Perfectly Imperfect

In this Mother’s Day edition of ā€œLife with the Girls,ā€ Constance Costas reflects on how her lack of domesticity eventually (if accidentally) helped her daughter grow to rely on herself.line

When my baby girl said mama for the first time, I looked over my shoulder, wondering if my own mother–the real one–had entered the room.Ā 

Oh, honey, I wanted to ask her. Are you sure we’re ready for that?Ā 

I’d been winging it through our first sleepless months together, getting it wrong as often as I got it right. Like an intern suddenly promoted to CEO, I hadn’t yet earned the title.

I grew into the mother role, though. We all do. And now that my daughter has reached her mid-twenties, I’ll tell you a little secret: An imperfect mother makes a far better teacher than a perfect one. How do I know this? Because my own weaknesses have become my daughter’s strengths.

My children came of age in the ’90s, when the term helicopter parent was coined. I watched, bewildered, as other mothers ran carpool spreadsheets and managed bake sale fundraisers like tech startups. The showoffs turned up 30 minutes early for afternoon pick-up, brought homemade cupcakes to school on birthdays and never missed a field trip.

I did my best, but I was writing for magazines and watching my hours slip through my fingers. From read-aloud classroom visits to library book-shelving duty, the school was constantly masterminding Opportunities to Disappoint Your Children, as I began calling them.

ā€œI watched, bewildered, as other mothers ran carpool spreadsheets and managed bake sale fundraisers like tech startupsā€

Then a funny thing happened in fourth grade. My daughter and I signed up for a field trip to Boston. When she suggested her friend Aubrey stay in our hotel room, I paused.

ā€œWhat’s wrong?ā€ she asked. ā€œYou don’t like Aubrey?ā€

I liked Aubrey fine, but her overzealous mother had left her a little helpless. Through no fault of her own, Aubrey could be…high-maintenance. I backpedaled. How to explain?

ā€œAubrey,ā€ I said finally, ā€œis the kind of child who always needs a Band-Aid. And I am the kind of mother who never has a Band-Aid.ā€

That settled it: Aubrey landed in the teacher’s hotel room and, a few weeks later, as we unpacked in Boston, we heard a knock on our door. It was the teacher with Aubrey in tow, hopping on one foot and holding her shoe.

ā€œDoes anybody here,ā€ the teacher asked, ā€œhave a Band-Aid?ā€

In the coming years, the Aubreys seemed to be everywhere: ā€œThey should never have left home!ā€ My daughter wailed when I met her at the airport after studying abroad in Spain. Her travelmates had been overwhelmed, unable to manage train schedules, currency exchanges or on-time check-ins. I had seen this coming when their mothers scheduled a conference call to pre-book the kids’ weekend excursions. Wasn’t a semester overseas about figuring those things out for yourself?

The next summer, my daughter landed an internship with a think-tank in Colorado. I traveled there for a visit, and when she took me to meet her boss, the woman gushed about how my daughter had jumped in with both feet. ā€œShe’s so capable,ā€ she said.

ā€œOh, well,ā€ I demurred. ā€œNeglect is a powerful teacher.ā€

As soon as the words flew out of my mouth, I realized what I had meant to say: I take no credit; it’s all her. I left the office feeling mortified.

But a few weeks later, my daughter confided that my off-color remark had been adopted as the unofficial mantra of her working-mother colleagues. ā€œThat’s right, sweetie,ā€ she’d hear them whisper into the phone, coaching a child at home. ā€œFifteen seconds on the microwave, then push start.ā€ They’d hang up, exhale, and whisper neglect-is-a-powerful-teacher to shake the guilt of not being home to heat up the Hot Pocket themselves.

My daughter now has a media job that looks a lot like mine. We talk shop on walks together, untangling knotty work questions. At 26, she faces ageism in her job; at 58, I face it too, from the other end. We were chatting about this recently when it hit me: Here we were, in 2021, the first mother-daughter pair in my family’s history who could discuss work together. How was this possible?

ā€œWhen I left for my first job my mother shrugged and said, ā€˜Good luck. You’re on your own’ā€

My whipsmart mother raised three children and volunteered because that’s what women did back then. Had she been born later, she might have gone to medical school or run a corporation. Instead, when I left for my first job in New York she shrugged and said, ā€œGood luck. You’re on your own.ā€ While my brother could draw on a deep bench of male mentors, I’d had no one before me to light the path. I’ve never taken sexism personally, but there it was, suddenly clear as day.

I have no doubt that my daughter will leap past me, succeeding in ways I could never imagine. But what I like best is her kindness; her work ethic mixed with her silly sense of fun. I’d work for her in a heartbeat. She’s a highly organized time-manager while I remain aspirational in that area. I may have pulled up late for carpool once (okay, twice) but, now that she’s grown, she appreciates my weaknesses.

ā€œI learned to figure it out, Mom,ā€ she told me the other day, ā€œbecause I knew you might not.ā€

I’m almost certain she means this as a compliment. Ā And I accept it with pleasure.

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Author: Constance Costas