Photo by: John Morgan

The Right Now Way

by Karen Maezen Miller
Photo by: John Morgan

Parenthood is one of the hardest jobs in the world, and there is no one harder on you than yourself. To be fair, we parents are nudged along in fear and self-doubt by experts who don’t mind telling us that the way we feed, hold, handle, speak to, and sleep with our kids is dangerous, particularly to their future test scores. No wonder we wake with a groan each morning as if we’d spent all night being kicked in the ribs by a little monster.

It’s not just the experts who dole out the body blows. We do it to each other. Venture into a park or playgroup and you’re bombarded by advocates for dueling parenting styles. We hurt ourselves, too, every time we fix on one way as the right way. One blind curve and the right way turns into the wrong way in a hurry. Perhaps we feel so inadequate because parenthood shows us the limits of what anyone can know, particularly about the future.

As parents, we think our job is to create an ideal outcome — a happier child, a smarter child, a more successful child. It’s a silly notion, isn’t it? That we are supposed to shape something presidential out of what looks like seven pounds of putty in our palm. The pressure alone makes us feel as though we’re doomed to fail. But this focus on the future outcome blinds us to the marvel that already appears before us. It’s not putty. Babies aren’t blobs. Do we ever notice, and trust, the wonder of life happening continually and miraculously by itself?

One day — it seems like only yesterday — my baby rolled over. Sat up. Crawled. Walked. Spoke. Ate with a spoon. A fork. Rode a trike. A two-wheeler. Read. Wrote. Made up a song. Climbed a tree. Boarded a bus. Turned a cartwheel. None of it was hard for me, to tell you the truth. What makes my life as a parent so hard is my persistent negative judgments about myself and my child, compared to my expectations.

We expect it to be the way we want it to be; and the way we want it to be is the way we call right. There is no right way to parent; there is only a right-now way.

Like it or not, this is the offering that children give us, over and over: right now. Children always show us the present moment unfolding. Our full attention is the only thing of value we can give them in return. Good thing too, because it is the only thing that makes a lasting difference.

We spend a good bit of our lives as parents thinking it will get easier some other day: when the baby is out of diapers, then out from underfoot, then out of our hair, and then finally out of the house. It is always going to be easier some other day. But we never have to wait that long. It gets easier as soon as you get out of your judging mind — the mind that picks and chooses one way as best and regards all other ways as less.

And what a happy day that is! When we liberate ourselves from the idea of parenting success, we liberate our children from failure, all without accomplishing a single thing. Freedom is instantaneous the moment we accept the way things are right now.

When we focus on what is in front of us, what is truly facing us in a situation, we know what to do and not do. I’m never confused when I see my daughter reach up to touch the open flame on the stovetop, only when I try to deduce some future impact on her performance. Since in the thinking about what to do we become terribly confused, I tell parents to stop thinking about all the worrisome what-ifs and just stay present to what is. Then, if we overreact, we can always say we’re sorry. There is no right way to parent, but saying we’re sorry is something we can all get good at.

“Mommy, I feel sorry for God,” my daughter said not long ago, “because he has to create a million billion fingerprints!” And here I am complaining about making another bowl of macaroni and cheese. As far as I’m concerned, she can call the source of creation whatever she likes; I’m just glad she’s taken the responsibility for fabricating the human race out of my hands. I can make a mess out of the simplest things.

Karen Maezen Miller is the author of Hand Wash Cold: Care Instructions for an Ordinary Life and Momma Zen. She is a Zen Buddhist priest and meditation teacher at the Hazy Moon Zen Center in Los Angeles, California. Visit her online. This piece is excerpted from the book Hand Wash Cold: Care Instructions for an Ordinary Life© 2010 by Karen Maezen Miller. Printed with permission of New World Library, Novato, CA.

Editor’s Note Share your thoughts in the Comments below, and you may win a free copy of Hand Wash Cold.

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47 Comments

I have been continually surprised at my ability to (1) live in the moment with my 18-month-old daughter since she's been born, and (2) not try to edit her, but rather to let her be and explore. I'm not perfect, and I'm not always fully present and available to her the way I want to be, and Karen's points are wonderful, gentle reminders. I'm looking forward to reading the rest of the book.

as always, thank you.

The only promise is "now" and Karen reminds us well.

I love the idea of the 'right way NOW'. So so simple and so difficult to remember sometimes.

I am setting an intention for tomorrow. I plan to just be with my son right where he is. I will not be distracted by to-do's or technology. I have set aside tomorrow for this purpose. The trick is how to do it on a regular day. As a "newbie" parent my biggest challenge has been focus. In the moment, perhaps my child can be my guide. Thanks for your words.

Thank you for this! I'm sharing this on facebook....I have been the most critical judge of myself and am ready to exit the courtroom. Would love to read your book as I bet it is a refreshing leap towards parental sanity.

what a terrific essay. thank you so much for sharing... it is amazing how simple wisdom can be, those "d'uh" moments. i've been doing a lot of "right here, right now" reminders. this was great to read.

wonderful. thank you for your lovely words!

reading your first book seriously changed the way i look at everything...from parenting to painting the shelves. i can't get enough of your take on the world, and i am eager to read your newest book! winning it would be AWESOME, since a brand-new book just isn't in the budget right now. ;-)

Thank you for this - such a relief and lightness comes when I can remember that my sons are already themselves whole and beautiful - I don't have to DO or MAKE them into anything different. Even more powerful is the reminder that I, their mother, am already whole and beautiful, too. This is much slippery to hold and remember.

As ever, you are the voice of sanity to me. Love, love, and more love to you!

I so agree with the "no right way". I finally figured out a couple of weeks ago that the "right" choice isn't always the most loving choice. That really shifted my world around in a good way. Thanks for sharing your perspective on this and for the opportunity to win a copy of your book.

I once thought every thing I said and did would make a permanent impression on my fragile little baby. Well.... she taught me different. "Nope" on green beans. Red clothes get taken off. Pink ones are okay. Thank goodness she had no trouble telling me what she liked and didn't like. Sure, we had a few "discussions", but it was so much easier with a place to start from. As she got older, I realized that giving her a say in things was helping her learn to think for herself...

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As I read this, I could feel the weights fall off of my spirit (the ones that I put there--I'll admit it!). I noticed (as I read) my son's little voice downstairs as he talks his way through the lesson he is giving on play dough. Thank you for reminding me to just pay attention right now. That's all there really is to *do*. The rest of the magic lies in the *being*, I guess...

Right now, my 5-year old daughter and I are watching a cartoon version of Charlotte's Web together and eating the last of the Easter "Smarties" candies. Her little brother is sleeping peacefully in his room and her daddy is taking his evening walk. Right now, we are laughing at the dancing chickens! Right now, my neighbors are celebrating the return of their 27-year old daughter from Haiti where she went to help build homes for earthquake victims. Right now is a blessing...

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