parents

Why I was reluctant to give up my 'single mother' title.

 

 

 

 

 

 

By WENDY FONTAINE

For the past four years, I have called myself a single mother. I certainly am one, which is to say that I have full custody of my daughter and I’m not married. When Angie was two years old, her father fell in love with another woman and asked me for a divorce. Angie and I moved out of our family home and into an apartment, where we shared a bed, baked cookies in our pajamas, and worked hard to find our way back to normalcy.

On my own, with a toddler to care for, I suddenly found myself doing everything. I got one job, then two, and put Angie in daycare. I put up shelves and paid bills, cleaned the house and kissed the boo-boos. I juggled doctor appointments, birthday parties, work deadlines, and meal planning. I went on food stamps for a while, to make ends meet, and sold my wedding ring to buy Christmas gifts for my daughter. It was exhausting, but it was all part of the persona I had created to protect the two of us: I was superhuman, invincible, bulletproof.

Over the years, I’ve clung to this label of “single mother.” It has been my cape, my shield, the way I defend myself against anything or anyone who might hurt me. I’ve stamped it on my Facebook page, used it on my Twitter account, and declared it in conversations with friends and strangers. I’m a single mom, I said. I can stretch, endure, and breathe fire. You can’t touch me.

The title no longer fits, exactly. I’m still a mother, yes. I’m still unmarried, yes. But I have a partner now, a boyfriend who is dependable and loving. He takes care of Angie as much as I do, just in different ways. He gives her freedom, while I give her protection. He helps her fly. I give her a safe place to land. He takes care of me too. When I quit my jobs and went to graduate school, he took Angie to the movies and the aquarium so I could study. When I felt like dropping out, he suggested I give it another semester. And when I graduated with a masters degree, all three of us celebrated with brunch on the beach.

With him around, I can do all the things I did before, plus lots of things I couldn’t. Now I can go to yoga class on Saturday mornings. I can meet my friends for a drink or vanish into my bedroom for an hour to read a book. I can share my bad dream, take a nap, ride in the passenger seat. I can ask for help, and when I do, there’s someone there, someone I can lean on without the whole universe toppling over.

This is not to detract from the hard work that single parents do everyday. I know how difficult that job really is. It’s intense and consuming, but also hugely rewarding. If my marital status were to change, some part of me would always be a single mother—fiercely independent and vigilant, watching the horizon for signs of trouble.

As much as I would like to, I can’t save my daughter, or even myself, from danger, pain, or fear. Whatever I decide to call myself, it won’t stop a robber’s bullet or thwart a lover’s betrayal. Angie and I might fancy ourselves bionic, but we are, after all, human. We will hurt and we will fail, but we will always bounce back.

When I was my daughter’s age, I wore the same Wonder Woman suit three years in a row for Halloween. She was my favorite, not just because she was strong and beautiful, but also because she had awesome bracelets and a really cool lasso. I squeezed myself into those blue knickers long after they stopped fitting, until finally my mother donated them to the neighborhood thrift store.

I’ve been with my boyfriend for quite some time now, but I’ve been reluctant to stop referring to myself as a single mother, thinking that shedding the label would diminish my power or downplay what I’ve been through and how hard I’ve worked to get my life back on track. Now I see that nothing, and no one, can take the past away from me. It’s mine. I own it, no matter what I decide to call myself. Wonder Woman was fierce not because she had bracelets or a lasso, but because she believed she was fierce.

Today, Angie is 6 years old. She still considers herself a superhero and dreams about capturing bad guys. Everything Angela isn’t ready to hang up her cape just yet.

And me? I think I’ve finally outgrown that suit.

 

Wendy Fontaine is experiencing separation anxiety from the term ‘single mother.’

Wendy M. Fontaine is a writer, editor, columnist and single mother in Los Angeles. She holds a masters degree in creative writing from Antioch University. A former newspaper reporter, her work has appeared in many newspapers, as well as Brain, Child Magazine, Grace Magazine for Women, and the online literary journal, Apropos. Find her on Facebook here and on Twitter here.

A version of this post was originally published on Role/Reboot and has been republished with full permission. You can view the original here.

What titles would you never give up? Do any of you feel like being a mum (single or otherwise) is the same as being Wonder Woman? 

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Top Comments

guest 11 years ago

Wendy, you are awesome. And have brought a brave and courage fuelled tear to my eye. That is all.


Sonia 12 years ago

I turn into a single mum for 26 days when my husband goes to work offshore. His swings are 26/9 days on and off. I feel I am a single mum for that time with advice and support online or over te phone from my husband. The transition again to partnership happens several times a year when he is on his r&r. I think the perception that the high wages counteract the lack of support I get but this is not true.