I awoke at 6:06 with an image: Parenting is like a mountain range. I laid in bed reflecting on what I knew about mountainsâhow are they formed and named? And then I traveled down memory lane drafting this article while my head was still resting on the pillow.
Does anybody listen?
Once upon a time about 22 years ago, I was a nursing mom. I had a breast infection that wouldnât heal. Doctors were visited. Nurse lines were called. La Leche League groups were frequented as were Lactation Consultants. Nobody helped me. They each knew their stuff, but it didnât include my stuff. One night that infection ruptured. If we think of parenting as a mountain range, this âmogulâ became an active volcano, literally erupting with stinky infection all over my pajamas and bedding. While I literally wrinkled up my nose at that stench, the eruption left me with a physical scar. But it also created a mental/emotional scar that still remains today when I think of traditional medical systems.
A couple of years passed, and our family expanded. Suddenly we had a baby with hives. Same doctor visits and calls as I sought help. Nobody cared; they only wanted to treat symptoms and not look at the cause. I found a functional medicine doctor who dug down to the root. (We still see him today!) At the time, hives felt like a pointy peak but looking back it was an opportunity to begin metaphorical rock climbing.
Mountain of Knowledge
Life continued; we added a third baby. We played in the fertile ground of the mountains. Until Lyme Disease attacked a kid. More visits and calls. More let downs. A motherâs intuition knew this disease, but I didnât have the data to support: 20 years ago, Lyme was ânew.â The Lyme Mountain was a biggie and had many smaller summits on the way to the top. Weâd think we were at the hardest part and a new âhardâ would expose itself. But we did it. We reached the summit and then got off that mountain! Thank you, God!
Cruise along a few years and suddenly a kid was vomiting and having digestive distress. This mountain was not yet named. Where were we? Leaky Gut, SIBO, Gut Dysbiosis, Celiacs, Allergies? The best way to name a mountain is to climb the darn thing. We climbed through lots of research and made mistakes (rappelling and abseiling back to the starting line). We were told weâd never truly reach a summit but rather weâd live on this âtable/mesaâ. Itâs 100% gluten free on this part of the mountain range.
Iâm thinking these are a lot of accomplishments, a lot of summits reached. Am I complete in my parenting of youngsters?
Limited Visibility on Top
Nope. Our current climb has limited visibility. It feels like there are more storms than sun at this moment. Will we persist? Definitely. Do we have a plan? Right now, we are reading othersâ adventures on this particular mountain. What did they learn during their experience(s)? We are creating the packing list and gathering the supply list. We will celebrate each stage of the climb!
Every mountain range has valleys, gorges, and ravines as well as the peaks. My miscarriages didnât feel like mountain tops. No, they were definite âvalley of deathâ encounters. Addictions might be another example of a âravineâ experience. I bet everyone can relate to this metaphor.
Some of us have bigger mountain ranges than others. There is no judgement in the size of the climb. Rather, itâs about cheering one another onward and upward. Itâs about being there when someone rappels down. Maybe youâre the anchor. Maybe youâre the belayer who controls the rope if someone falls. Maybe youâre the spotter. Your role might be active, or it might be supportive. Maybe youâre at the bottom offering refreshments.
In the image in my mind, what matters is that we are in this together. We are rising to greater heights. We are raising up the next generation.
Feel free to share one of your parenting âclimbsâ in the comments.