FAMILY LIFE Lat er, Mom • Moms and tots get together at .a Sunday meeting. RONELLE R. GRIER Special to The Jewish News B ecoming a parent can be an awesome • experience at any age, but what hap- pens when you're "forty-ish" and facing motherhood for the first time? If you're Edie Fagenson- Rubin, 41, and Harriet Bakalar, 42, you find other women in the same situation and start a support group. "I was terrified at the pro- spect of havifig a baby with no one to 'talk to about it," said Bakalar. "I didn't know many people my age with new babies, and I felt I didn't have much in common with younger mothers." "When our parents had children, there was more sup- port in the neighborhood," said Fagenson-Rubin. "Kids were always outside playing, and the parents all knew each other. It's different now — my subdivision doesn't have the same kind of family at- mosphere as when we were young?' The two women placed a classified ad in The Jewish News, spread the word around among friends and acquain- tances, and held their first meeting at Fagenson-Rubin's Farmington Hills home in the summer of 1988. About ten women, babies in tow, came to find friendship and support. More than one year later, they're still coming. "I heard about the group at a time when I was feeling really isolated at home," said Debbie Metler, 38, and mother of three. "I enjoyed it a lot and still do. It's great to find other women with similar backgrounds and con- cerns." Nitzana York, the group's youngest member at 33, join- ed after moving to the Detroit area from Israel. "I was very lonely and didn't know a lot of people here, especially peo- ple with babies," she said. "I find it a great relief to talk with the other moms about babies and husbands and work, and to feel like we're not alone in this world." "I work with children every day," said Bakalar, who is chief of pediatric social work at University Hospital in Ann Arbor. "But when I had my own child, I realized I needed much of the same help as the parents I work with. My ex- perience taught me that you're not born knowing these things." Fagenson-Rubin, a social worker with extensive Friendship and information drive a local support group of older mothers. pediatric experience, agrees. "Many of the group members are human services profes- sionals, teachers and social workers, but we still felt like idiots when it came to taking care of our own kids!" What are the concerns of older mothers, and how do they differ from those of mothers in their twenties? • "We're probably more in- dependent, we've had more years to get set in our routines, so the changes a new baby brings are even harder to deal with," said Fagenson-Rubin. "Also, many of us got mar- ried later in life. Because of our ages, we didn't have the luxury of waiting several years to have children. So we're adjusting to having babies almost on top of ad- justing to being married!' "We also talk about the physical problems that come with having children when you're older," she said, "like complications during pregnancy, genetic testing, and just finding the energy to take care of our kids?' Women who have children later in life often have parents who are elderly and need care themselves, which can create additional stress. "Although our parents en- joy seeing their grand- children, they can't help us out or provide support in the same way that younger grandparents can," said Bakalar. "That's another reason this group is so impor- tant!' Balancing., a professional life with motherhood has been a popular group topic. Because most of the members had established careers before having children, the group has spent many sessions discussing day care, time management, and even how to get their husbands to do more housework. The structure of the group and its composition have changed over time to accom- modate the members' needs. Some early members dropped out because they were looking more for a daytime play group. "We really are a suport group, although everybody enjoys getting together with the kids, too," said Fagenson-Rubin. During the first summer, the mothers met once a week. Now that most of the women have returned to work, they meet twice a month: Sunday morning with the kids and Wednesday evening for mothers only. "We realized we needed time for ourselves, where we could talk without any distractions," said Fagenson- Rubin. "Now most of us real- ly look forward to those Wednesday nights!' "It's great when just the mothers get together — it's like a social night out for me," said Jan Goldstein Wanetick, 39. During the summer, the group held a barbecue — its first event that included the fathers. Next on the agenda is a murder-mystery dinner par- ty on New Year's Eve. "We joked that the couple who couldn't find a babysitter THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 89