Faith, Family, & Focaccia

A faith and culture Mommy blog, because real life gets all mixed together like that.


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Encountering My Privilege

Today brought me an unexpected encounter with my own privilege that has left me floundering for an adequate response.

The day started out normally enough. I woke up a bit late because of yet another epic battle with the Gigglemonster about going to bed and staying asleep in his own bed all night (we are into week two of this new phase and it is leaving Tyler and I both exhausted, frustrated, and completely at a loss for how to master this new emergence of the monster side of our son’s personality). Consequently it was a bit of a rush to get the kids dressed and ready and out the door in time for school. We missed my target departure time by 11 minutes, but we still managed to enter the school just before the fateful hour when they close the main gate and the only entry available is through the shame-shrouded side door.

From there I waved a greeting to a few moms from the Gigglemonster’s class who were all looking very sleek and Milanese on their way to grab un buon caffe, and despite their warm friendly smiles I was painfully aware of my unwashed hair and muddy jogging shoes . Then I was off for my training run. I am signed up to “race” in the Stramilanino in 4 weeks. It is a non-competitive 10 kilometer organized run through the heart of Milan, and it is only a race in the very loosest sense. In my case the goal is simply to run/jog the whole way (completely disregarding time), but the fact that until a few weeks ago I had never in my life run even 5 kilometers in one go means that I am in training. Today the goal was 6.4 kilometers (4 miles for all my American friends) and it was my longest run to-date. I had mapped a circuitous course that took me from the school through some of the quieter neighborhoods of Southeastern Milan and up around Porta Romana to finish up at my own front door (I’ll walk back to school the afternoon where my car is conveniently waiting the drive the kiddos home). The run started out a bit labored with the cold air hitting my morning-fogged lungs, but my route offered lots of sunshine and I soon warmed up. I had my ridiculously over-priced but oh-so-wonderful running jacket (thanks to my wonderful mother-in-law’s thoughtful Christmas shopping), and its convenient sleeve pocket nestled my i-phone so that it could deliver Eye of the Tiger and other suitable exercise inspiration via earphones to my waiting brain.

I managed the run in 46 minutes and didn’t even huff too much on the long hill over the train tracks, and I felt good. I decided to run a few extra meters to the end of the block where I could cross over to one of my all-time favorite spots in Milan – the Forno Ambrosiano bakery. In addition to their focaccia (which truly is ambrosia), the Carnevale and Lenten seasons bring an additional high-calorie indulgence that is worth every extra pound: tortelli vuoti. The closest corollary that I can describe for those who have not tasted this magical confection is donut holes, but those are only a poor shadow of this greasy, sugary goodness. The bakery offers two other varieties (filled with crème custard or nutella), but our family always opts for the vuoti (meaning literally empty – so that there is nothing to compete with the taste of melt-in-your mouth sugar-coated fried batter balls). Understandably, this variety usually runs out first, and thus my decision to head to the bakery first, rather than stopping home for a much-needed shower. As I sprinted down the last 100 meters of sidewalk I passed Madonna, and began an internal dialogue about how to approach my return journey to my front door.

I should explain that Madonna is a woman who begs on the sidewalk  just outside the coffee shop that is 6 doors down from my building. I first got to know her about 4 or 5 months ago, when I asked her name as I dropped a small bill into her cup. In one of my college sociology classes a professor encouraged our class of generally liberal, faith-minded idealists to consider how to make our charity more humanizing. She suggested that one of the worst things about extreme poverty is the way that it cuts you off from social interaction. Those who are reduced to begging for change generally meet two reactions – either averted eyes that pretend not to notice them, or eyes that watch the small donation of loose change into their cup, but never make contact with their own. Professor Alexander didn’t insist that we should give to every panhandler we encountered, but she said that if we do choose to give, we should try to do so in a way that makes a human connection. Make eye contact, ask their name, offer an encouraging word, if time permits offer to buy them a sandwich and sit with them while they eat. Give them more than just loose change – give them the respect they deserve as a fellow child of God.

I’ve always remembered that advice and I try to put it into practice when possible. I certainly don’t give to every panhandler I see, and I can’t claim to have any admirable system or criteria for deciding when I do. Most often it has mostly to do with how easily I can access a suitable denomination of coin and how much of a rush I am in at the time. However, on my way home from school one day in late September or early October I dropped a contribution into Madonna’s cup and made eye contact with a smile. Her responsive smile was enveloping, and she offered an enthusiastic thanks. We had a brief conversation, hampered by the limited Italian that is our only common language (she is from Romania), but eased by the responsiveness of her eyes and smile. It was a moment of humanity, and since then I have felt a certain connection with Madonna. I won’t claim that there are never times I pass without offering her a contribution – when I am balancing shopping bags and whining children or when I am completing or starting a training run and I have no money with me, but I always try to at least make eye contact and smile, and she does the same, usually with a friendly “Ciao, Bella” as well.

Then came the run-up to Christmas and all the business and activity that involves. I had not talked with Madonna for a week or two with all my rushing about, and I had been thinking (with a degree of self-satisfaction I am ashamed to admit) that the next time we met I would ask her what her two children would like for Christmas. I imagined the opportunity to take Princess Imagination on a shopping trip to pick out Christmas gifts for her 6-year-old son and 3-year-old daughter and what a great chance that would be to reinforce the lessons we are trying to teach her about generosity and passing on the blessings we have received. When I stopped one morning to hand Madonna a small bill, however, the interaction did not go as I had planned. She held my hand in both of hers, looked into my eyes with a look of desperation and explained that she had been hoping to see me. Her son had told her that the only thing he wanted for Christmas was to go home to Romania to see their family, but she couldn’t afford the tickets. She had asked everyone she could, but she was still short by a substantial sum. The price was not really that high in the context of my life — perhaps the equivalent of two dinners out for Tyler, myself and the kids — but it was certainly more than I had ever given to someone on the street.

I was taken aback. Suddenly my warm and fuzzy sense of generosity was replaced by discomfort and even fear. Was the story true? Had the relationship I felt we had been building been genuine, or was it just part of a long-con to get a large chunk from the naïve American? I was fairly sure I had been conned by another “young mother” a few months back for a smaller, though not insignificant, sum and I felt wary. My instincts to help clashed with all the stereotypes of class barriers and I did not want to be taken advantage of. I told her I would have to think about it, which I did.

I thought. I anguished. I avoided walking along that stretch of sidewalk for over a week to prevent any need to confront her searching eyes again.  And finally I prayed. I came to the decision that I wanted my life to be more characterized by love than by fear, by compassion than by distrust. It was money we could spare, and ultimately I believed she did have need. Whether the money was really to pay to take her and her children home to Romania or not, it didn’t really matter. I gave her the money a few days before I departed for my astronomically-more-expensive trip home to California (paid for by the company thanks to a generous expatriate contract), and I felt wonderfully at peace. I had no doubt that I had made the right decision, and the tears shining in her eyes as she clasped me in a hug of thanks were a very special Christmas present that confirmed my faith in the value of humanity in all human contacts.

When I returned to Milan in January I did not see Madonna for a few weeks. When I gave her the gift she had said something about perhaps not seeing me again if she could find a way to stay in Romania (or at least, I think that’s what she said – our communication is imperfect). I wondered whether that had happened. Perhaps she had found work, or her husband had, and they had been able to abandon the failed hope of a better life in Milano. I was glad to imagine that possibility for them, but I have to admit that I was also glad of the prospect of not facing her beseeching eyes again.

You see, what Professor Alexander had not talked about when she encouraged us to make human connections in our charity, was how that raises all the complications of human relationships. Issues of trust, and selfishness, and relative power, and judgment arise when you acknowledge someone else’s humanity. In the particular relationship of informal benefactor and recipient these dynamics twist every interaction into a distorted parody of the more natural interactions of our daily lives. We had no natural point of connection other than the passing of money and there were no rules or standards for how to govern that exchange. What was enough? What was too much? What right had I to control how my donations were spent? What expectation could she have that she could ask a large sum from me again? Once our exchange had gone beyond the occasional coins or small bills, there was an increased stake in our relationship, and I was quite happy to avoid that prospect. And so, I wished Madonna the best in Romania.

And then she appeared again. Her smile for me was warm, but I felt something else behind it (whether genuine or born from my anxiety I am not sure). She asked when I would be walking by again. She had made a video for me back in Romania, to thank me for my help and to show me where her family lived. She would bring it if I would tell her when. We made a date a few days out when I knew I would be able to walk down that short stretch of sidewalk, and I left. When that day arrived I felt oddly hesitant. Feet that have newly accustomed themselves to run several miles at least 3 or 4 times a week felt heavy and reluctant to traverse just 50 meters of pavement. But finally I ran out of other tasks that needed to be accomplished and I made the walk. Madonna smiled her same welcoming smile as I approached and chatted in her friendly sing-song voice. At first she did not mention the video. Rather she asked about the kids, and my trip home. She then inquired about my faith. I confirmed that I am a Christian and she said she had a feeling – something about me just shone. She was not a Christian herself, but her mother in law was, and she saw the same love in me. It was a lovely compliment, perhaps one of the most beautiful I have ever received, but it laid another weight on the burden of responsibility I had grown to feel toward her. Now my actions toward her reflected not just on myself, but explicitly on God as well. I hoped even more fervently to be spared any further obligation that might come with her promised video. Perhaps she had forgotten to bring it? Perhaps I would be spared that tangible, physical tether to her need? But as I made to pass on she dug a paper-wrapped DVD out of her bag and handed it to me with a little explanation. The video showed her home and her family in Romania – so that I could see where she had gone. And, if I wanted to do something more to help her, or if I wanted to show it to my friends to see if they would like to help, she would thank me deeply.

I left with a heart of lead. My fears were realized. The first request was being followed by more. I couldn’t just reach down my benevolent hand in a gesture of humanity and then retract it, with no sense of continued obligation. I was now her benefactor, with the potential (at least in her eyes) to identify still other benefactors as well. The video sat unwatched on a shelf in my house for several weeks. The thanks it promised to give felt tainted by the expectation of further gifts, and it made me deeply uncomfortable.

So again, I avoided that stretch of pavement during Madonna’s normal hours, or I loaded myself down with parcels or schedules that did not allow for extended conversation. She occasionally asked if I had watched the video, but I would explain I had not yet had time, and then rush on with my busy life.

Until today. Today, as I walked home from the bakery toting my bag full of tortelli vuoti, I lectured myself with Professor Alexander’s words about humanity, and with the reminder that my life reflects not just on me, but also on my Savior and Lord. So I stopped and talked to Madonna, after handing her today’s contribution. She remarked on my running gear and I explained about my training, telling her I had never done anything like this before, but now I had the time. She was complimentary and enthusiastic, as she always is. I began to feel a bit of the ease return to our interaction. As I made to leave she asked again if I had watched the video, and I smiled my reassurance. “Oggi” I promised – today. After all, if I had the time to train for a 10K run, certainly I had 10 or 15 minutes to watch a video.

So that is what I did. I did my post-run stretching on my very expensive, double-thick yoga mat, laid out in my spacious company-financed apartment and watched her DVD on my big flat-screen TV.

The contrast took my breath in a way that no run ever could. Her home in Romania looks like an abandoned farm building. Only one room has a fully intact roof and walls, and it is furnished with one hutch, one chair, and a large couch. In it are seated her two children, her sister-in-law and her three children, and her mother-in-law. The only other “room” in the house has gaps between the walls and the rafters and thatching that make-up what there is of a roof and contains only large piles of fire wood and a rudimentary kitchen with some cupboards and what I assume to be a wood-burning stove. There is no electricity, no running water, and no plumbing.

She also explains that her children do not go to school because they cannot afford it. Her 6-year-old could presumably go to public school but that requires money for books, for school meals, for clothes, and for other fees. They do not have any money, so he cannot go to school. She does not say it, but it is an unavoidable conclusion that he will be trapped forever in the same poverty he lives in now, without even the basic education with which his father cannot find work.

Madonna’s sweet voice and smile narrate the film, and it is not a hard sell. It is just an account of her life, and her expression of gratitude for what I have done to help her. She and her children smile at her friend’s video camera and wave good-bye with a chorus of “Ciao Bella.”

And I sit in shock. How could I have just stood in front of her in my expensive jogging paraphernalia, holding a bag of confections with no nutritional value, chatting about the luxury of training for a race, and finally condescended to watch her thank you video after a month of procrastinating. I took a minute for self-recrimination before I moved on to the even harder question. What could I do now?

Her need is desperate. There is no doubt of that. She and her husband came to Milan to seek a better life for their children, but without work their poverty here is still desperate, even if their home here might have complete walls or electricity. But what can I do?

I have only two resources. The first is money. But the money they need to really change their lives is far beyond what I can provide. Tyler and I are certainly comfortable, but we don’t have enough excess to permanently support another family.

The other resource is knowledge. But I don’t seem to have the kind of knowledge that can make a difference. I don’t have any way to connect Madonna’s family to more sustainable support. Tyler and I have no connections that can offer her husband employment, and I don’t have the least idea what social supports exist for her in this embattled and bankrupt state. As someone whose career (prior to this move) was in the fields of anti-poverty research and advocacy, that ignorance is humiliating, but difficult to remedy. In any such effort my language barrier combines fatally with the confusion and opacity that characterize the Italian social system, which Italian friends have told me make the system nearly impossible for even native Italians to navigate. The election held in Italy over the last two days has apparently decided almost nothing and the national and European economic pressure is certainly not the context for expansive relief programs for undocumented immigrants, so I doubt any of the parties of coalitions have any solutions in mind for Madonna.

There is nowhere to look for a solution to Madonna’s problems, and I am left sitting on my comfortable couch, in my warm apartment, typing on my laptop computer about how I don’t know what to do with this juxtaposition of privilege and pain. I know there are lots of social arguments out their about personal responsibility — not having children if you can’t support them; taking the legal road to immigration if you want to work; doing whatever it takes to earn an honest living — but I can’t blame her as a way to escape from her pain. She’s a human being. Her children are innocent victims of an impossible situation. They will probably never experience the comfort I take for granted every day. And I don’t know what to do about it.

And so, I have written this entry. It doesn’t have a pithy conclusion where I tie it all up with my moral of the story. It doesn’t chronicle any momentum decision I have made that I think worthy of sharing. All it does is give witness to the injustice of the contrast between my life and Madonna’s. If I can do nothing else, at least I can give witness.


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Laundry Guilt

A day or two ago a friend of mine re-posted one of those “mommy-thoughts” that are always floating around on Facebook. This particular quote went something like this:

Someday all those piles of laundry will be gone,

and you will miss them.

It is a beautiful sentiment – a reminder to treasure the time with your children while you can, and not to feel guilty or overwhelmed if the endless household chores that come along with having children go undone. I expressed a very similar sentiment only a few posts back in reflecting on my children’s demands for what I too often see as “my time” (see post Parenting in the Air         https://faithfamilyandfocaccia.wordpress.com/2012/12/16/parenting-in-the-air/).

When I read this Facebook quote, however, it had the opposite effect on me. It didn’t assuage my guilt for the massive pile of unfolded laundry heaped onto my couch. Rather, I got a guilt-slap right across the face. Guilt because I desperately wanted to fold and put away that laundry and I had been planning to do just that as soon as the kids and I got home. You see, I was scrolling through my Facebook newsfeed on my phone, while I waited outside the kids’ school to pick them up. I’d had a busy day and I had not had the chance to get to the laundry in the morning as I had planned, and the thought of leaving it there for one more night tied my insides into knots.

Because the thing is, at some point the laundry really does need to get done. For one thing, there’s the couch. We need to actually be able to sit on it. I am not complaining about my apartment. At 131 square meters it is really a decent size for an apartment in Milan and I know a number of my friends here will roll their eyes at me if I say I don’t have enough space. But with four people and all their stuff (including the bags full of new Christmas things we just brought back), that space fills up quickly and there is certainly none left over for a dedicated laundry area. In terms of clean surfaces not otherwise occupied with more than their share of clutter there are:

  1. tables (but we need those for eating, and homework, and art activities, and games),
  2. beds (but we need those for sleeping, and rare is the day that clean laundry is taken down from the line, folded, and replaced in the appropriate drawer or wardrobe all within the 16 or 17 hour period that is my waking-working day);
  3. or the couch (the single de facto option).

I usually manage to maintain a sufficient lead on the clean-but-wrinkle-forming pile that it only really covers the chaise lounge side of the couch, leaving two or even three spots free for the comfort of the family bums. This advantage, however, requires me to continually be working to decrease the pile, so that the newly dried clothes can be taken off the line to make room for the next load that is sitting in the washer and will develop mildew if it is not taken out and hung up.

For another thing, there is the fact that the children (from whom the laundry is threatening to steal my time) need clean clothes. Granted, they have a lot of clothes – much more than they really need because Gymboree was having ridiculous sales while we were home at Christmas and I just couldn’t resist. These bursting drawers, however, are of no help during the school week when the children have to wear their school uniforms. These uniforms are not cheap, and they have an impressive capacity to attract and display dirt, paint, food, and all manner of other grime. What is more, there are two separate uniforms for each child – standard and gym, which have to be worn on specific days of the week depending on the scheduled activities of the day. All this means that we do not have an endless supply and they need continually to be washed. When the laundry monster gets an advantage on Mommy the inevitable result is an increase in my morning crabbiness in direct proportion to the amount of time it adds to our usual morning rush for me to locate the needed items of apparel. If one or more of the items are not in their appropriate drawer the general result is a moaned “Oh, fudgesicle” and a frantic effort to root through the pile of unfolded laundry on the infamous couch (or through the stacks of folded laundry waiting in the hamper to be put away) all while trying not to disturb the questionable order of these mounds with my efforts. If this search is unsuccessful, the hunt commences in the dirty clothes bags, usually accompanied by a more colorful expletive muttered under my breath when the item is found, and proves to be in the hamper for a very good reason, leaving me with the question of whether Princess Imagination can still squeeze into the Gigglemonster’s size 4 shirt, or whether I can rely on my notoriously hot-blooded daughter to keep her blazer on over short sleeves instead.

To repeat, the laundry really does need to get done! Ideally this would happen while the kids are at school, and when I was a working mom I couldn’t understand how stay-at-home moms with school-aged children could complain about not having enough time. Now I know. There are so many activities that have to get squeezed into that magic, shrinking time frame “when the kids are at school.” There is the actual transit to and from school (which usually eats up an hour, either because I leave the car at school and walk home or because I have to arrive-super early and sit in the car in order to get a decent parking space), as well as grocery shopping, and Bible study prep, and training for the 10K run in 10 weeks (OK – not strictly a “necessity” but this is the one chance I will probably ever have to do something like this and it is good for my health, so lay off), and the necessary shower after that, and time to connect with friends (which I will also argue as a necessity when living as part of a very inter-dependent ex-pat community in a foreign country where most interactions make me feel like an idiot because of language incompetence). Plus, you have to remember that there is no dryer, so laundry involves much more than transfers from hamper, to washer, to dryer. It also involves all the time to individually hang each item (in a way that won’t create weird marks at the shoulder or hem), wait for them to dry (which can take from 8 hours to 3 days, depending on the weather outside and whether the building has cranked up the thermostat that controls our radiators), and then individually take down each item and move everything to the couch for it  eventual progress to the folding and putting away stages.

So, when I fail to accomplish all these tasks in the 6 short hours the children are at school, I have three options:

  1. Add this to the list of household chores that I have to complete as soon as the children are in bed. Dinner dishes are a pretty inevitable element to this list, as is tidying-up (a.k.a. – pick up all the toy cars, and dolls, and marking pens scattered arbitrarily across our limited floor space, which will make the journey from the bedroom to the kitchen at 4 am when the Gigglemonster howls for more milk a dangerous proposition in sleep-fogged darkness). If we are expecting company the next day or if the cleaning lady is coming (yes, I know, how dare I complain about household chores when my saintly Tina comes for 8 hours every other week to achieve more genuine cleaning that I could achieve in a month!) then the tidying needs to be much more intensive. And the result is that even without folding and stowing laundry I am exhausted, if not comatose, by the time I sit down next to my husband on the couch — or as close to him as is permitted by my piles of laundry and his piles of papers and work folders (which he has pulled out in part because he has work to do and in part because I am clearly too busy for him). That’s not the way to sustain a healthy marriage. He needs my time, and attention, and energy just as much as the kids do. While he is more patient with me than the kids, he doesn’t deserve to always come last, so laundry can’t always happen during “his” time.
  2. Anticipate that I will have one of those all-too-frequent jolts of writer’s inspiration at 1:00am (what is it about 1:00am?!) that is more destructive to sleep that an Italian buon caffe (that is, espresso in American). In which case, I can utilize my unwelcome insomnia to tuck into the laundry pile with all that jittery energy. The problem is, the creative energy that woke me up does not seem to be satisfied by the mundane task of folding clean clothes and putting them into divided hampers to be delivered to the appropriate bedrooms once their occupants have woken at a normal time for human activity. No. That energy is not going to be mollified enough to allow my return to bed for a few hours of much needed slumber until I put pen to paper, or fingers to keyboard, and make a little progress on the pesky novel that is trying so hard to be born.
  3. So, I am left with option #3. That is, to violate the sacred time the universe has given me when my young children actually want my attention, and squander it on the ever replenishing laundry pile.

And yesterday, that is exactly what I did. I took about 30 minutes of the precious two hours between our return from school and zero hour for starting dinner preparations, and I put clean clothes onto hangers in closets and I folded them and put them into drawers.

And do you know what? I still managed to be a good mother. I took a mini-break between each fold to catch the ball the Gigglemonster was throwing to me and gently lob it back. I didn’t go chasing after it when he or I failed to catch it – “Mommy’s doing the laundry, Honey, you need to go get the ball” – but I still played with him, and he was none the worse for a little extra exercise. And I carried on a conversation with Princess Imagination that enabled her imaginative play (right now it is mostly based on the characters from Disney’s Cinderella), although my role was restricted to vocal participation.

And I don’t feel guilty any more. In fact, I’m a little proud of myself for finding a way to get the work done in a positive way in front of them. My children are not being raised in a penthouse environment where meals mysteriously appear on the table or beds miraculously make themselves while the family is out doing other things. My children see the work that goes into maintaining our household. They see that Mommy works hard, just like Daddy does, and when they complain about our busyness they hear that we do it for them. I can’t always be present to them in exactly the way they want me to be, but acts of service are a language of love as well.

And so, I will love them through their laundry.