Published in The Fauquier Times-Democrat, Weekend Edition on Friday, May 11, 2012
Hopefully you did not think to yourself that the octopus,
being an invertebrate, has no backbone, and therefore the analogy shows your mother
to be some sort of soft and spineless individual. Never forget that the octopus has a hard beak
for dealing with prey (and possibly rude children like you), and is capable of
injecting poison. Rather, you should
realize that the soft-bodied cephalopod is consummately flexible. This means you can keep tossing things onto
its to-do list, and somehow, your trusty octopus, will juggle it in. Like many modern women, the octopus is able
to get into and out of tight spaces, with some exceptions made for parallel
parking SUVs in Old Town.
The octopus, like your mother, is highly intelligent. In laboratories, it (the octopus, not your
mom) can find its way in mazes, (think of driving and directions) and can
unscrew jars to get to a snack. While the
advent of the GPS seems to have suppressed my intuitive sense of direction on
the road, I can still find, and get to, the snacks.
The octopus can be playful and changes colors to indicate its
mood. The octopus is a master of
camouflage, adapting itself to not only the coloring of its surroundings, but
also to patterns and movements of other creatures. In other words, the octopus can figure out
how to get along in differing environs.
Also, the octopus tends to fortify and decorate its lair with shells.
The octopus can jet around quite fast. Have you seen the speed at which your mother
can/could move when expecting company?
How about when behind the wheel?
One of those arms is attending to the steering while another is wiping
up a stain on the seat beside it. A third arm is sending a snack to the
backseat, while the fourth arm has just confiscated the toy is being fought
over. Arm five is adeptly handling the
cell phone, while arm six is adjusting the music in the car to suit everyone’s
taste, except the mother, because she is just used to making sacrifices like
that. Arm seven is able to wield a
hairbrush and makeup for a quick touchup before arrival and arm eight of
course, is suctioned around that omnipresent coffee-cup.
You’re thinking this image is ridiculous because nobody’s
listening to the radio anymore; the kids are listening to music individually or
watching a DVD back there. Or maybe
you’re wondering why the hairless octopus needs a hairbrush when just the lipstick
will do. Or maybe you know that the
octopus is deaf. And that’s not due to
the noisy children. Another breakdown in
the analogy: the real octopus is a solitary creature. I haven’t known many women who were like
that. Or maybe I don’t know them because
they are solitary.
I started thinking of the octopus several years ago, when we
got a book called Nico’s Octopus by Caroline Pitcher. (http://www.amazon.com/Nicos-Octopus-Caroline-Pitcher/dp/1566564832.)
It’s a beautifully illustrated, touching
story of a little boy (Nico) who finds an octopus and keeps it for a pet. Nico learns much about the octopus, but the
most heartrending is in her transformation to motherhood.
The mother octopus lays around two hundred-thousand eggs and
hangs strings of them from the ceiling of her lair. She guards and fans these eggs to keep them
oxygenated. For the entire month or two,
she does not hunt and does not eat.
Shortly after the babies emerge, the mother dies of starvation. In humans, the decline is not as rapid,
thankfully.
Sunday is Mother’s Day, and if you have the fortune of
having your mother around, show her a little love and appreciation, no matter
your age. I’m sure you think you are
that perfect offspring, one whose very existence makes motherhood
meaningful. Don’t flatter yourself. Get her a few flowers – handpicked ones, even
little wildflowers, are fine.
You might be cute and you might be sweet, but you should
realize that birthing you probably involved some level of pain. Even if you were adopted, and have no contact
with your birth mother, your adoptive mother probably endured pain too, though
it might have been more emotional or bureaucratic than physical in nature. The pain associated with acquiring you, in
whatever manner, would have rapidly paled in comparison to the pain that arose
from your maintenance and upkeep. And
look at yourself now. You have been
nurtured to a point where you are a decent and caring person who is intelligent
enough to read this column. Get her a
card or make one. That would validate
the decent and caring part of my theory about you.
When I think of mothers, I think of the octopus. On so many levels, mothers have to be like
the amazing octopus. You might think
that’s because the octopus has eight arms, and so often, mothers seem to need them
all to juggle the demands of the brood. If
an arm is lost, it can grow back later.
I view this as an analogy for women who make sacrifices for their young. For some, it might be their careers. For others, it might be their figures. For a sad few of us, it is both.
Make sure you thank your octopus this weekend.
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