Lessons Learned from a Cabbage Patch Kid
When I was 4, I dreamed of having my very own Cabbage Patch Kid doll. It was a fairly common dream in the minds of many little girls as the Christmas season approached, strategically stepping up the pressure on their parents a notch. It created what was known as the Cabbage Patch Craze in 1983, filled with determined parents attempting to shop and fulfill the desire of their little girls cradling a Cabbage Patch Kid doll on Christmas morning.
I had been sent a baby brother about a year before and I
dreamed of cradling a little girl doll with flowing yellow yarn hair that
resembled my own and a pink dress with lacy edges. I had wondered what assigned
name would read on her cabbage patch birth certificate when I pulled it out of
the yellow and green box with the clear window front. I thought about all the
places she would go with me and all the fun we would have together. And on
Christmas morning, I awoke to find a Cabbage Patch Kid waiting under my tree
with mint green overalls, a white shirt, short brown hair and a boy name –
Jeremiah.
In retrospect, it was probably one of the first, in a series
of hints from the universe, indicating that I would be raising 3 boys, no
daughters. It was also indicative of the kind of father I would have.
Children generally are not aware of the difficulties their
parents may be experiencing, as they shouldn’t be. I didn’t know that Christmas
morning my parents lived paycheck to paycheck and often worried how they would
stretch money to make it through the month, let alone be able to afford to buy
me a baby doll. I didn’t know that my father had woken up early one cold morning to
wait in line, outside of a closed toy store before heading to a 12 hour shift
at the shoe store he managed at the time. I didn’t know when the shoppers
rushed the aisle, my dad arrived to an empty shelf and argued with another woman
as she grabbed the last doll to be placed in a cart already packed with several
dolls. I do know that he won that argument because I opened a Cabbage Patch Kid
on Christmas morning in 1983.
I didn’t have a shiny new car with a big red bow on my 16th
birthday, but I did have car when I moved in with my Dad half way through my
senior year of high school to prevent me from needing to change schools. I didn’t
get to attend a fancy, out of state college, but I did attend a 4 year in-state
college and graduated debt free, thanks to my Dad. He taught me the value was in the work put into the degree, not where it came from. I didn’t have chair covers
at my wedding but it was a beautiful wedding graciously paid for by him and I had a dad whom I was proud to have stand beside me and walk me down the aisle that day.
I have a dad that taught me the importance of my
independence as a woman. He made sure I was the first to graduate college in
his family because he knew an education provided me options and prevented me
from ever needing to stay in a bad marriage because of financial dependence. I have a dad that made sure I married a good man
and would never be in a bad marriage by setting the expectations for how I
should be treated by men and the type of a father to expect for my children. Who taught me to always trust my own instincts in
life and to not require a confirmation from anyone else. Any request for his advice was
and is always answered with “What do you think? Go with your gut.” Who never
boasted or bragged about me to others, yet never let me question his pride and, at the same time, taught me to be humbled by that pride. I have a dad that taught me where my stubbornness
originates, even if we both continue to refuse to admit it.
The outcome of our actions often does not reflect the heart
of our efforts. My parents made many mistakes raising my brother and me, just
as I have made many mistakes in raising my own children. However, it is in
those same mistakes that I have learned the most valuable of life’s lessons. I
gained the most insight not from what I had as a child, but what I didn’t have.
It taught me the vast differences between need and want and the pride in
earning will always outweigh the gratitude of being given something. Sometimes
I forget this in raising my own children. We try our best to prevent any unhappiness
in our children, often failing to realize the missed opportunities for learning
when preventing their slightest discomfort.
The lessons of my childhood at times were obvious, but most didn’t
come into focus until I saw them through adult eyes. I may not have had
everything but I did always have a dad that tried and that was everything, even
when it was a little boy Cabbage Patch Kid, named Jeremiah.
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