I remember when my first son was in need of his first
haircut. I took him to a professional stylist and, with 35mm camera in
hand, clicked away, literally walking around and around his seat, so that, once
developed, the pictures would immortalize that very special day in my life, in
his life, in the world, I was sure.
By the time my third son was in need of his first haircut, I let
my mom have at it and, as it turned out, time did not improve her hair-cutting
skills. My youngest son ended up with the same bangs that I had worn some
30 years earlier — a wavy line of hair jutting out all over the place somewhere
between eyebrows and the hairline.
Things really do change from the first born to the second and then
to the third. And as that is all the children we were blessed with, I can
go no further with my experience but my assumptions would be that by the fifth
or sixth child, he or she may very well be performing his or her own first
haircut.
Now, my oldest is now a college graduate and owns his first home, the
second is a semester away from graduation and the third has begun his college
years. All the years in between those first haircuts and this point in time
have truly gone by in the blink of an eye.
I can’t say, for sure, what each of my son’s take on things has
been; but, for me it has been an incredible journey. And I’ll admit that
I look back and find great relief that my oldest, in particular, has been so
forgiving towards me in all the ways I tried to shape and mold him into what I
thought was right — and certainly in keeping with my post-feminist upbringing
which included the need to neutralize any distinctions between the sexes along
with my politically-correct interest in taming all things that could even
appear to have a glimmer of “inappropriateness” attached to them.
I remember once when my mother was reading a book to my oldest
son. She came to some point in the story where, when my husband and I
read it, we had always chosen to replace some word or phrase with more “proper”
words, but not knowing better, grandma read the actual words. Well, when he heard her reading it verbatim, he was
on the floor laughing, “Grandma! It does
not say that!” So much for our attempt at politically-correct censorship.
No matter how hard I tried, though, he was still a “boy.”
And that means something. They all were, actually, very much “boys.” For
instance, they simply weren’t able to pass each other in the hall without a
push and a shove for good luck. Try as I might to dissuade them, they
were just so “physical” all the time! I once received a note from a teacher
who, in all seriousness, felt it was imperative to tell me that my son, while
playing “Duck-Duck-Goose” became so mischievous that he tapped two children
instead of one! I can only imagine the pandemonium that ensued and my son
received from me the sternest of warning against such wild classroom antics. At
the time I was duly mortified that I would have birthed the child who wreaked
havoc with “Duck-Duck-Goose” rules.
Of course, despite such notes and other miscellaneous offenses
along the way, my boys were, in fact, quite good kids — in the grand scheme of
things. Sure there were times that I was forced to walk away from
parent-teacher conferences with a piece of paper held in front of my face in
hopes of obscuring my identity as I made a beeline towards the door; but, all
in all they were really fine young boys on their way growing into fine young
men.
It’s just that I didn’t have brothers and couldn’t figure out why
these boys of mine wouldn’t sit down and play quietly with one another or do
their puzzles in an orderly fashion. I could fondly recall how my sisters
and I would play school for hours on end. Not a peep out of us as we wrote on
the chalkboard and assigned one another “homework.”
The closest my boys came to that sort of quiet, structured, group
play was when they were building Legos; but, for the most part, even that time
was spent constructing weapons or creating scenarios in which caves, hideouts
and counter-attack strategies were necessary. This, after having been
exposed to the dullest of television choices — which were extremely
time-limited anyhow — and don’t forget censorship galore on all books!
One dinner, when the boys were around 2, 4, and 6 I remember one
of them eating a piece of bread into the shape of a gun and being completely
convinced that I had failed as a mother.
“How,” I moaned to my husband, “could they even know about such things?!”
“How,” I moaned to my husband, “could they even know about such things?!”
Boys will be boys.
Now that’s a phrase I’m none too fond of but there is some truth
to the fact that, well, boys will be boys.
However, if we understand it not as an excuse for bad behavior but,
rather, being a plausible testament to some basic genetic truths, we are able
to more sufficiently appreciate how God created male and female and the path on
which each will proceed towards developing virtuous behaviors and moral
choices. Denying the genetic and natural differences between male and
female will not make them go away.
And as a mother of all boys — and never having had any brothers —
I have grown to love the way in which God has made male and female.
Raising boys has given me a new appreciation of my husband and how, if we are
called to the vocation of marriage, we grow in beautiful ways when we embrace
the unique gifts and talents and personalities of male and female.
I am fully convinced that God knew what he was doing when, in His
immense wisdom, He gave me all sons. I have learned so much about our
Creator through my life as a mother of boys. So many of the ill-conceived
notions about gender-neutrality, which was part and parcel of my life as a
teenager in the post-radical-feminist-movement that pervaded the 70s, have been
washed away in the Truth about male and female, their inherent differences,
their shared dignity, their beauty as having been created, equally but diverse,
in His image, His likeness.
As my own sons grow into men, I am grateful for the gifts they
have received from their Creator and feel blessed that I discovered, sooner
rather than later, how important their unique “maleness” is and how it has been
a gift to participate in helping them grow into all that God has called them to
be as they venture out into the world as men.
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