My first trip away from my baby taught me I can handle anything
I could handle motherhood—I could handle this.
I love being a mother…and sometimes it swallows me up whole. There is no “but” in my love of motherhood—it is 100% the most incredible thing I’ve ever done and my most favorite job in the world. And it is the hardest work in the world, the most suffocating at times and it can break me down like no other.
Motherhood is all and, which can make it all the harder.
So when my youngest was 14 months—and we had officially ended our breastfeeding journey—and I was offered a press trip to Steamboat Springs, CO to go on a snowmobiling trip with Polaris no less, I jumped at the chance.
It would be my first trip away from both my girls—my first trip away from my youngest ever. It would also be my first time to Steamboat, my first time snowmobiling (or doing any kind of extreme snow activity. It would be a bonafide adventure.
But when I first read the snowmobiling itinerary, a tiny, niggling voice whispered at the back of my brain: I can’t do that. I will be too scared.
I ignored the voice as I packed my bags, kissed my babies goodbye and made my way west. I reveled in the simplest things—the single carry-on suitcase, with room left around my clothes that would normally be stuffed to the gills with blankets, tiny rolled socks tucked between miniature pairs of pants and extra diapers. I basked in the decadence of a light handbag, packed with only my own things instead of extra snacks and sippy cups and extra diapers (always extra diapers). I delighted in the breezy way I moved through the airport, the only thing disturbing my peace was the thought that I must be forgetting something. I can’t possibly be holding enough things right now.
I love motherhood, and it is a constant weight in my life. Sometimes born lightly, tiring me to a deep satisfaction. But sometimes a heavier burden, threatening to pull me under. In either case, there is always so much to hold and carry.
Ironically, I missed my girls already. Found myself sneaking peeks at photos on my phone, wondering when the next time they would call or send me a Marco Polo. After all, I love being a mother.
But there were also near constant reminders of how much I had needed a break. When my flights were boarded and then delayed, I breathed a sigh of relief that they weren’t here, imagining my anxiety levels rising at the thought of entertaining a whiny toddler and a super mobile baby for any extra time in this tiny space. I watched two movies (one of which I had wanted to see for over a year). I read one and a half books. (For context, in the last year since my second daughter was born, I had probably read…zero.) Enjoying these things I rarely had time for anymore felt like catching up with old friends, people who knew me way back when.
Later, after settling into my room (with my own bed! And my own bathroom! And no one asking me to wipe their butt in it!), I met my fellow travelers at the house next door for dinner. I ate appetizers without anyone asking me for a bite. I drank a glass of wine and sat in a chair for 20 minutes before I stood up—of my own volition—to sit at the dinner table. No one commented that the food looked “yucky!” or asked how many bites they had to take to get dessert.
Irony alive and well, it was me who kept bringing my girls back to the table, telling stories of the funny things my 4-year-old says. The way my 1-year-old squishes her face and snorts to look “tough.”
I love motherhood, and it is the constant thread of my life. It affects everything, tints everything, changes everything—and I wouldn’t change that for the world.
The next morning, I woke before the sun for the excursion, drank a cup of coffee (that I finished before it got cold, thank you very much), and boarded a shuttle to the meeting site. I again had to shake that feeling that I was forgetting something, but there was relief in knowing that anything forgotten was mine alone. I could deal with a forgotten hat (my toddler would throw a tantrum). I could shake off a cold wind on my neck (my baby would scream, and we would have to go home).
The other riders and me shivered slightly in our snowsuits while the guides demonstrated the ignition and the kill switch and the proper way to whap whap whap the gas. They told us we would start on trails and then go off the trail if we were comfortable. The old voice resurrected in my brain and whispered again: I can’t do that. I will be too scared.
After our (incredibly short, to me) training, the guides broke us into groups of five and started to lead us out of the lot where we had met onto the trail. Just like that—here’s how to turn it on and away we go!
I should have felt more nervous, but strangely, motherhood had prepared me for steep learning curves. Just four years ago, hadn’t I been wheeled to the doors of the hospital, tiny baby wrapped in my arms, sent home and told to have at it?
I could handle motherhood—I could handle this.
I was pleasantly surprised to find snowmobiling was much easier than I thought. Flying down the trail, I felt myself relaxing into the ride, able to take in the stunning surroundings and hearing only the roar of my motor and the whistle of the wind under my helmet. I felt brave and strong and exciting—things that maybe I had forgotten I could be. That I already was.
At lunch, perched on the edge of an alcove of trees and overlooking a snow covered meadow, our guides told us we could “play around” as soon as we were done eating. They pointed to the wide open stretch below us, off-trail and unmarked by anything. I stared at the expanse of white and mountain and heard the voice say again (though perhaps a bit quieter): I can’t do that. I will be too scared.
I lingered by the fire a few minutes after I finished eating, my eyes not leaving that meadow. I couldn’t do it. But then…what if I could? I pushed myself up from the drift, grabbed my helmet and hopped on my sled.
“I can just go?” I asked one of the guides.
He grinned at me. “Just go!”
In seconds, I was flying down the hill, the waist-deep powder cascading behind me. I crested a hill and paused for a second. It was so cold, the mountains were so beautiful and I was so alone. More alone than I had felt in years. I took a long, deep breath, realizing for the first time how much I had really needed this.
Once you are a mother, you are a mother forever. It’s as sure as your bones—and as wholly part of you. You can’t lose the part of you that is a mother. But you can lose the rest.
I had thrown myself into motherhood willingly, like so many other endeavors in my life, wanting—needing—to give my children my very best. My all. But somewhere along the way, I had forgotten to reserve a little bit for myself. This trip was a reminder: It was okay to prioritize myself now and then. It was necessary.
I missed my babies, but I felt now how much I missed this part of myself.
When you choose to make your first post-baby vacation an adventure, you pay homage to the woman you were before. The one who did things for the first time, who had a world of opportunity before her. But you honor something else too, something perhaps even better: the woman you are now.
Because, truthfully, I never want to go back to who I was before. It would be disingenuous, and it would devalue all the work I had put in since then. The woman I am now is so much more empathetic, so much stronger, so much more confident—she’s the woman the old me would go to for advice and counsel and to be built up when she needed it.
By choosing an adventure, it was a permanent reminder to me—and to that tiny, doubting voice—that I have no idea what I can’t do. But I knew now that I can do so much more than I ever thought.
As I started to turn back from the meadow to head toward the group, I took a turn too sharply and tipped my sled, wedging it firmly in a deep bank. I was totally fine—the snow was so deep, it was exactly like landing in a fluffy pillow—but I couldn’t right the sled myself. I radioed the guides for help, and one of them came speeding up within minutes. In a second, he had the sled dislodged and I climbed back aboard.
“You good?” he asked. And I grinned.
“Never been better.”