents act more and more like children.

Whose responsibility is it to take care of them at that point?  Being African, the automatic answer would be that the children should take care of the ageing parents. However, what happens where there are 4 children? Or even worse, none?

The other day, I paid my mum a visit and I was shocked to find that she had aged. I have said it severally that she needs to realise that she is growing old and stop behaving like she has not, but now I realise that I was saying this from a purely academic perspective. Now I know she is growing old and I am scared.

Not because I need her to mother me, but because I am not too sure I know how to mother her. I can stand on mountain tops and scream at the world and tell them how wrong my mother was in how she brought me up, but fact is, I am who I am today because of her. She nurtured me, taught me things, disciplined me, shaped my fashion sense and greatly influenced my taste in men.

I think every woman secretly fears becoming her mother and we stop in shock when we hear her in our voice, when a friend notices a similarity of expression, when we look at old pictures and wonder whether the young woman in the photo is her or me.

Her ageing is forcing me to accept my own mortality and my own fallibility.  Will my daughter one day be in the same position I am; faced with an ageing mother, who has memories of all the great things she could have done, but having instead to deal with the reality of not being able to do even half of them. In that situation, what will my daughter's instinct be?  Will it be to run for the hills; distance herself as much as she can from this person her mother has become? Or will she find it in herself to show compassion and love?

I think back to all the great things we shared with my mum: playing ‘blada’ with store bought elastic because we lived in an area that had no bicycle repair men; learning to use the sewing machine; learning to cook many a dish; taking rides on our bikes and grabbing some fresh maize from a shamba (not necessarily ours) to go and roast; playing Scrabble to the highest possible total. I remember watching her in awe as she got ready for a party and thinking that I had the most beautiful mother in the world and when I saw her pictures, I had proof.

I saw her host and entertain guests with dishes she had learnt to make only a week back and carry herself with great aplomb where I now know she must have felt completely out of depth.

And now, here I am. Scared to see her age. Scared to know that this woman who is the reason I am who I am is no longer the woman she used to be. I know I have to step up to the plate and do some serious batting as far as her care and well-being is concerned. However, I must admit that I feel lost.

You see, as a mother, you grow into the position. You carry a baby in your womb for some 9 odd months; you watch that wrinkled mass turn into a walking, talking bundle of amazement; you watch your child learn to do stuff that makes you both proud and embarassed in equal measure; then your child is not quite a child anymore, but starts to grow her wings and becomes more and more independent every day.

However, as a child, you assume that your mother is all powerful, ever knowing, almost god-like…then suddenly she is not. 

It scares me!

Friday 6 December 2013

I Will Shine

So, who am I that you should read my posts?

The modest and noble thing would be to say that I am nobody.  Just one of I-don't-know-how-many-billion-people who could be doing this..., but, that is just the point. I am ONE in several billion. Therefore, I am super unique and I believe I have a story to tell. Heck, not just one, but several.

Until recently, I thought that I had to have a captivated audience to tell my story, but I have been thoroughly disabused of that and I thank Kenyatta Otieno a.k.a 'YouK' a.k.a 'Mteka Maji' who helped set me up and get started on this blog. And though I have heard it a hundred times over, when he said it, it clicked! I just had to start, and whereas there may be no-one out there to hear what I have to say, I will have said it. Further, the more I say it, the better I shall become at saying it and one day I will be able to proudly say I have X number of words under my belt. As you are reading this article, I can say I have already surpassed my initial goals and there is at least one person who has read me.

I look at my life and I feel that I have a wealth of information: mistakes I made along the way; great decisions, bad decisions; happy days, sad days.... at the end of it all, we are the sum total of our experiences, so if any of my experiences can make anyone's life better.... Amen!

My favourite quote is one from Marianne Williamson (much quoted by the late great Nelson Mandela ... RIP) and from this I draw my inspirations regularly...

"Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate.  Our deepest dear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that frightens us. We ask ourselves, "Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented and fabulous?" Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world. there is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people will not feel insecure around you.  We are all meant to shine, as children do. We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It is not just in some of us; it is in everyone and as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give others permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others."

When I reflect on this and think of myself as a child, I remember standing on tables to recite poetry, standing on bus seats to talk to the guy behind us, asking my parents' friends if I could make them a pancake (I had just learnt to make them on my own and needed to show off my skill) and I wonder who have I become. Do you know that I can make a leather bag from scratch by hand? Do you know that I can make a killer shepherd's pie? That I can do intricate embroidery? Probably not.  How sad for me and for all those others who hide their abilities so as not to appear too different.

One of my most vivid memories of hiding my brilliance (modesty aside), was when I was in high school. I went in to this institute of higher learning, full of good nature and determination to make something of myself. I was eager to learn and eager to show that I had learnt. I was not shy in the least, I would raise my hand at every opportunity I got, either to seek clarification or answer a question. I had even picked a seat that guaranteed me an unobstructed view of the blackboard (green boards, whiteboards and smart boards had not arrived by then). Further, as I am a visual creature, I also ensured I had an unobstructed view of the teacher and any demonstration he/she made. I was set to learn and to excel! I positioned myself at the front centre of the class.

Imagine my horror when a couple of weeks into high school, the teacher moved me to the last column, next to the wall and a few rows back. Even worse was the reason she gave; my hand shooting up all the time was proving to be a distraction to both her and the other students! That was my first lesson in dimming my shine. I relegated myself to a quiet, brooding back-bencher.

This continued for 4 years. The lesson to not be too loud or too confident was always imparted with a soft tone and guised as concern for others, but in truth all it did was cause me to check myself before raising my hand. I was encouraged to give others a chance to speak; not to intimidate others with my knowledge and confidence. How sad that the very people who were meant to be building my confidence and moulding me into a knowledge thirsty being, ready to learn and impart knowledge, were the very ones quashing my ambition and lowering my standards.

Fast forward to my life today and I find that I am having to unlearn some of these bad habits because, guess what? Knowledge that you possess, yet fail to share is as good as non-existent. This bad habit has had a financial cost to me. While running my consultancy business, I found that one of my greatest hindrances to business was not being able to confidently sit at the table and tell my prospective clients exactly what I am capable of; I would find myself downplaying my abilities and achievements so that I... (I can find no rational end to that statement).

I am however vindicated by my love for life. I live, I learn. If I can learn from others ... great!  If not, I will learn from my mistakes and hope never to have to learn the same lesson from the same mistake more than once.

So, I have decided that I will live Marianne Williamson's mantra:-
  • I will embrace my power
  • I will make no apologies for being brilliant, gorgeous, talented and fabulous
  • I will not let my fear imprison me
  • I will manifest God's glory in me
  • I will by my actions liberate others 

I WILL SHINE!



Take a moment to remember something great about Nelson Mandela.

He shone!