Nelle Loves You

You know those things that the rational side of your brain totally realizes are not a big deal, but your inner righteous babe cannot let lie? It turns out, my inner righteous babe is hard to quiet.
 
I know that I am loved, by my partner and our kids. I know that I am valued by both as well. I know that I help make our family run and that my purpose in our family operations is grand and important and needed. I know all of those things. I know that I help make lunches, get the kids ready for bed, cut nails, assist with teeth brushing (except after getting ice cream…), do laundry, pick up and drop off from school and camp, help with homework, teach life lessons, make memories, and create special bonds with each of our kids. I know that these things outside of my love are what make me a mother. I know that in the ways our kids say they have three moms, ask if they can call me Mom, ask for “the other Mommy” when I’m not the one responding to their pleas, and even when they tell their friends, “I can’t do that, my mom says no,” when they’ve just asked to do something they know they shouldn’t.
 
But when your mom-name is Nelle, nobody else knows that.
 
And while I can sit with my equitable heart and know that what I know I have is more important than what others see and think, my righteous babe keeps yelling anyway.
 
My righteous babe shakes her fists when other’s hear “Nelle, can we play for 5 more minutes?” and they think I am a babysitter or the nanny (ok maybe being forced to say I was the nanny in the beginning makes that one particularly stinging).
 
My righteous babe gets a little red in the face when I sign a permission slip or call the school and my name does not match our children’s or my partner’s, and they have to check if I’m authorized.
 
My righteous babe rolls her eyes when it is questioned why I would want to be present at parent-teacher conferences, or doctor and dentist appointments. And my righteous babe even gets full on self-righteous when someone gives one of our kids an item of clothing that says “Mommy Loves You.”
 
Guess what? Nelle loves you too. But no one is making shirts that say that.
 
And my rational brain says that it is completely absurd to ever get in argument with the woman you love because you find a “Mommy’s Little Devil” shirt picked out for school the next day. And it’s not because you do not want your partner, the biological mother of your collective children, to be robbed of the opportunity to put said collective children in ridiculous clothing with foolish slogans.
 
It is because you can never have that opportunity.
 
And sure, my rational brain knows there are a million opportunities that I do have as Nelle that I am insanely grateful for. Insanely. So I assure you that these righteous babe moments are few and far between, and – fortunately – fleeting. But I would be lying if I said they didn’t happen.
 
So – Tinies, Little – if you want to puffy-paint on your graduation gown “Nelle Loves You”, I won’t object. My righteous babe will cheer and hoot and holler louder than you’ve seen her yet. And it’ll embarrass you just as you’d expect to be embarrassed by your mom. Just saying…

 

Nelle w/ Kids @ Honey Pot

 

4 thoughts on “Nelle Loves You

  1. Having been a Nelle or in my case a Kathy- I know of what you speak. Except I AM lucky enough to have 3 calling me mom from the got go. I’ve always said that being a ‘step’ (whatEVER that even means) was the most challenging role ever!!

    Puffy paint will be had!!

  2. I understand this completely. I will always be Renee’ to my step daughter but when she talks about me she sometimes says my other mom or step-mom or even mom.

    For years, I had no idea what kind of relationship that we would have. Now that she is in college, I can say that it is a really wonderful one. See my wife worked crazy long hours and I was the “mom” who did after school stuff such as homework and “No, you can’t go to an unsupervised house” and dinner and all of that. But I was never mom then, just Renee’.

    1. The true role of “mom” is often a silent one anyway (I think even when you’re the ONLY mom you feel that at times). It’s amazing what we learn to appreciate as adults from our mothers, all of them 🙂

Comments are closed.