A year ago this April, Lashanda Armstrong loaded her four
children into her minivan and drove into the Hudson River. Her oldest son, aged
10, was the only survivor after he rolled down his window and swam to the boat
ramp in 45 degree water. Her other children, ages, 5, 2, and 11 months all
died.
By all accounts, Armstrong was a good mother doing the best
she could on limited means and with limited emotional support. She was
estranged from both of the fathers of her children and for all intents and
purposes a single parent. She mentioned in passing to her children’s daycare
provider that she was “tired and all alone.” After a fight with the father of
her younger 3 children, it seems she felt even more so as that was when she
piled all of her kids into the car and drove them down a boat ramp into the Hudson River.
Armstrong’s story is tragic, and still, when the topic came
up in parent discussions on playgrounds or over dinner, parents talked about it
in that distancing fashion that we save only for the most uncomfortable of
topics. By the distancing fashion, I mean, the “I can’t imagine doing such a
thing” or “Who could do such a thing?” or “It’s unnatural. It’s irrational –
the urge to kill yourself and your children.” (as if we were unclear or thought
that suicide and infanticide were well reasoned, thought out and rational
courses of action). It’s the judgmental distancing thing we do when we’d like
to think that the kinds of people who do these kinds of things are a completely
different species of human being than ourselves.
I saw this again this last week, when a Chicago mom, Michelle
Feliciano, 23, was arrested on child endangerment charges after her 11 month
old baby was found with multiple injuries including bleeding on the brain, a
broken clavicle, marks on the neck, and puncture wounds on his feet from toothpicks.
Feliciano explained the injuries; she said they happened in a “bout of
frustration.” Her oldest child, between
the ages of three and four, is now staying with a relative, while her baby is
in stable condition in the hospital.
The comments on Feliciano’s debut into the papers sound like
the things I remember reading about in the history of the Salem Witch trials or
a Dickens novel. Feliciano is an immoral monster who should be hung in the town
square. She should be sterilized without her consent or anesthetic. Her crimes
inspire even the most collected and enlightened of onlookers to think of the most barbaric and
medieval of punishments.
Yet, Feliciano’s case, while profoundly disturbing, I think
deserves some degree of compassion. She is another young mom trying to raise
children on limited means. There is no mention of a father being present. While
Feliciano had family close by and it was a family member who noticed that
something was wrong when the 11-month old baby couldn’t hold his head up,
Feliciano obviously didn’t feel like she could call them for help when she
found herself frustrated. In the moment,
dealing with two children all by herself seemed so overwhelming, that somehow
hurting one of them seemed to make sense.
Child abuse is inexcusable, period. But to assume that Armstrong or Feliciano are
unlike other people is a mistake. Rather, they reveal the shortcomings of all
of us.
Parenting, as one of my friends says, is unrelenting. Consequently,
it can bring out anger and frustration that most of us didn’t know we had.
Despite being raised in an angry household where my parents often yelled
(generally at each other), I didn’t consider myself an angry person. I didn’t
usually yell or throw things or kick things or throw tantrums like people who
were angry people did. Even when I had a child I didn’t do these things. When I had my first child, if anything, my
patience, compassion, and tolerance increased. But something happened after the
birth of my second. Since the birth of my daughter, and the increasing
independence of my son who is 3-going-on-15, I have found myself profoundly and
ridiculously angry. By sheer coincidence, I have also found myself profoundly
and ridiculously tired.
And, I beat myself up all the more because my children are
happy, easy to be around, healthy little people. Unlike Feliciano and
Armstrong, I am educated and not young (and not there’s anything wrong with
young parents, though studies show child abuse drops as people have children
later in life, but to be clear, to have more than one child by 25 – the age
when our own brain just finishes its development – is young) and I am not
trying to raise my children on limited means. My children’s father is an active
partner and parent; we have a solid marriage with pretty great communication
skills. We fight and yell, but we also love and laugh and keep talking. My
sister lives around the corner with her awesome soon-to-be husband. When my
husband works late, I can crash – with my two kids in tow - dinner at their
house. Yesterday, I came home to find my almost brother-in-law in the backyard
working on our chicken coop and watching my son play; my husband had to run out
for a work call. I also have help; we
can afford a housecleaner and I have a nanny part-time, so while I get up insanely
early to get work done, I also have a few hours in the afternoon when she
comes. I have her help for whatever I need: she can hold the baby, while I hold
my son during his allergy tests at the doctor’s office or his teeth cleaning at
the dentist.
For all intents and purposes, my parenting experience is at
the complete opposite end of the spectrum from Feliciano and Armstrong.
Nonetheless, I have had days since the birth of my daughter, where I felt emotionally and physically exhausted, drained, isolated, angry and even
violently so. I have had moments where I have imagined doing terrible things to
my children and myself and horrified myself. I have had moments where I didn’t know I was
going to make it through the end of the day. I have moments where when someone
said, “it only gets worse” I have thought, “well, then, I am not going to make
it.” I have had moments where walking into traffic seemed like a reasonable
course of action. I have thought there
was something terribly wrong with me. I
have felt hopeless; because my own parents were so angry, I have spent years
working on my personal development, so I didn’t follow in their marriage and
child-rearing footsteps. And as a result, I do live a very different life than
my parents did when they were my age.
Then one day, my son asked for sliced cheese and when I gave
it to him, he cried that he didn’t want it and without even thinking, I became
my mother in 1976 and picked up the cheese and threw it across the room and into
the trash and said, “well, then don’t eat it.” Horrified by the instantaneous
transformation, I instantly picked him up, apologized and we cried together
about how I scared both of us.
When I tentatively brought up the topic of my own parenting
anger in a group of friends and my favorite fellow parents, I was worried I
would get asked to leave. But nonetheless, I had to ask, “I know we all want to
be gentle parents, or conscious parents or whatever the terms are - I know we all want to be the parents our
parents weren’t, but does anyone beside me ever just lose it?”
I wasn’t shunned. One friend said, it’s going to happen, and
it’s what you do in the moments after that make the difference. I realized that
this is true, that my own parents told me I had it coming, so I always felt
wrong even if I wasn’t. Whereas my children and I ended our bad patches, with
me apologizing, and us on the couch snuggled together and reading, that this
had the effect of my outbursts passing like my kids’ outbursts. Once we
expressed the emotions and accounted for them, we could move on without
carrying grudges forward.
Another friend wisely said, “I think we have to be like
Gandhi, where we just keep taking hits from the British.” Then she added, “But
I don’t know that Gandhi was as tired as we are.”
So while I’d like to pretend I can’t fathom how people like
Armstrong or Feliciano do what they did, I can; I have felt the emotions that
lead to those kind of actions. And like them, and like my favorite friends, and
like my wise-Gandhi-citing friend, I - and most of us - weren’t taught how to
deal with frustration or anger. Many of us were actually taught that expressing
anger or throwing temper tantrums was nothing more than being manipulative or
trying to get away with something. But this only leads to bottling emotions up until we can no longer stand it and we explode, often taking it out on those around us. Not many of us had parents that got down at
our eye-level and said, “I get you’re angry and that’s a valid emotion. Do you
want to talk about what makes you angry?...Oh? What else?” Most of us grew up in households
where expressing emotions like anger was considered misbehavior.
Except that it’s not. Alfie Kohn famously writes that every
act of misbehavior has at its core a valid complaint. The trick is to give kids
– and ourselves – the skills to express that valid complaint in language. I know for myself that when I act out, I too have a valid complaint at the
source, whether it’s that I feel unsupported or overwhelmed or that I need a
break and am unable to put my children on “pause” while I take a nap. I suspect
if we asked Feliciano and Armstrong if they had a valid complaint at the source
of their “unthinkable” actions, we would find they did. I suspect we would
find, that, in a country we consider advanced, they felt the struggles that
come with not enough support.
We can imagine Feliciano and Armstrong as monsters or
unnatural. Or we can consider that like many of us, they didn’t have the tools
to handle the wide range of emotions that come with parenting. Like many of us, they found themselves overwhelmed with frustration.
3 comments:
Thank you for this. Sometimes it's hard to admit to our less-than-perfect moments for fear of being judged. Its nice to be reminded that we all struggle and that the moments after really do matter.
Thank you for a great post. You gave words to so many things I had been thinking and feeling, anger, frustration, the unrelenting element. Thank you!
Thanks so much for talking about this (sometimes taboo) topic. I know I've gotten the side-eye from some parents when I talk about my frustrations, and the embrace and understanding nod from others. I think it's important to keep talking, because the frustration can be all too real, and bearing it in isolation is clearly not healthy.
As a true-crime buff, I'm both repelled and fascinated by stories of infanticide by mothers. Because, like you said, I have reactions in equal parts of "I could never!" and "In some circumstance, maybe that could be me." It's scary.
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