Motherhood in Quarantine

Motherhood in Quarantine

Even without the excuse of Mother's Day, I've been thinking a lot lately about that part of my identity.  I'm thinking about my pregnant friends and what it'll be like for them to give birth later this month.  I'm thinking about my friends raising kids alone.  I'm thinking about my mom friends who worked in restaurants and bars. I'm thinking about my mom, far away from me. I'm thinking about the million ways that all of us might be experiencing motherhood right now.  Fellow moms, I'd love to hear how you're doing. You can leave a comment below to share with everyone, or reach me at connie@eastfork.com.

Here's how I'm doing: 

4:45 am

I got a later start this morning than I’d hoped for. I’ve already wasted time fussing with a clump of splinters in my right hand, setting the water on the stove, watching a video of Brad Pitt playing Anthony Fauci on SNL. If I’m lucky I have two hours alone, but more likely our two-year-old will realize I’ve gotten out of bed, and in twenty minutes or so, I’ll hear her tiny feet on the steps.  “You there, Mama?” These days, darling?  Yes. I always am.

5:10 am   

During quarantine, I fantasize about being alone. Taking a bath alone.  Reading the newspaper alone. Eating lunch at my desk alone. It’s 5:12 am and already I’m mourning this fleeting moment of silence. A lot impacts how each of us is experiencing this pandemic. Here’s what it looks like for us:

For 8 weeks, my husband, our daughters Lucia (2) and Vita (4), and I have been quarantining in a little house in the woods owned by friends who live in Charleston.  A path leads down the hill to the Hungry River.  There’s satellite Internet—enough bandwidth for Alex and I to be living in our email and GSuite, but not enough, really, to stream movies online.  There’s a DVD player, though, and 1 DVD—Frozen 2.  Vita’s made a convincing case for being allowed to watch it twice a day, so long as she plays it in Spanish. “I’m learning, Mama!” Sure, sweetie. Whatever you want.

As the reporting director for our Sales, Marketing, and Creative teams, I’m still working full-time.  Alex took a few weeks to clear his head but now has been at the factory a lot, masked, gloved, figuring out how we’re going to make more pots than we did last year, but with 6 people on the factory floor at a time instead of 35.  My work and my motherhood are only getting half my brain, but that’s not really new, is it?

My vision of myself in motherhood was pretty off the mark from reality.  Before I had kids I’d imagined day after day filled with homemade playdough, construction paper crowns, planting gardens, going on walks.  I didn’t imagine myself working 50 to 60 hours a week, distracted by my cellphone, tired all the time, bickering with Alex over work stuff that we probably actually agree about if we could hear each other better. “Stop talking about East Fork!” was an early adopted phrase in both our babies’ vocabularies.

During quarantine, I fantasize about spending more time with my children.

5:48 am 

Still alone. Vita, understands that the Coronavirus is especially dangerous for older people, which has her very worried about her grandparents, especially my mom and dad, who live in Los Angeles and are still having to go to work Downtown.  She’s had a lot of tantrums—hitting her sister, throwing her fork, stomping her little foot while her face floods red.  When I’m patient enough to hold and breath her through it, the feelings behind the anger is always the same—I miss my grandma and I want to know when I can see her again. “Me too, baby,” I say. My mom’s started dressing as Disney characters and having my dad film her talking in character.  When Vita is sad, we watch them again.


Connie's Mom holds a Buzz Light Year and Woody Doll


The third week of quarantine, after I gave up on trying to keep my team’s regular meeting schedule, I gave myself some space to close my computer, turn off my phone, and—in spurts of 2 to 3 hours at a time—give my babies my full attention.  A few days I even turned my phone off at 4 pm and didn't turn it back on until the next day. That week Vita told me she had something she really needed to say.   “Mama,” she whispered, “ I know I’m not supposed to say this, but Coronavirus is the best thing to ever happen to our family.”

6:03 am

I’m terrible at long-distance communication. I hate talking on the phone.  I think a lot about writing letters but then I don’t—when would I? I miss my mom.  She loves the phone and is a great letter writer.  I’m trying to convince her to move out here to Asheville, but she’s not ready to retire,  or she feels ready but she won’t.  I can’t really tell.  Sometimes I think it’s selfish of me to suggest it.  LA is her home.  The only city she and my dad have ever lived in. The city they’ve given their entire life to serving.  But in quarantine, I fantasize about a big, dysfunctional family compound, with my sisters and brother and parents and kids. We’d drive each other crazy.  But we’d be all together.  That way maybe I could have a bath alone. 

6:37 am 

Everyone’s still asleep! Now’s my chance to read the newspaper, but I won’t.  Instead, I’ll slip back under the covers with Lucia and put my forehead on hers. She’ll wake up and hold my chin with her tiny hands. “Good morning, Mama,” she’ll say.  “Hi, baby.  Did you have good dreams?” She dreams the same dreams every night.  “I dreamed of you, Mama,” she’ll say.

6:39 am

Nevermind.  I hear footsteps.

Connie with her two daughters

Back to blog

31 comments

This message was so welcome this morning. My son, who will be one next month, is so amazing. He will take his first steps any day now, and I am beyond glad I will cheer for him and see his excitement, instead of that privilege falling to a staff member at daycare. Yet I know even he feels the stress we all carry, and gets bored in the house, and is more temperamental than usual. He has completely lost the ability to sleep in his crib, and we’ve had him in our bed again in an attempt to get a few hours rest without screaming. My back aches from contorting around him, and he likes to kick. But when he wakes up and sees me, he breaks into a smile that strikes me to my core. I’ve given up trying to do a normal amount of work, and am skating by, letting my identity shift into our home. There are hard days, and hard hours, but good ones too. I am grateful for everything I’ve built with my family and friends. I’ve been talking constantly with my sister in law, quarantined with three kids (including a three month old), finding solidarity in the fact that no, not everything is fine. She and her husband have decided that anything said in quarantine doesn’t count after. It is such a challenge to be kind. I am trying to be kind to my partner and child, and kind to myself. There has been so much kindness in this quarantined world, and when most things return to normal, that’s something I hope will stay the same.

Daniella Jacobs

Trying to home school my 4, 6, 8, and 11 yr old through tears this morning as I wait for my husband to get home from his 12 hour shift at the ICU. Our peak is supposed to be the first week of May and it is ramping up. Because he is in direct contact with Covid I don’t really have much support or help…I have severe asthma so we can’t sleep in the same bed or be that close either. I am an artist that after taking a decade off was trying to re-start my career and get back into painting. Thats all been put on hold….I feel like anything for me has been put on hold and then I feel selfish for feeling like that because we have it better than a lot of people, we have a job, a house, food…..I just feel really over whelmed and lonely. I have enjoyed more time with my kids, I have enjoyed more time outside, I have enjoyed the rewards of teaching them, but mentally, I am exhausted…its kind of like when you have a new born and you see your former self just slipping away. There are good days and bad days, its still early enough to hopefully turn today into a good day. Reading your story, reading these comments, getting to vent, it all helps. Thank you for a safe, judgement free zone.We will all get through this and be stronger for it.

Christa

Thank you for sharing. I’m a new mom and I’m beginning to relate so much. Yesterday, my darling girl turned 16 weeks. I went straight from maternity leave into working from home. So it sort of feels like an extended leave but with the love and stress I feel for both my work and my baby co-existing in her nursery (literally, it’s where I set up my make-shift office). My mom is amazing and wonderful, and is currently in an ICU four hours away. We can’t visit due to all of the hospital restrictions currently in place. We are living for the once a day FaceTime call the hospital allows. My daughter is her first grandbaby. It’s a lot. to process. Knowing other mamas are processing a lot of emotions now (and really, all the time), helps me feel connected and grounded. Sending love to you and all the moms we know and love.

Sarah

Lovely story of finding your way through these difficult times, and the wisdom we sometimes learn from our children. My baby is nearly 30 years old, lives alone in another city, and I insist that she call me every single day so that I know she’s ok. If she calls twice, I panic when I see the caller name because I’m afraid she’s sick and how will I get there fast enough if she’s having trouble breathing.?How will I make a the long distance drive in time to look after her, to not be separated from her if she has to be hospitalized? You see, even when they grow up, it doesn’t get any easier when there’s trouble like this in the world., but I take so much comfort in a comment she made several months ago when I had to reschedule a dinner with her to help a former student who was struggling. She told me to go ahead, that he needed me and she understood because the one thing she had never doubted in this world was that her mama loved her. It sounds like your babies won’t doubt that either.

Catherine Eagle

It’s now 11am and I’m just starting to sit down for a full 8 hour work day crammed into 1.. maybe 2 hours before one of my 4 year old twins comes and finds me hiding in a little corner of our home. This morning I’ve already given my kids more attention than I used to be able to do in a full week. (we danced, we painted, we exercised, we overcame tantrums) And it’s only 11.

In reality the only thing I want to do is anything but work (thankful to have a job and a wonderful partner) but instead garden outside, paint with my girls, make bread, clean the house, resurrect all the creative things I used to do.. and after a month of sort of “figuring this whole thing out” I’m finding so much peace in these simple things, moments with my children that otherwise would’ve passed by too quickly. This is the first read – out of a lot of them bombarding my inbox these days – that hits true to home. Thank you for posting.

I miss my mom so much too.

Ashley Parker

Leave a comment

Please note, comments need to be approved before they are published.