User loginNavigationAbout UsSubmissions GuidelinesHave something you want to submit? Here are our submissions guidelines. Event NewsWho's onlineThere are currently 1 user and 79 guests online.
Online users:
Active forum topicsWho's new
|
slug and lettuce column was due yesterdayand suddenly I forgot how to write! It like all my words are jumbled up! I had this little antedotes about stuff in my head, I wanted to write. and I don't know if they make sense!!!! And then I wanted to share some of the tour I went on, but the tour was so great and my account is so sketchy. I just want to write something for my column, and tell people about my upcoming book - and its like I'm so rusty at making sense. I dunno. I'll share it in case anybody can give any quick feedback: . . . Most alternative parents are somewhat isolated from each other: I know I am. There’s a whole lot more rad parents around these days but most of them have younger children, not a teenager like how I do. It’s too easy to become isolated as a mother of teen since the role isn’t as overwhelming as raising a younger child—but its still surprisingly heavy. It also just feels good when you find out how some one is similar to you in some small detail. I was having supper with my friend (a mom of teen) Lydia and her family and found out that her son had also not believed her when she first told him that Chuck Taylors/Converse All Stars were cool. Not until the fashion caught up with his own peer group did he realize his mom might know more about what is cool after all! (In Elementary school, my daughter literally cried when she left her good tennis shoes over some one else’s house and had to wear Chucks to school! It wasn’t until her High School days that they became popular with her peer group.) Anyway, it’s a silly detail but it made me feel good. I don’t normally have supper with other parents of teenagers. They were saying something about embarrassing him and I said: Well all teenagers are embarrassed by their parents. (I highly recommend any rad parent of teen to read “Why can’t you be normal?� in Ariel Gore’s book “Whatever, Mom : Hip Mama’s Guide to Raising a Teenager�) My daughter was like that too. But they come around, just like with the converse tennis shoes, and realize you were pretty cool after all. One day my daughter came home from her friend’s house who is a painter and apologized to me. “I’m sorry about the time I told you it was a terrible idea to paint a mural on the wall, and how I would never let you paint a mural on the car. That was a pretty great idea and I’m sorry I gave you such a hard time.� And it feels good to hear that! See? Said Lydia. “Yea�, said her 15-year-old, “But I’m not at that point yet�. And that’s just how it is. I think that teenagers and parents both like to hear the stories of other people to realize they are not so alone in their irritations; they don’t suck, these things happen and it gets better. Feeling encouraged by the tennis shoe story: I told Lydia that I suspected a trait of our generation of mothers might be that we had all left our afterbirths in the freezer. When you put together the trend in natural birth and the rediscovered custom of burying the afterbirth under a tree with our lack of attachment to land and laziness/procrastination: a lot of afterbirths sit around in the freezer for a quite a long time. And I think my story might be worst of all as I left most of mine (I drank part of it in a V-8 cocktail) in a friends freezer, where I forgot it when I left town. She laughed and said she didn’t have that experience: as a young mom of 16, she really didn’t have as many of choices over the birth process at she would have liked: she gave birth in a hospital and felt apologetic most of the time. She said that was the great thing about finding girlmom.com was finding other teen moms to share experiences with and empowerment. I remember when I was first pregnant, and I felt sick. I worried something was wrong with me until I read in Our Bodies Our Selves that I was morning sick. Its kind of crazy how isolated we can be, how scared, and how much better we feel when we find out we are “normal� whatever that is, and even being not normal isn’t abnormal because there are always other people like ourselves out there with to trade notes with. Last spring I found myself, really wondering what happened to the radical single mom—it seemed like all the “hip� parents I knew were married. I was also really craving to be around people more like myself, even those a step ahead in the road as usually I am always the one in the crowd with the oldest kid (she will be 18 in March). I get asked for advice but I don’t get much of a chance to ask it. And guess what? As if there is a Goddess and she answered my unsent prayers—to send to me the precise people I needed to talk to about the most important issues in my life-- I found myself road tripping with a bunch of rad single moms of teens and grown children! My dear mama-zinester friend Ariel Gore invited me to go on her Essential Hip Mama Book tour “Yo Mama's Illumination Road Show�: from Baltimore up to Burlington, Vermont. Oh my god – it was like a dream! Hanging out with the old school “Welfare Bohemia�! I met Katherine Arnoldi (author of The Amazing True Story of a Teenage Single Mom) who is a grandmother! And hot! She has long hair in braids and she looks like a librarian and has ton of knowledge/experience about art, revolution, and social justice. We also toured with Annaliese Jakimides who is a poet/artist/mother from Maine of three grown children who raised them during the “back to the land� movement. And I just want to say, if you think the issues in zines and on the internet are good—they aint nothing compared to a road trip when it comes to discussing the deep issues in one life you need hours and hours on the road to bring up these talks and confidences. There is stuff I talked about, that I just never can in print. Especially with raising teenagers, there are serious things to talk of that we are more sensitive to keeping our children’s privacy and can not easily discuss: plus the way these issues are entwined in our own histories and souls. Plus, for once in my life, being around mothers with children older than mine, indeed grown, really gave me some perspective I needed. And everywhere we went: the mamas fed us! They took us in and gave us a place to stay; shared their stories of all the interesting things they were doing in their towns. (Providence, Boston, Portland—wow, I’ve never been to New England before!) It was really really inspiring. When I came back to town, it seemed like some road magic was still on me cuz Atomic Books approached me that they would like to put out a book of mine, an anthology of my zine: The Future Generation: a zine for subculture parents, kids, friends + others. It took me a half a year to sort through my 15 years of making a zine and try to get something in order, with help from my two bestest mama-writer friends (Ariel Gore and Vikki Law). I’m kinda nervous, and kinda excited and hope to share with you (anyone who is interested in anarchy, raising kids, and parenting be it social parenting or being a parent yourself) soon my zine book. Details shall be forth coming! Until then, if you would like something cool to read: order my daughters first ever zine! Dildo #1 is out for $2 from P.O. Box 4803 Baltimore Md 21211 Thanks to everyone I met, read with, and stayed with on the road. Stay in touch! China410@hotmail.com |