I just threw away my first papaya. I was so proud of myself
for buying it and I felt so exotic even thinking about making a Papaya and
Avocado salad (Giada's Papaya and Avocado Salad) to accompany some basic grilled chicken.
The bagger at HEB certainly seemed impressed when I told her about it in line
Saturday morning (she did ask). But when I cut into that papaya, the aroma was
nauseating. Since it was my first papaya, I figured I’d go ahead and taste it,
since, you know, sometimes smells can be misleading (I’m thinking Roquefort
here). Of course, in the back of my head, I’m hearing the narrator of some
long-ago National Geographic special advising me that “bad smells are nature’s
way of telling animals not to eat poisonous foods.” Too highly evolved for all
that, I cut off a sliver of papaya, tasted it, and immediately spit it out.
Here’s where the Ph.D. comes in—I tried another
bite. Really, did I think it would taste better if I finished peeling it,
scooped out the seeds, then tried again? I guess this is what 10 years of
higher education gets you: the incredible ability to ignore instincts and
common sense and taste that foul-smelling fruit, not once, but twice.
I often find myself wondering if graduate school is
compatible with parenting. Not in the “Can women break through the glass
ceiling of tenure?” way that many valuable books and articles discuss today,
but in the “Do I seriously need to search for peer-reviewed articles to find
out which solid foods to serve my baby first, or what color his poo should be?”
kind of way. In other words, do I overthink everything? People tell you to
follow your gut as a parent, but is my maternal instinct being buried by the
voices of “experts”? Start with grains, start with vegetables, avoid fruits,
eat fruits, puree, don’t puree, feed him, let him feed himself … the list goes
on and on. I teach my students to begin each writing assignment with a clear
understanding of the significance of their argument, the “So what?” question. The thing is, all of this advice doesn’t state the “So what?” but the
implication seems to be that if you serve your child pureed apples instead of
smashed green beans that he or she will be malnourished at best, certainly a
lifetime picky eater, and at worst, will harbor feelings of neglect until his adult
years when a therapist will help him trace his trust issues back to the
parental choice not to let him hold his own spoon.
Here’s what I know. My child loves sweet potatoes. He’ll
happily eat them every night and search for more when the bowl is scraped
clean. He still loves breastmilk and, though he’s reached an age at which he’s
easily distracted, seems to prefer to nurse over any solid food, a fact which
relieves me to no end. I’m going to mash some avocado for him tonight (once I
figure out what will replace the spoiled papaya on tonight’s menu) and we’ll
see how that goes. I’m not going to google anything, nor will I search on
amazon for baby food recipe books, all of which say the same thing: “Mash or
puree cooked food with breastmilk or water until it reaches desired
consistency.” If I take a step back from the expert voices all competing for my
attention and reverence, I think I can hear my instincts telling me what to do.
And if my little guy makes the same face at the avocado that I should have made
when I smelled that rotten fruit, I won’t push the issue. At least not until
tomorrow.
This makes so much sense to me! I'm 3 weeks into being a professor mommy and have not once trusted my "instincts" as everyone says to do. I read at least 4 books in the first 2 days after he was born, and my head was spinning with all the different methods people suggested for sleeping, nursing etc.
ReplyDeleteI wonder too if maybe we should trust our instincts more in our work - both teaching and scholarship. I know sometimes when I'm teaching a new text I will read everything out there on how to teach it, but somehow I always come back to the original questions and exercises I came up with on my own.
I think collaborating with other people's ideas is essential, but there is obviously a good balance to strike. Good luck finding yours Sarah - lets collaborate when we think we've found the balance :-)
You know I am all about collaboration!
ReplyDeleteWeirdly, I find it easier to follow my instincts at work. Maybe because I'm dealing with adults-- well, usually ;-) Or maybe because I've had training to do my job and feel so unprepared to be a parent. Then again, the contradictory parenting info. can be the problem.
I'll let you know when I think I've figured something out. Right now it's read up on the basics and then take it from there myself. (I actually keep forgetting I have parenting books on my shelves.) At this stage in his development, this works best for me. That wasn't the case when he was a newborn, though. Maybe the balance keeps shifting. Great--being flexible. Something I'm so good at!