It’s been twenty days since I launched A Field Guide To Now, and in those twenty days I have been more intensely creative than I’ve been in over a year.
I’ve been forced way outside my comfort zone. My word for the year was action, and this project has forced me to take action on behalf of my career as a writer and artist in ways I couldn’t have conceived of when I first took the plunge. I’ve had to learn how to query and research and push the limits of my ability to create at night after small boys go to sleep. I’m working on this book project, my novel, paintings, and a few other big projects that are under wraps with fingers crossed.
(I am also working part time, at a job that is pushing me to learn In Design and Photoshop, always under deadline. The child-free hours of my day are spent thusly: designing ads and view books and writing press releases. The rest of my day is spent juggling, with a single-minded focus pounding in my head like jungle drums.)
I am compelled, determined, wired, moody, thrilled, exhausted, inspired. When I sleep my mind is active in a way that is almost new to me. It’s frenetic and repetitive: gnawing away at the creative tasks I’ve left off from before bed. This past week I’ve begun dreaming of whales—and they’ve inspired some of the newest art for A Field Guide To Now. Here is a glimpse (in progress.)

Incidentally, when I looked up what it means to dream about whales, this is what I found: Whale reintroduces us to our creative and intuitive energies to show us a talent we’ve forgotten about or haven’t been aware existed. How spot-on is that?
I’ve had more coffee and less sleep; more wine, more sex, more dreams and less rhythm. I’m spending less time on laundry and dishes (and the house is in probable shambles because of it) and more time perched on the stool in my studio painting, with gauche on my fingers. Less time taking leisurely walks with my boys; more time trying to multi-task while they’re under foot.
It’s made me think about my identity, about who I am and how I define that. For a while, after Sprout was born, I slipped wholly into the identity of mother, and felt my world narrow to the small, domestic orbit of that life. It was restful, to be there. For a while. Sprout was such an easy baby that I enjoyed his babyhood in a way that I never fully did with Bean—who cried more and was more needy, just as I was newer and more anxious at the whole mommy thing.
But now, Sprout is walking. Bean is 5. The house is littered with legos (Sprout holds lego helmets in his mouth like a chipmunk. I’ve checked his diaper but he’s never actually swallowed one. Go ahead call me neglectful. YOU just try to keep legos off the floor with two boys in the house, four years apart.) There is a constant stampede of activity and peanut butter sandwiches and glasses of milk that get spilled. The vacuum is out all day long. Money is tight. Bean has outgrown all his pajamas. Sprout is starting to say words.
And.
And in the midst of all this messy, simple, regular domesticity, I’ve begun to long fiercely for myself. For myself not as a mother, but as someone entirely separate from my children.
Truthfully, I’ve always had an uneasy relationship with the definition of motherhood, and now, more than ever, I am enjoying my boys and wanting to be distinct from them, in my own right. A writer. An artist. Right now my mind is preoccupied with the craft of writing, with images, and also about self-doubt, and longing…
How do you define yourself? Where does your definition of motherhood (if you are, or want to be a mother) shape you? What are the words you use to tell yourself the story about your life as it is at this current moment?

I read through your posts as they presented, backwards by date. After this post, a thought about multitasking formed in my head. When I read the next post it became clearer and I wanted to share it even if it isn’t 100% in focus yet.
Do you think that maybe having all these “must dos” such as dealing with children’s immediate needs and going to a job for financial stability might actually clarify the other must do’s (creativity)? I often get frustrated by all the things that seem to take time away, things that I’ve chosen in one way or another, like a job/career but that aren’t really what matters most to me. I wish I could devote more time to other interests instead. But when I look back at my life and when I was reading your thoughts today, it seemed to me that maybe those other things (whatever they are), that whir and twirl of day to day life are actually what enable us to be so creative at different points in our lives. I’m picturing the water hose and how when you hold your thumb over the opening the water sprays out, given more force by the constriction.
I have rarely commented but today I must share that I love to read your blog. You take ordinary things (just words) and put them together in a way that make me say “yes that is it exactly.”
Jen–what a thoughtful, interesting observation. I do think there is truth there–and I feel that in my life: the sharpening of my creative focus when I have many things to be doing. I also know that when I didn’t have kids I didn’t have any more time–or at least I didn’t believe I did! I’m so glad you commented. :)
Reading this line, “wanting to be distinct from them, in my own right…An artist” made my chest tighten and my eyes well in longing. So many things I want to say about that but I can’t find the right words so I will just say this…
Lay a sheet down and dump the legos on top. Then when they are done playing you just pull up the corners of the sheet and put the whole package in the bin.
xxoo,
andie
Wow, what thoughts… I want to make a comment, too, but I’m having a hard time solidifying a thought. I have been unclear about me-my voice, my role-since we moved to Florida almost 8 years ago. I had been a very content (personally & professionally) massage therapist with a very successful business in NY. I sold that to move to FL after my husband’s sons moved out. For the first time in years I didn’t know what to do! We rented-something I had never done, I worked for different people-something I hadn’t done in so long, I worked in different fields, I lived near salt water, it was hot almost all the time… In all honesty I think I’m still looking for myself again. I had my first son after trying for years (& giving up) so I was ecstatic to be a mama!!! Loved every sleepy, pukey, crying second. I wanted to experience it again so badly & to give J a sibling, so when I had my second son I was still in love with being mama wholly & completely. Plus I’m good at it. I think it’s so important to be a good mom-my mom was & is, and my brother & I LOVE her for that. But. I find myself feeling…restless (?) as they’re getting older. They are so much more significant in me being a mama. Before, I made the rules & pretty much ran the show. Now they write the story. What we do, what they eat…& don’t eat, what I hear (“I love you, Mama” or “You’re dumb! I hate you!”), how my time is spent. I’m having some difficulty moving in this new direction & again yearn for those years when I did run the show-controlled scheduling, hired, fired, made money, had money and nice clothes and vacations, received praise for my skills. I still love completely climbing on the rock jetty (oh sorry, mountain climbing with “Jeff Corwin”), looking for crabs at the beach, going to the library, reading stories, playing play-doh, lying with them, holding them on my lap, smelling their skin. But I don’t feel as sure and as in command as I did even a few months ago. I think that’s why I’m having the same feelings as when I moved here–I’m in a “just don’t know exactly what I’m doing” phase.
Oh my goodness! Though I am not a mother, this is one of my most common inner debates. If and when I can have children, so I work or stay home? Half time or full time?
I spend time earning my Master’s degree to be an art therapist, and now that I’m working, I have to spend 2 years earning my supervision to be licensed. Do I give all that up to be a mother? If I work am I a ‘bad mother’ because I’m not at home with my children? If I stay at home, do I forget all about my professional identity? I feel that I’d like to have some of this straightened out before childbirth.
There are definitely days where I think I could be perfectly happy tending my garden, raising chickens and children, and working on my artistic ventures…but then I wonder why I went to graduate school.
I like hearing this dialogue. :)
(delurking) Thank you for this statement … “And in the midst of all this messy, simple, regular domesticity, I’ve begun to long fiercely for myself. For myself not as a mother, but as someone entirely separate from my children.”
I needed to hear this from someone else so I could articulate it for me. :-)
I love the whale picture. The novel that I am writing at the moment features a whale so they have been in my thoughts/ dreams too.
I love the whale dream picture. Such gorgeous color and texture! And I love this post.
I think it’s hard not to lose yourself in the role of wife and mother. I’m sure men have similar feelings of losing themselves, but I think the pull is stronger for stay-at-home moms (maybe stay-at-home dads too).
For the past 20 years, my life has been centered around my husband and my children. Many times I’ve felt my own identity slipping away. Of course the real me hasn’t really left the building, it’s just buried under layers of duty and the needs of others, my voice muffled–or maybe drowned out by the activity, noise, and clamor of life with children.
I wouldn’t trade the life I’ve had for anything, but sometimes I wonder if I put myself last and silenced my own voice too often. After 20 years, it’s hard to find again. It’s difficult now to adjust to life with grown and almost grown children who need me less and less. I’m finding myself alone with my time my own more and more often, and I feel I need to become reacquainted with who I am as opposed to who I am in relationship to others. Sometimes I look in the mirror and wonder about the person staring back at me, and I think, “I don’t really know her at all.”
You are wise to continue to nurture your creativity and sense of self while you raise and nurture your boys. It doesn’t have to be one or the other, and I think your boys will likely learn from your example and be happier adults because of it.
I too, like Liz, have noticed your creative energy pouring out here. It makes me so happy for you. When I first became a mother, I felt isolated. I longed to go back to work, where I was finally feeling competent and was taking on some leadership roles. At home I felt incompetent, overwhelmed. I didn’t really like being a mother for the first months. Crying all night, sleep deprivation, nursing, and not really knowing what to do with a baby made my days (and nights!) long and hard, but it consumed me. When I had my twins, it was so different. I was nervous because it was such a hard transition with ONE, but it was blissful. I still wish I could go back and enjoy my oldest as a baby. I regret that I was so consumed with feeling overwhelmed to see what a gift a newborn is. I defined myself as a mom for years, until I tutored a couple of first graders two years ago. That set me in motion to get my master’s degree, and now to have a new job. I like having a piece of myself that is separate from my kids. And, I think it is good for them to see it, too.
Blazing. Fierce. Learning. Living. Broadening. Loving. Overwhelmed. In peace with that. Happy.
I’ve had this sense of you glowing like a white-hot sun with creativity lately. I’ve also had an uneasy relationship with myself as mother. Because I never wanted children, this life I’ve found myself in has been by turns surreal and frustrating and so incredibly giving. It’s taught me to relax my expectations and to roll with the punches in a way I never would have if I hadn’t had kids. Change is what it’s all about: from routines to clothing sizes to what they want to be when they grow up. And for me as well. They help me realize that everything is a phase, and that I am still changing as well.
I dream whales all the time. Never looked up what they meant. :-) Thanks for this.