What To Do When the World Feels Like It’s Falling Apart

What To Do When The World Feels Like It's Falling Apart; photo of me (a white woman looking at the camera with a 'what the hell?!' kind of expression)

Parents are supposed to keep their kids safe, right? But how can we do that when the world around us is falling apart? There’s escalating climate change, COVID getting ever more contagious, civil rights eroding constantly, gun violence heightening, and democracy in danger. Not to mention the less privileged of us who have more individual, very real worries about their children’s everyday safety.

Some people retreat to denial, pretending nothing’s wrong at all and they play no part. Others – far more dangerously – blame vulnerable groups for “corrupting” children, when they are the corrupting ones instilling hate and fear.

Then there’s those of us who know what’s happening and don’t know what to do about it. I include myself in this group because as much as I intellectually know what to do about it, emotionally I still feel befuddled much of the time.

I started writing this from the balcony of a hotel while I was isolating from my kids because I tested positive for COVID. I worked so hard for more than two years to avoid it and the moment we went on vacation, got it. What else could I have done? I have no idea. There’s no way we could have expected this would still be going this long and be even more contagious when we planned this trip a year ago. That was when it was at all-time lows!

While emotionally I’m flailing, intellectually I do know some things that can help.

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What if I’m a Mermaid?

What if I'm a Mermaid? Photo of a white woman in a bathing suit sitting in the sand with two white children in bathing suits

My mom leaned in conspiratorially to my small, little girl face. “I’m a mermaid, you know,” she told me, smiling. I gazed up at her in amazement. Could she really be? But no. Mermaids aren’t real. But maybe? Just maybe. “Really?” I asked. She just raised her eyebrows and shrugged.

Splash, splash, flip, flip.

Waist-deep in the shallow end of the town pool, I yelled, “Look at my trick, Daddy!” Once he turned around, I dove into the water and did a front handspring. He smiled and clapped. I could never do that trick in gymnastics class. But in the water? In the water, I could do anything.

Splash, splash, kick, kick.

Gazing down at the bottom of the YMCA pool, my teenage self pushed my chest up and filled my lungs with air. I plunged my head back down, shoved the water away, kicked my legs, and repeated the process, over and over. On land, I tripped over myself and didn’t notice where I was going. In the water, I felt sleek, powerful. I had the potential to be graceful. To be like a dolphin, my favorite animal. My swim team times never came close to the speed I felt in my head. But they weren’t what mattered to me. The water mattered.

Splash, splash, stroke, stroke.

“What if I’m a mermaid in those jeans of hers with her name still on it?” I sang along to Tori Amos’ cry in the song Silent All These Years. I had never been in an awful relationship like the song’s narrator. But in my almost 20 years, I knew well what it was like to be ignored, alone in a room full of people. I had just extricated myself from a social group I had dedicated a year of my life to, only for them to treat me like shit. Exclude me, talk behind my back, make fun of me right to my face. So I left. But now I was alone and uncertain. So I sang. I kept singing that song, in different ways. And bad times became better.

Splash, splash, dive, dive.

“I’m going to go bodysurf!” I declared to my kids and husband, running off to the surf before anyone could yell to me that they needed something. I waded up to my chest in the cold water of Cape Cod, feeling the small waves lap against me. I waited and waited. Finally, a big one. I dove into it and tried to swim. Instead, the wave tossed me under. My knees hit the sand and my mouth filled with water. Struggling to my feet, I spit out the water and laughed. I pushed back through the water and waited. This time, I was certain I could bond with the wave, get in tune with it rather than fighting it.
Splash, splash, wade, wade.
“You’re a mermaid!” my younger son declared, as we played in the town pool. He pointed to my chest and I looked down. “So I am!” I exclaimed as I noticed that I was, in fact, covered in iridescent scales. They were the pattern on my bathing suit, but still. Who could argue with the obvious evidence?
I thought back to a few weeks before when he had told me, “You’re the Tooth Fairy and Daddy is your backup.” He was about to lose his first tooth and he had already figured it out! But watching his face, I saw that fact didn’t change a bit of the magic. We were all magical already. With some words and game dice, I could become a druid who turns into different animals or a magical engineer with a robot dinosaur. In his imagination, he could be a three-headed Cerberus puppy or a giant monster kitty or an elephant. Even in real life, to him, I could explain the biggest stars and the smallest particles, keep him safe, grow vegetables from mere dirt and water, play tag (almost) endlessly, and listen to his many theories of what the video game character Kirby could eat.
So of course I could be a fairy. Or for that matter, a mermaid. Of course.
And what if he’s right? What if my mom is a mermaid, but I didn’t really know what that meant? What if I am too – and always was? What if?

Being a Good Parent Means Relying on Community

Being a Good Parent Means Relying on Community; photo of a white boy looking at a museum display labeled "The A B Cs of Abolitionists"

“Hey, where are you going?” my friend Randi called after my younger son. My kid was wandering away without telling anyone, as he has a tendency to do.

My head jerked that way, suddenly realizing that she was the only one who had eyes on him. I had been absorbed in conversation with her husband, Drew, one of my oldest friends and someone I hadn’t seen in person in years.

Shame and fear flooded my brain. What if she hadn’t been watching? How far would he have gotten? We were at the National Museum of American History, so it would have been easy for him to just disappear. I should have seen him before she did! Wouldn’t have a good mom noticed that earlier?

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The Blurred Clarity of Memory

Photo of two children and a woman in hiking clothes hiking down a trail covered in leaves; text: The Blurred Clarity of Memory

“First we took the orange trail and then red and we came down the green,” my older son said from the backseat of the car. I stared at the phone in my hand, where I had pulled up a map of hiking trails. No, he couldn’t have remembered it that clearly. We hiked it two years ago. This is a kid who forgets things minutes after I say them. I looked again. He was right – that was exactly what we had done.

“Yeah, I think you’re right,” I said.

Memory makes things strange.

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On Flowers and Children and Unplanned Beauty

Photo of a bumblebee on a marigold flower; On Flowers and Children and Unexpected Beauty

A small brown haired head with flecks of blond leans down. My son’s nose is almost touching a bright orange flower, its torn pedals sprouting from a huge green stem. In the middle of the flower, there’s a fuzzy yellow and black bumblebee butt sticking out. It has its whole face immersed in the flower, guzzling down nectar. My son watches it in wonder, occasionally speaking to it.

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Not Letting Our Childhood Burdens Become Our Kids’ Burdens

Photo of a white woman taking a selfie of herself in a mirror that says "There is no foot too small that it cannot leave an imprint" Text: "Not Letting Our Childhood Burdens Become Our Kids' Burdens"

“Why do all of these people already have friends?” I thought to myself looking around the elementary school cafeteria during parents night for kindergarten. Clumps of parents sat at long tables, chatting away. Even my anti-social husband had wandered off to talk to someone he knew from preschool. I stifled the urge to get out my phone and stare urgently at the screen. Instead, I read the multi-colored handouts with an intense stare. Being there brought back so many experiences that color my perspective on my kids today.

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Reading Down the Generations

An old, battered (and bunny-chewed) copy of Alice in Wonderland with Alice standing with her hands clasped behind her, the White Rabbit, the Cheshire Cat, the Duchess, and the Mad Hatter; Text: Reading Down the Generations

Peering at the front inside cover of the battered book, I noticed something for the first time. I had opened the copy of Alice in Wonderland to show my younger son that it had once been my book – that it said “Shannon Brescher” in the front.

But my name wasn’t the first one in the book. No, elementary school-me had crossed out someone else’s name and written mine below it. I peered at it to try to make it out. Above my name, visible underneath the black marker line, it read: “Patty Brescher.” My aunt.

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