Gravity: Movie Review for the Grieving Parent

Picture this:  The grandparents are in town, we’ve enjoyed lots of great family time and fall activities with our two boys, and it is suggested that Mary Tyler Dad and I take a few hours for ourselves and go on a date.  No need to twist our arms.  Based on buzz and glowing reviews, we decide to see “Gravity” in 3D on the IMAX screen.  Date nights are few and far between right now, so we were all in.

Gravity

SPOILER ALERT — you’ve been warned.  

After nachos, a soda so large Leslie Knope would disapprove, and twenty minutes of previews, we prepare to enter space.  We expected a film that looked like the previews, full of terror and thrills and beautiful people in space suits.  All we wanted was a few hours of escapism and the opportunity to be transported.

Yeah, not so much.

SPOILER ALERT — no more warnings. 

Shortly into the movie, it is revealed that Sandra Bullock’s character, Dr. Ryan Stone of Lake Zurich, Illinois (a local, yo), is the grieving mother of a four year old daughter who died in a playground accident.  As Mary Tyler Dad put it so effectively in a Facebook status update,

Just saw GRAVITY. Very, very good, recommend it highly. But. Explain to me how a movie set among astronauts in space has a dead four-year-old daughter in it?

When this particular plot device was revealed, and make no mistake, the presence of a dead child is indeed an often used plot device, Mary Tyler Dad and I looked at each other in the darkness in a moment of solidarity. What can you do?  We knew in that instant that this would be a different type of movie experience than for those sitting around us.

What we didn’t know, what I didn’t know, was how profoundly moved I would be by Gravity, how completely and thoroughly Sandra Bullock’s space crisis is the perfect metaphor for grief, and how absolutely director and writer Alfonso Cuarón captured the pain of child loss and intense grief that parents experience.

Leaving the movie, I was dizzy and exhausted, but I also felt understood, seen, and that I had just witnessed truth.  This is a rare thing in filmmaking.  Days later, I feel grateful for the experience.  I want to sit down across from Cuarón, weep in his presence, and let him know how grateful I am to him for capturing something so profound.

I know, I gush, but it’s true.

When we got home, both of our little ones were asleep.  I couldn’t wait to tuck myself into bed, in the dark and quiet of our bedroom, and Google reviews for Gravity.  What a colossal missing of the mark did I find.  Rotten Tomatoes gave Gravity 97%, but most every review focused on the visuals, the experiential aspect of the movie.  A few loved it, but dinged it for lacking plot.  Some thought the presence of a dead child was contrived.

UGH!  Wrong, wrong, wrong.

One particular review really got to me.  This is an excerpt (italics are mine) from Stephen Carty of Flix Capacitor:

A straightforward tale of survival, the film is decidedly slight when it comes to narrative and character, lacking the kind of underlying layers that might compel you to watch it again. In fact, it could be argued that there’s not much more to the story than Bullock drifting from one space-based predicament to the next. Undoubtedly, each and every predicament is so spectacularly realised that many viewers won’t care. They’ll just enjoy being pulled along for the ride. But on a deeper level there isn’t much to think about, with Cuaron offering little in the way of thematic weight or high-minded ideas. There’s nothing inherently wrong with such an approach, of course, but the end result is never particularly involving in an emotional sense, despite the best efforts of both Sandra Bullock and George Clooney.

Methinks, blessedly, Mr. Carty has no personal experience with the death of a child, cause for me, Gravity was an intense experience both visually and emotionally.

For those of you who have seen Gravity, what most sticks with you?

  • My guess is it might be the moments of sheer terror and isolation in the vastness of space, Bullock untethered, drifting, lost, spinning uncontrollably, with no anchor or sense of where she is or if she will survive.  
  • Maybe it was her tenacious capacity to survive, her ability to stay in the game, her strength, her perseverance, her reaching, grasping, clinging to anything she could that would get her where she needed to be.  
  • Perhaps it was those quiet moments in the Russian space station when she resigned herself to her fate, her own death, the shutting down, her embrace of her own ever after, the haven to be found in nothingness, and then the sudden appearance of Clooney, so calm, so reassuring, encouraging her to stay, inviting Bullock to find purpose and stay.  
  • There is the newfound resolve to survive, to remain, to return to that place of before, where you belong, but the only thing to get you back to that place is your gut, and a few manuals and buttons written in a language you don’t understand, and your will.  
  • Or for some it might be the heroic hurtling through space, the impossible trajectory of speed and pressure and reentry, the movement towards the unknown, but wanting it, risking everything for it, choosing hope with every cell in your body.  
  • And then there is land, the grasping of sand and water, blessed terra firma, finding the capacity to stand, to walk, to move forward, not knowing what you would find, but moving just the same, impossibly forward, only forward, triumphant, powerful when stripped of everything, transformed but still here, still standing.  

This, my friends, is grief, in its purest of forms.  The predicament Bullock’s Dr. Stone finds herself in so closely acts as a metaphor for intense grief, that I cannot shake it.  Instead I embrace it, mulling it over, again and again, grateful for the opportunity to watch it, see it, feel it again through the comfort of dark, soda and nachos at my side.  Bullock’s crystalized tears that gently float off the screen were not overkill, they were my tears, the tears of every parent who survives loss.

The grief of child loss is lonely and terrifying and steals the only anchors you think you have.  It unhinges you, flings you into this vast space that few others have seen, let alone walk through.  Child loss is disorienting, isolating, foreign, vast, unending, transformative, impossible.  The parent that survives this grief is not the same parent, not the same person.  You know things about yourself and the world that can never be unknown, ever again.  Your eyes are opened, your heart is exposed, worn outside your body for the rest of your days, your capacities tested in ways you never imagined were possible.  You are different, stronger, knowing, fierce, changed.

Grief in space -- terrifying, untethered, freefalling
Grief in space — terrifying, untethered, freefalling

If any of you, dear readers, wonder what it is like to lose a child, watch Gravity.  Know that while extreme and visually fantastic as it may be, it fully, completely, and truthfully captures the grief of child loss.  And this is not a plot device, this is not a vaguely sexist tool used to make Bullock more vulnerable, cause I will tell you that there is nothing stronger than a mother who survives the loss of a child.  Nothing.

Make no mistake about it, Gravity is a visual and emotional and glorious depiction of grief, which happens to be set in space.  Truth.

Tips for the Newborn Photo Shoot, Or Poop Happens

I curse Anne Geddes.  I do.  You know who Anne Geddes is, right? WHAT?! Well, if you don’t know her name, you certainly know her work. Take a gander:

Photo from annegeddes.com
Photo from annegeddes.com
Photo from annegeddes.com
Photo from annegeddes.com

A lot of folks love this stuff.  Me, not so much.  Hell, she’s sold 18 million books and 13 million calendars, so clearly, I must be in the minority on this one.  I know I’m not supposed to snark about babies, and she’s just a mom doing her mom thing, but dammit, this gal has singlehandedly shaped the landscape of newborn photography.  So even if I label this photo genre as a wee bit excessive, I give mad props to her ability to shape and promote an entire industry.

The Mary Tyler Family entered into that industry ourselves for the very first time a few weeks ago.  Despite never having done formal portraits for Donna or Mary Tyler Son as newborns, when we adopted our newest little one, well, things are a little different this time around.  It seemed like a very nice gift for Mary Tyler Baby’s Birth Mom.  How could we not?

Cue the baby photographer!

We went with the same photographer who shot our adoption family video.  I know, I know, a what?  YES, we shot a family video on the advice of our adoption agency.  Social media has changed things, folks, and adoption is not exempt from that.  Long story short, the amazing woman who gave birth to Mary Tyler Baby found us through a Mary Tyler Mom reader who knew we were looking to adopt.  After she saw our family video, well, she liked us and reached out.  The rest of the story is still being written, but suffice it to say we are some lucky sons of guns over here.

The day of the shoot, the photographer called and asked us to turn the heat up.  Way up.  Way, way up.  Like 88 degrees up (insert fan here).  The reason being that naked babies are more comfortable in warmth.  Honestly, naked anybody is more comfortable in warmth, right?  So up the heat went, cause we are nothing if not obedient photo subjects.

When the photographer arrived, she came prepared with props.  Not mad props, yo, photo props.  This shoot was serious.  There was a super cool bean bag, hats, blankets, etc.  I had no idea.  She looked around our home and decided the best light was in our playroom.  We all tromped downstairs and I was grateful, as it’s always a few degrees cooler there.

Mary Tyler Baby was wrapped in a blanket and before I knew it, we were both in front of the camera.  What the what?  Honest to God, this was supposed to be a newborn thing.  I had no earthly intention of being in front of the camera, as evidenced by my messy pulled back hair, total lack of make-up, and yoga pants.  But our photographer liked what she saw when I was feeding Mary Tyler Baby and before you knew it I was glamour shooting it up with abandon.

Photo by Bum Bul Bee Photo + Films.  Hey!  Did you all ever disbelieve that I am a huge fan of Caillou?  Well, here is photo evidence of said adoration of one tiny, whiny, bald little kid.  Also, remember to dress better than his when you take your own newborn photo shoot.  And pop the damn contacts in, too, why don't you?
Photo by Bum Bul Bee Photo + Films. Hey! Did you all ever know that I am a huge fan of Caillou? Well, here is photo evidence of said adoration of one tiny, whiny, bald little kid. Also, remember to dress better than his when you take your own newborn photo shoot. And pop the damn contacts in, too, why don’t you?

Sigh.  I really didn’t expect that.  So tip number one, if you are getting newborn shots done, you best look photo ready yourself.  At a bare minimum, brush your teeth.

Soon enough, after bottle and in the tropical climate of our playroom, Mary Tyler Baby was ready to rumble, newborn style.  Things went swimmingly for a while.  There was a favored blanket knit by a friend, there was a diaper, there was a sleeping baby.  All was good.

Then shit got serious, literally and figuratively.

With the diaper off and a sweet little gnome knit hat on, Mary Tyler Baby was still pretty cooperative.  Until the Anne Geddes poses started.  Did you know that most newborn photo shoots occur right after baby is ten days old?  There is a reason for that and it’s because it’s before the baby acne sets in at week two and babies are still pretty comatose in their first few days, pliable, if you will.  You know, like play doh.

At twenty-three days old, Mary Tyler Baby was ancient for a newborn photo shoot.  Like Kate Moss on a runway ancient.  Twenty-three day old babies don’t want to be molded in the hands of a photographer or mom.  Nosiree!  Twenty-three day old babies want to be left the hell alone, unless you are feeding them, holding them, or changing them.  This nonsense with knit hats and props?  Oh, hell no.

So tip number two is to get that photographer in there early, or you best believe you will be charged extra for the airbrushing of unsightly blemishes and baby wrangler fees.

At this point I was half nervous about my undiapered baby on the photographer’s pure white blanket and half cracking up over the directions she was shouting at Mary Tyler Baby, “MOVE YOUR LEG TO COVER YOUR DINGLE!”  I mean come on.  COME ON!  How can you not laugh at that?!

My nervousness won out, though, as I worried aloud about my baby’s fluids on this pristine white blanket.  I was repeatedly reassured that Mary Tyler Baby could do nothing that had not already been done.  Oh wait!  Except shoot spit up out his nostrils, projectile style!  Does your baby do that?  My baby totally does that.  It’s pretty cool, honestly, and gave the photographer a new story for her baby photographer arsenal.  I could almost hear her say to her fellow baby photographers, “And then the kid shot milk out his damn nostrils!”

The clock was ticking.  I needed to go pick up Mary Tyler Son at school and I had a naked baby that needed dressing and car seat harnessing, pronto.  The photographer promised just one more shot.  Mary Tyler Baby was deeply sleeping after some of the requisite close-ups of hands and feet that required no play doh manipulation of his little limbs, and she was getting some great shots.

And then it happened.  The poop smelled round the world.

Would you believe my precious Mary Tyler Baby did exactly as I was worried he would do?  That boy pooped, or more accurately gushed, a bright orange liquid poop all over that perfectly white Ralph Lauren blanket.  Wow.  It was disgusting and hilarious and so very orange all at the same time.

Poor baby.  Poor photographer.

I sprang into action, grabbing Mary Tyler Baby in one hand, wrapping a blanket around his bits as I lifted him up, and with my free hand, I grabbed my iPhone and took a photo.  Cause it was freaking hilarious and it demanded documentation and I could not stop laughing and the very game photographer plugged her nose with one hand and smeared orange poop with a burp cloth on her perfectly soiled fancy blanket with the other hand.

Anne Geddes 4

Poop happens, folks, especially when you have an undiapered newborn on a white blanket.

Within minutes my little one was dressed and harnessed and I had sprayed the shit, literally, out of that blanket.  Moms are excellent multi-taskers.  And when I got home from the school pick-up, I popped that pooped blanket right in the wash and an hour later it was as good as new, ready to be pooped on again by another little newborn of another little family full of hope and laughs and giggles and joy.

So tip number three is to have a lot of Shout it Out on hand, and apologies, and a camera within reach.

I never got those Anne Geddes style shots of my two oldest, and much as I have skoffed at them in the past, and despite knowing all the work that goes into those newborn photo shoots, I’ve gots to say that seeing Mary Tyler Baby, precious as precious can be, nestled all snug with a gnome cap on his head, manipulated as the image might be, Lordy, am I glad to have it.  Cause ain’t no gnome as cute as my wee little gnome.

Bum Bul Bee Photo + Films, the woman owned business behind our newborn photo shoot, is right now having a holiday special through November 15.  And, nope, I didn’t trade this mention for a free photo shoot. We paid full freight, cause they are that good.  

 

When Mom is a Mom Blogger

I have three kids.  One is a newborn my husband and I adopted last month, one is a four year old who is brilliant and sweet (of course), and one is dead, the victim of an aggressive brain tumor at four years old.  That’s my family in a nutshell.  To me, these children are the most precious creatures that exist on this earth, probably a lot like yours are to you.  I treasure them and wonder how I got so lucky in this life to be surrounded by such love and joy.  I am blessed.  Truly.

The child I write the most about is my beautiful daughter, Donna.  Anyone who reads Mary Tyler Mom knows of my girl, as she is a central figure in both my life and my writing.  She guides me through my days, reminding me to choose patience, choose joy, choose hope.  These are lessons I need each and every day and my dear Donna is my constant teacher.  I am grateful to have been her Mom and miss her utterly, completely, thoroughly.

Donna

My four year old is only referred to as Mary Tyler Son in my posts.  He is a bright, beaming, curious, funny, smart boy.  He is every inch four years old, which means he can be challenging at times, aggressive at times, endearing at times, playful most all of the time, and so, so beautiful.  This boy saved me after Donna’s death.  Rather than run down the rabbit hole, he reminded me, every day, with his ten month old self, that I was still a mother of a child that needed me desperately.  He deserved no less than I gave Donna, which was all of me, everything.  Mothering him pulled me through the thick of my early grief.  Mary Tyler Son will always be my light.

School

And now, through adoption, we have been chosen to parent again.  I honest to God can think of nothing more sacred than asking another human being to care for and love and raise your child.  Think about that and just let it marinate a moment.  We honor our selection, being chosen, and this beautiful boy by parenting him, just as we did Donna, and just as we do Mary Tyler Son.  We are all in.  All in.  Mary Tyler Baby is what I will call him here and you will come to know him through my words.  I don’t know much so far about Mary Tyler Baby, other than he fills me up, makes me smile, blesses me every day, and needs me to love and care for him.  I am his Mom.  That’s heady stuff.

Feet

That’s how parenting works, yo.

Right now my kids are of an age or a circumstance where they don’t give a fig about me being a mom blogger.  Mary Tyler Son is intrigued by it and knows that when I am sitting in front of the computer screen I am blogging or Facebooking, which these days, is almost an extension of blogging.  He calls me a writer and that’s just about the coolest thing I could imagine.  Sometimes, he wants me to post about him, “Tell your blogging friends X, Y and Z,” he will demand of me.  What can I say, it charms me.

There are strangers around the world who are charmed by Mary Tyler Son because of what I share in my blog and Facebook page.  And I gots to say, it’s a great feeling when others find your kid charming, right?  It happens in your life, too, even if you’re not a mom blogger.

What’s not so cool are some of the other things that happen when you’re a mom blogger.

  • Sometimes, when I write about the more challenging behaviors of Mary Tyler Son, strangers call him a brat or “full of himself.”  Who in the hell says that about a four year old boy?  Strangers tell me what I am doing wrong and that my poor parenting choices will absolutely result in raising a future law breaker, jail bird, loser.  Oh!  And how could I forget the woman who damned poor Mary Tyler Son’s soul to eternal hell and the gratitude she expressed at having children whose soul’s were not black like his.  Sheesh.  Fire and brimstone ain’t my thing.  
  • Some folks don’t understand why I still write about Donna four years after her death.  She has been called worm food and I have been told to “get a new angle,” as the Donna angle was “wearing thin.”
  • Earlier this year when something I wrote about adoption was featured on the Huffington Post, I was on the receiving end of two weeks of strangers lashing out at me, consistently and repeatedly, in the comment section from hell.  I was called a baby thief, rich white bitch, narcissist, entitled, opportunistic, manipulative, and a few other choice words.  I’m not gonna lie to you.  That episode really ran a number on me and contributed to a depressive episode that made me question our wish to adopt.  
  • A couple of years ago I posted a photo of Mary Tyler Son on Facebook that involved a parenting mistake I had made at the end of a stressful week.  I captioned it with the words, “Worst Mother Ever.”  A rabid pack of fellow mothers saw that and rather than acknowledge, yeah, that Mary Tyler Mom made a mistake, they wished for my son’s death.  They then described the death they wished for in great detail, in hopes that I would learn a lesson.  After that didn’t get a rise out of them, the image of my son was stolen, copied, and several Facebook pages were started with him being the poster boy/profile shot of new pages focused on what a bad mother I was.

So being the child of a mom blogger is not all it’s cracked up to be, you see.  That is why I protect my kids.  That is why I don’t post photos of my living children with their faces exposed.  That is why I don’t use the names of my living children openly attached to my blog.

They didn’t ask me to be a mom blogger, to have their exploits, both good and bad, publicized for all the world to see.  It’s not my place to call them names or endlessly complain about how they are ruining my life.  Other mom bloggers do that and it’s super cool for them, but it just isn’t my cup of tea.  And that is okay, cause you like what you like and there’s all sorts of fish in this mom blogger sea.

If you don’t care for what I’m doing, like the Facebook commenter this week who asked what the benefit of my page was if I only show my baby’s feet and don’t even give his name out, well then, it is easy as pie to hit the “unlike” button and go about your day.  There are literally thousands of other mom bloggers who will fill up your news feeds with adorable photos of faces instead of feet.  I promise, I won’t mind in the least.  Most likely, I won’t even notice you left.  That sounds harsh, but honest to God, I am sleep deprived these days and don’t drink coffee.  I don’t keep up with the numbers like I used to.

For those of you who do stick around, who don’t mind a parade of baby toes in your news feeds, or a series of hilarious and wacky questions from the back seat that Mary Tyler Son asks on an almost daily basis, well hells bells,  I am so happy to know you!  You make my life richer in a thousand different ways that are hard to convey.  I so appreciate your company and your respect and your empathy.

This parenting is tough stuff.  My husband and I do the best we can.  For us, that means no photos and no names of our boys.  Other mom bloggers make different choices, which is A-OK!  Hey, you can enjoy as many of us as can fit on your feed, and no doubt, that will involve a whole lot of feet and faces.