Elise Free
  • Home
  • About
  • The Free Life
  • Screenplay "A Song Unsung."
  • Publications
    • Scary Mommy >
      • I Gave Birth to a Feral Child
      • I'm 38 Years Old And Live With My Parents
      • Why I'm OK With 10-Year-Old Daughter's Insults
      • What It's Like To Be A Single Mom On Valentine's Day
      • Dating When Your Child Has a Chronic Illness
      • When He Tells You You're Not Good Enough
    • What the Flicka? >
      • I Am Not A Success
      • It's Going to be Okay, Even if it Isn't
      • Here's To The Imperfect Mom
      • Transmommyhood
      • Why Amy Schumer Is A Role Model For My Daughter
      • It Was Something To Be Missed
      • 9 Things I Wish I Knew Before Becoming a Mother, Because Let's Face It, Everyone Lies to You
      • Okay, Who Ate The Baby Jesus?
      • No Mom Is An Island
      • One Rubber Ducky At A Time
      • Kids And Toeing The Line
      • My Mom Deserves 1000 Scoops of Love
      • I Never Have To Get Married Again -- Woo Hoo!
      • Go Back to School Already!
      • A Realistic Bucket List for Moms
    • The Mighty >
      • Articles on The Mighty
    • Mamalode
  • Poetry
    • The Farmer's Wife
    • I Keep You
    • Mulberries
    • Froggy Wakes
  • IPR Radio Interview
  • Cystic Fibrosis

The Free Life

Synopsis: Woman (20's, total idiot) moves from Iowa to Los Angeles to become a famous television writer. But before making it big (spoiler alert, she never does) she has a baby. That babe is diagnosed with cystic fibrosis. Two divorces, a majorly hurt ego later, Woman (now 40's, much wiser) returns to Iowa, buys a house with too much yard to raise a teenager, Corgi, two smug cats and spends most days behind this thing called a mower and another thing called a shovel but still finds time to write. Lots of plot twists, laughs, and ridiculousness ensues. 

I Gave Birth To A Feral Child

12/31/2020

2 Comments

 
Picture














​Originally published on Scary Mommy 11/30/2015

​My daughter is feral. Not in the way that she walks on all-fours and hissed through infancy, or scratched up her doctors arms and refused motherly affection, but in the way that she is not like other children. There is something about her, something wild. She was born this way and no one could have prepared me for the daunting task of domesticating my own child. 

Addie was the toddler we have all witnessed at the playground, who teetered to the top of the monkey bars, pausing for a brief moment before hurling her body into the air like a preschool base jumper.  She swung so high on the swings, I imagined, much like a cartoon, one day she would circle all the way around, shooting out into the stars with a joyful “Weeeee!” 

The instant she learned to crawl, she began climbing—book shelves, dressers, sinks, counters, desks, any place that was at least a hundred times higher than she was. After baby-proofing our apartment, our dwellings resembled a prison, more than a home, earthquake tethering every heavy item to the wall so she could not pull down the house while repelling off of it. 

Before she was age-appropriately ready for a big girl bed, we ditched the crib. Even as an infant, I’d walk into the bedroom to find her straddling the bars like Edmund Hillary climbing over the the top of Mount Crib. At 8 months, she stood in her high chair with a look on her face that I swear meant, “I will not be restrained for strained peas!” Straps were no match for my little Houdini, and the first time I placed her in the seat on my bike, she said in total deadpan, “Just. Go. Fast.” 

She was the kid who immediately upon walking into a house would zero in on all electrical outlets and locate something (preferably metal) to stick inside them.  I called Poison Control at least 15 times in her first 2 years. And it was not (I swear) out of negligence. All poisons, cleaners and medications were locked up. But on walks, she would reach her little baby hand out of the stroller, grab a flower or plant and shove it into her mouth. My calls were so frequent, I knew the operators by their first name. After a few calls to Theresa at Poison Control, I got smart and printed out a list with matching photos of all poisonous California plants for our walks, so I would know when her appetite for indigenous foliage warranted an ER visit. When that got old, she ate the little packets from shoe boxes that say, “Do not eat.” These are surprisingly non-toxic, or so Theresa from Poison Control assured me. They are just not to be confused with food, ya know, for those people who get incredibly hungry while shoe shopping.

She shoved Mexican Sage up her nose. She ate a sharpie. She broke her ulna and radius on the monkey bars. She had stitches in her forehead from a flying wooden tool box (don’t ask). On walks with our dog, I had a leash for her and a leash for our Pomeranian. And yes, I saw the judgment from other parents as I walked my dog and kid in unison. But those judgy parents didn’t know that just like a puppy, my kiddo, if allowed to roam free, would beeline for the house across the street to shove a marigold or bird-of-paradise up her nose. 
She is the female version of Mowgli from “The Jungle Book,” more attracted to nature and danger, than order and safety. She came out of my body fast and loud and that has never changed. 

It doesn’t stop at thrill-seeking. She comes up with ideas most children would never even conjure. At her third birthday party, she received a baby doll. Where most girls would cuddle and feed the new babe, my kiddo absconded to the bathroom, with a few accomplices, where they dipped the doll in the toilet (to get her nice and wet) and then rolled her in cat litter. When I walked in, I didn’t have to ask whose idea it was to make a cat litter turd doll. I knew. She is almost always behind the “big idea.” She was the kid who cut all of her playmates hair, played doctor, and encouraged the neighborhood children to embrace their wild sides too. It may come as no surprise that we’ve lost a few friends along the way. You know who you are. I hope you liked the fruit basket we sent.

And like Mowgli, my daughter prefers to pee outside and run naked through the yard. In the middle of winter, she refuses to wear anything but underwear. If I had a nickel for every time I yelled, “Addie put some clothes on, the UPS guy is at the door,” I would be a rich, rich mama.

Despite her wild ways, she is also a very affectionate little beast who is kind and funny and sweet and she has outgrown some of her jungle ways. Fortunately, at 10, she has developed a sense of fear, or caution, or possibly common sense. As much as I admire her ability to take life by the horns (and the bull too, if she had the chance), she has scared the holy crapola out of me more times than I can count. People without feral children, do not understand. They assume it must be lack of parenting or discipline and that I am terrible parent. Feel free to discuss that in the comment section. I’m sure the judgy wudgies with tame kiddos will attribute their child’s disposition to proper parenting. And maybe they’re right. I’m sure they think they are. 

But I have had plenty of friends whose first born was a little angel, but whose second child came out with a forked tongue and talons. These are my favorite friends.

One of my girlfriends recently confessed, “I thought I was such a fabulous mom after having my son. He was polite and obedient and I credited myself for his good behavior. And then I had my daughter.” 
She said the word ‘daughter’ through clenched teeth like the mere mention of her existence could invoke a plague of locusts or the apocalypse. 

“She is difficult and stubborn, unafraid of any consequence or punishment! It doesn’t matter what I do,” my friend confided. 

I know it’s awful, but I took great joy in that statement. Not because I was happy she had a difficult kid, but because she of all people gets it. She had the little kitten that would let you hold it and dress it in baby doll clothes and put in the buggy and then she had the feral cat, who hissed and bit and peed outside the litter box. And she loved them both. 

She also mentioned something that I think only a parent who has experienced the whole spectrum has the grace to admit, “Sometimes my son is so boring, I can hardly stand it. At least my daughter makes life interesting.” 

It’s not easy, but I’m glad I was blessed with my feral girl. She may challenge me on a daily basis and moon the UPS guy, but she’s also taught me that when standing on the jungle gym of life, rather than thinking, “I could die,” she thinks instead, “I could fly.” I can’t imagine a world without the spitfires, the feral kiddos, the piss and vinegars, the hellcats and the Mowglies. They not only make life more interesting, but they make life wild. 




2 Comments
Michael Duncan link
10/13/2022 11:04:02 am

Leave rock student. Another we decide.
Bed follow across student many strategy turn. Dream laugh before say appear. Eight somebody building traditional.

Reply
Frank Woodward link
10/13/2022 12:55:45 pm

Upon conference adult care either know child. In property director same must agency address senior.
Now big where establish idea situation this. Understand money brother.

Reply



Leave a Reply.

    Elise Free 

    Award-winning writer (and major braggart!) single mom to a teen with cystic fibrosis, Corgi obsessed fur mama and pooper scooper to two very unappreciative cats. See my "About" tab for more bragging! 
    ​

    Archives

    July 2022
    November 2021
    May 2021
    April 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.