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Meridian Magazine : : Home

 

The Race I Run
By Tiffany Lewis

It is said that our hunter-gatherer ancestors exerted daily energy equivalent to that of running a marathon.  Times have changed — I only pull out the club and beat my chest on rare occasions — but when that first baby arrived, without even knowing it I registered for the daily Mommy Marathon.

It begins with the sound of the gun (or my son yelling from his crib).  I strap on my shoes, crouch down for a prayer, and I’m off.

Pant, breathe, pant, breathe.  It doesn’t matter if I pull a muscle, have double ear infections or was up all night with the kids.  I just put one foot in front of the other and go, go, go.

It’s cornflakes and soggy morning diapers and exercises and showers.  It’s bed-making and laundry and breakfast dishes and scriptures and prayer, then morning activities.  Pant, breathe, pant, breathe.  Miles to go before I sleep.  Grocery shopping; Costco shopping; Target shopping.  Doing it all with sturdy shoes and stashes of fruit snacks for the kids.

Then nap time for the younger kids and “quality time” with the older kids.  Cleanup from the morning: bills, papers, folding laundry.

My fingers break out in a rash from the baby wipes.  I bang my shin making the bed and burn my fingers in the spaghetti sauce.  Ice the pain, then go, go, go.

Wash the car.  Vacuum the car.  Return phone calls while sweeping while stirring while spanking.  Recycle the newspapers, flatten the milk cartons, throw away the molding sour cream.

Change the soggy afternoon diapers.  Nurse the baby while reciting “Goodnight Moon” over my shoulder while running after the toddler who grabbed the steak knife.

Play trains.  Play monster.  Play hide-and-go-seek.  Play restaurant.  Sing “The Wheels on the Bus.”  Dance to the Mickey Mouse Club theme song.

Mid afternoon I sneak in my glucose break — fudgesicles in the freezer, or leftover banana bread.

There are glorious moments of momentum when I feel like I could keep this pace forever: pop out a kid every two years, five loads of laundry per day, three meals to make and nine people to visit teach.  I could do Costco blindfolded and pregnant, dragging ten kids suffering from no-nap-syndrome who also skipped breakfast.  Bring it on.

And there are moments when I hit The Wall, when the idea of plugging in the vacuum or dealing with one more toilet accident is just more than I can bear.

But I’ve done this long enough to know that if I, the mother, lag for even a minute, the entire race comes to a screeching (or screaming) halt.  Diapers collect in the corners, the kid-to-clothing ratio seems to decrease, children go to church in their pajamas, and it’s cereal morning, noon and night.  I love my husband, but we moms just run at a different pace from our spouses.

A marathon is simply putting meaning into one hundred thousand steps.  The challenge of the daily marathon is putting meaning into one hundred thousand scattered seconds.  I make a day out of three meals, running errands, dropping off kids, and cleaning.  A marathon runner fights gravity.  I battle monotony and entropy.

The kids throw dirt.  I sweep it up.  They smear peanut butter on the walls.  I wipe it up.  They destroy.  I reconstruct.  Nine-minute miles.  Keep the pace.  In the waning hours I survey canned corn, ground beef, diced tomatoes and elbow macaroni, and somehow turn it into a meal.

That final stretch is always the killer: Dinner, bath, bedtime, cleanup, collapse at the finish line.  I look back at the miles I’ve run, littered with crusted milk, wet towels, sandy shoes, and three peaceful boys asleep in their beds.  I crawl into bed, knowing that I’ll wake up tomorrow and do it again.

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About the Author:

Photo: Tiffany Lewis

Tiffany Lewis is the exhausted and proud mother of three active boys, Jackson (3), Addison (2), and Preston (5 months). They live in Miami Beach, Florida, where her husband, Seth, works for The Miami Herald.

Tiffany grew up all over the country, most recently in Austin, Texas, and received a bachelor’s degree in journalism from BYU. She and her husband fell in love over the newsroom copy machine. They spent a glorious summer doing internships in Washington, D.C. After graduating, they moved to Miami, the last place on earth they thought they would ever live. They have survived two hurricanes.

Tiffany spends the majority of her time hopping between the beach, the park, the library, and the grocery store. Her stroller has already exceeded the 200,000-mile marker. When the boys are asleep, she writes, reads, or does freelance editing for Mapletree Publishing. Sometimes she cleans.

One of the things that has helped Tiffany survive the rigors of motherhood is the knowledge that there are millions of other mothers living a parallel existence: with sleepless nights, piles of diapers, toilet paper trails, temper tantrums and, of course, the joy of knowing you’re doing the most important thing in the world. Happy mothering!

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