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May 17, 2007

Tragically Unhip

The following entry was written for Mommybloggers by Stefanie Wilder-Taylor. It has been a joy to pass over the reigns to her today.

My daughter is much cooler than me and she’s two. Yesterday she wore cammo pants with a red tutu – and she pulled it off! People stopped to take her picture. Believe me I had been worried about her future because her mother is a failure in that department. No one’s ever stopped to take a picture of me in my banana clip.

You may not know at first glance that I’m not hip. I mean, I’m wearing my “vintage� shirt, but, unfortunately for me I didn’t pay 35 cents for it at a thrift store or 3,500 at Fred Segal. No, sadly, I got it at Wet Seal, the store that caters to the 11 to maybe 18 set. I’m 40. I actually do a lot of shopping there. I know. it’s true. I’m a member of a club that would never admit it’s own existence. But, I’m coming out of the closet. I’m one of them. The tragically unhip. I’m not nor have I ever been uncool enough to bring it full circle and be geeky in a hipster way. I’ve slipped through the cracks.

And I’m not one of those people who cool doesn’t matter to. You know, a Wall Street type who’s mad for Dave Matthews and knows the world is on his side on this one or someone who calls Dr. Laura introducing themselves as “Hi Dr. Laura, I’m My Kid’s Mom� or uses the phrase “Ah ha moment� with serious purpose. No. I’m not oblivious to my unhipness. I wish I was. What I am is so much worse. I’m a dreaded wannabe.

It started in early grade school. In our studio apartment, my mother collected green stamps like it was her job and my clothes were ordered for me from the Sears catalog. But here’s the catch, I liked it. Yeah, I didn’t groan like a future Janeane Garafolo, I looked forward to the delivery of my purple polyesther pants suit with white fringe and the daintiest 100% plastic flowers surrounding the turtleneck white collar with glee. Oh yeah, I used words like glee.

In sixth grade I made an early attempt at hip. I begged and begged to get a “real� professional haircut by a real professional hair dresser. Up until that point, my mother thought it was perfectly fine and a great money saver to pull out the old Singer sewing scissors and chop away until I had a straight wall of bangs well above my eyebrows. Finally my mother relented. Only, it wasn’t at a “salon� it was a friend’s mom who cut hair out of her house on the cheap while enjoying a few gin and grapefruit juices – but hey, I thought, at least it wasn’t MY MOM. The hairstyle I wanted, naturally, was the infamous Dorothy Hamill - the haircut of the pre-pubescent ice skating, gymnastic, freshly ear pierced set. But the “hairstylist� may have been more familiar with the work of Olga Korbut. The result didn’t look cute and girly on me, hitting my jawline just so and flipping up delicately. No, I just looked like a boy. Possibly a cute boy. But a boy. I didn’t become aquainted with layers until my twenties.

After that, there were Toni home perms that went awry (are there any other kind?), Sun-In, self tanning lotions that made me look jaundiced at best and other misfired attempts at hip. It seemed to always be my fault too, seeing as the other girls in class managed to pull it off. And, I swear over twenty years have gone by and the self-tanners still turn my skin colors not found in nature. But I’m still trying.

Shorty after the perm incident that went awry, I was invited to a friend’s birthday party. Okay, not exactly a friend. More like a girl’s whose mother made her extend an invite to all her 6th grade classmates. I obsessed on what to get her for her present and decided on a record, not just any record but my favorite record. Janis Ian. Even my mother thought it might not be a great idea but I loved Janis Ian. Not just the song “At Seventeen� but all the poignant, angst filled songs that I cried and sang along to in my room wishing I was a folky, 20-something, unruly haired singer who could literally make people’s hearts ache with a specific chord change. And pull off a beret.

At the birthday party, I presented my gift with bated breath waiting to finally be accepted, perhaps even celebrated. My heart swelled with pride while she unwrapped it. But the recipient, Debbie Shindower, gave me a look of pity I’ll never forget. I’d gotten it so wrong and they all knew it. Smirks gave way to laughter and exclamations of “Who the fuck is Janis Ian?� Debbie went on to open Shaun Cassidy, The Bee Gees, Olivia Newton John and other far less navel gazing lesbians, apparently more appropriate for a 10- year-old girl.

In another misguided attempt to fit in with the cool kids in my semi-tough neighborhood, I played along with some clumsy sexual games in the alley behind my house. A few of the girls had gathered and were daring each other to rub up against the 5th grade boy who lived across the street from me. Not wanting to do it and not wanting to refuse, I participated. This escalated to making him pull his pants down and one of the girls suggesting we touch his flaccid penis with a leaf. Then we were dared by our leader to “touch it� which I did for a millisecond (it felt like sand paper). So, years later I found out that the boy had been mildly retarded. So if semi-molesting a mentally challenged 5th grader made me cool then score one for the home team!

Continue reading "Tragically Unhip" »

May 3, 2007

i think i made our waitress cry

The following entry is one of Jennster's favorites from her archives.

no seriously. like now that we've left the restaurant, i think she's sitting back there- crying. like real tears. cause apparently, i.am.one.offensive.bitch.

a few of us went out to dinner the other evening. we got a somewhat sassy little waitress who was trying to be cute and cool. she failed however, because she was neither. when i asked her if i could get some more water, she replied with, "oh hell yeah!" so basically i figured that she was fun! i figured i could play with her and she wouldn't get offended or freak out. damn my spidey senses were SO off with this one.

i ordered a salad (i wasn't hungry people, don't get all dinner nazi on me) and she asked me if i was allergic to nuts because even though it doesn't list nuts in the ingredients, there are nuts in the salad. i let her know to pile em on, i'm a nut freak- she laughed and was like "right on" (okay she might not have actually said "right on," but that was her vibe).

we get our food and i notice there are no nuts on my salad. she built up the damn nuts and now there are none. so i was laughing and i said, "there are no nuts in this salad, you lyin' whore." right then her eyes got really big and she stepped back, stopped smiling and walked away. then she practically ran over to the bar where she started talking to every other person that worked there. jimmy and boyfriend both informed me that she was highly offended and that she wasn't laughing and that i should apologize. first of all, i got defensive because i was KIDDING AROUND and secondly, i felt like an asshole and jimmy and boyfriend were making me feel worse. the last thing i need when i've done something stupid is to have it pointed out. and continually pointed out. and then repeated again.

so i'm in shock thinking she can't really be upset. can she? i was totally kidding. so i called her a whore. i call everyone whores. and i figure that she must be this upset because she actually IS a whore. and then i think she should consider herself lucky because she isn't that cute, so if she really is a whore- then good for her. whores have more fun, eh? apparently not this one.

so now she won't come near our table. she walks the long way around- all the way around the restaurant to get to the table next to us and walks the long way back just so that she doesn't have to pass us. so i'm realizing that she really is offended. so i tell everyone i'll fix it, because that's what i do. i'll apologize and all will be well. she can't be mad if she knows i was kidding, right? right? wrong.

i walked to the back of the restaurant where she was talking to the cooks and her eyes almost bulged out of her head when she saw me coming towards her. i asked her if she was seriously upset about this and she looked at me dumbfounded. i informed her that i was completely and 100% joking around.. and how she can talk to me all "hells yeah" when i ask for water, but i can't joke around with her? and then a conversation somewhat like this happened:

whore: "you called me a whore!!!!!!"
ster: "i was totally kidding! i call all my friends whores! i call everyone whores! like, what's going on whore?! like that!"
whore: "but you said i was a whore! i don't think that's funny."
ster: "um, i don't even know you, so you realize this wasn't personal right? like i wasn't REALLY calling you a whore?!! i was just fucking around."
whore: "whatever."

so basically, she was an unreceptive bitch to my apology. now i was pissed off and feeling bad. she didn't wait on us anymore. she made someone take over our table because she was that upset and refused to face me. i can't make this shit up.


so everyone- let this be a warning to you.. i make people cry. random people. strangers.

everyone going to blogher- if i call you a whore, take it as a compliment- it means i think you're actually fun enough to handle it. but the new inside joke in sterland is- if you call me a whore, i'm going to cry. because apparently being a whore is not funny! or fun!

*runs off crying non-whorish tears*

Continue reading "i think i made our waitress cry" »

April 25, 2007

G.B.J.D.

The following entry is one of Erin's favorites from the archives of Queen of Spain:

I vote we all start calling Father’s Day what it really is: Guaranteed Blow Job Day.

Don’t act all coy. Or shocked. You know you either got one or gave one. It’s just some unwritten rule. Father’s Day. Birthday. Way to Get a Raise Day-Equals guaranteed Blow Job.

There are rules to the guaranteed blow job. You must initiate. You must think of it as ALL about him, expecting nothing in return. And you only get to take off your pants too if he makes it clear this isn’t a one-way encounter.

So while your husband ate his kid-made toast and opened up another popsicle stick birdhouse (or in our case a homemade stool and beer coolies) he knew, that you knew, that he knew, that you knew that he was getting a BJ later.

Who started this and why isn’t there a female equivalent? I mean, I know there is a female equivalent, but what I’m saying is…is there a guaranteed —fill in the blank—Day for wives?

On your birthday, do you know there is something you will get? More than 10 minutes to shower without a screaming child outside the door? Sleeping in? Meals cooked that you don’t have to clean up? While I can say those things happen on Mother’s Day or my birthday…I can’t say they are guaranteed.

Before you start yelling about me about how I don’t have to do anything I don’t want to do, let me stop you. I want to give him a blow job. It’s his special day and I know it’s what he wants. Trust me, he wants that more than a tie. Maybe less than a new iPod, but more than a tie. But maybe more than an iPod. Anyway, I don’t see it as my “duty� or anything. I enjoy making him happy. I enjoy giving him what he wants. But when did it go from unexpected to a maybe, to a “yeah, it’s Father’s Day, it’s totally going to happen�?

AND, at what point in our marriages did we all just realize this was the way it went? Because let’s face it…you can laugh and shake your head at me all you want-But I know, that you know, that I know, that you know, that I know you did it too.

Continue reading "G.B.J.D." »

April 18, 2007

A Gift of Wanting

The following entry is one of Elizabeth's favorites from the archives of Table4Five.

How do you explain how much you physically love your child? This is my fourth draft of this post, trying to get the words just right.

Her Bad Mother, after writing her own post on that subject, invited her readers to try to answer that question themselves. She has collected over three dozen posts written by Mothers who are trying to put into words how they feel when they hold their child, why they feel an overwhelming need to kiss and touch their babies until it borders on addiction.

Last Friday, I took Kaitlyn and the boys to see “Cars� along with some friends. Kaitlyn alternated between my lap, the stroller and the carpeted floor in front of our seats. She ate Banana Puffs and tried to chew a straw. About 3/4 of the way through the movie, it was naptime, and she began to whine.

What veered me off track in my original post was remembering those horrible days in the hospital after her birth, when I was so sick from the stomach flu that I couldn’t even hold her. And then we learned that she did not need to be rocked to sleep, or even held while she slept, that she wanted to just lay down and be left to drift off herself. Only very occasionally would she fall asleep in my arms while drinking her bottle.

That day in the movie theater, I figured I would keep her calm and quiet until the show ended, and then she would sleep in the car on the way home. I picked her up and carried her over to the side of the theater, down the ramp leading to the exit, and stood there in the dark holding her up on my shoulder. I watched the movie and rocked back and forth.

I felt her head drop on my shoulder, but I figured she was just resting it there. And then I felt her breathing slow down, and I held my breath too. Cautiously, I lowered my face until it rested between her jaw and shoulder, and breathed her in. I kissed the soft swell of her cheek and the corner of her mouth. I whispered shhhhh.

And then suddenly she was asleep. Her body went limp and was somehow both weightless and heavy in my arms at the same time. I lowered my head even farther, resting it gently on her shoulder, and listened to her breathe. For that moment, every thing else went away. I couldn’t hear the movie or see the screen. It was just me and her and nothing else, because she was giving me a precious gift.

She wanted me. She needed to sleep, and she trusted me to help her. A baby who only wanted to be put in bed awake and allowed to put herself to sleep was letting me hold her as she slept. It might have only been 15 or 20 minutes, but it was wonderful.

One day, she will be too big to carry, and I’ll miss her little arms around my neck, one hand patting the back of my shoulder, the other hand slowly scratching my shirt. I’ll miss rubbing her back, slipping my hand under her shirt to feel her warm, soft skin. I’ll miss those rare times when she falls asleep drinking her bottle, and I get to spend a few minutes running my fingers over her little hands, stroking her velvet-soft cheeks and gently kissing her forehead and the corners of her mouth.

The love I feel for my baby encompasses the physical, the emotional, the psychological. I couldn’t not kiss and touch her. She is me, and I am her, and as long as she wants me, I will be available to her. I will kiss her on the lips, the cheeks, the forehead. I will bury my face in her neck and whisper shhhhh. I will love her, physically and otherwise, forever.

Continue reading "A Gift of Wanting" »

April 10, 2007

The grass is only sometimes greener

This entry is a favorite from the archives of this week's featured guest, Jessica of Kerflop.

Oh how I hated elementary school. I remember my mother driving me to school in the early morning chill. I’d be hunched down in my coat, watching the houses go by beneath furrowed, angry eyebrows. Sometimes neighbors would have their drapes or blinds open and the cozy yellow light of their kitchens or living rooms would spill out onto the frosty grass. I could see glimpses of blue-green news programs blinking over breakfast nooks and children too small to go to school sipping hot chocolate and eating cheerios.

I resented being out in the cold. I resented having to go to school and sit at a desk and face the ridicule and dismissal of my peers. I would day dream of the time I would no longer have to do things I didn’t want to do. I’d stay home all day in a safe, warm house watching television while eating Lucky Charms in my flannel nightgown.

Later, after I grabbed my High School diploma from the hands of the Principal and cartwheeled my way out the front door, never to return again - I found myself working at a department store in Ogden, Utah. Riding the bus to and from work I once again dipped my cold nose beneath the collar of my coat and glared at the warm looking houses wanting to be inside. Once at work, I begrudgingly rang up happy shoppers purchases wishing I could stroll around looking for new shoes rather than stand at the tedious register.

It seems for a long time, I wished my life away. I was often dissatisfied despite all the privileges and comforts I had that I know (now) many others in the world long for. “I’ll be happy when…� This morning after I dropped my boys off at pre-school I drove home noticing the golden glow from neighbor windows and remembering all of that resentment in previous years.

As I rounded the corner, my own house sat in the crisp, still gloomy morning air, bright lights winking happily at me. I pulled our car into the garage, and my husband opened the door, holding our daughter in all her early-morning gloriousness with her disheveled bed-head and rumpled, toasty pajamas. The light poured out of the house and bathed us all in its warmth and welcome. I thought, “I want to remember this always. I’m happy to be right here, right now. In my own comfortable life. Things may not be perfect, but I’m grateful. So grateful for every second of it.�

Continue reading "The grass is only sometimes greener" »

March 1, 2007

Au Revoir Mon Minivan

The following is a favorite entry from the archives of Deborah Klosky's Spot-On Column.

Dear reader, please forgive my reddened eyes, my tear tracks, my sighs. it's just that we've decided to sell the minivan.

A suburban mom without a minivan is like a knight without his steed, a snail without its shell, a mail carrier without her bag, a fast food joint without its garbage cans; she is lost, vulnerable, defenseless, reduced to only what she can carry in her hands and stuff in the basket under the stroller, she is without a base, without a trusty friend, she is, in short – an SUV driver.

No, no, not that, I assure you, my friends. Although many suburban families do believe they somehow increase their coolness factor by driving an overpriced, ill-famed hunk of monster metal so they can pretend they off-road through ecologically sensitive desert terrain, instead of driving the ever-useful and often-humble minivan, we’re not going that route.

No, we’re giving up my mother’s little helper because we're moving to Spain. While it’s relatively inexpensive to ship a car there, there are apparently quite a few hassles getting it through customs and adapted to EU car standards. But mostly, we’re not sure if it will be useful. If we live in its natural habitat, a suburb, of course it will fit right in; but if we live in the city or even a village, with street construction a carryover from foot and horsie days, then, well, the poor thing might have to be shot when it gets stuck trying to turn a corner somewhere. Or abandoned when it knocks down a few pillars in a city parking garage designed for Matchbox-sized cars. And that’s possible even though it’s on the smaller end of minivans. So we’re leaving it behind.

I’ve never cared about cars, or even liked them much, but, ah, my minivan. The thing is, it’s not a car, it’s more like a really big tote bag on wheels. With room for the kids, of course. And it helps uphold the U.S. competitive advantage in number of cup holders per vehicle. With the kids’ car seats we have nine individual places for drinks. Take that, you scooter-riding Euros. Sure, you look great in your miniskirts and your leather jackets whizzing around on your Vespas, but where do you keep your Big Gulps? Huh? Ha! You don’t, do you? You stop at cafes when you need something to drink. And where’s the efficiency in that? Ha! Over here, we even have cup holders in our ride-on mowers. Now that can make you think of some fun ways to spend a Saturday. Top that!

But of course, now we’re off to Vespa-land, or the dinky little sedan equivalent. Europeans drive cars that a Hummer wouldn’t even consider a worthy snack. Yes, you know, there’s that much more expensive gas thing and there’s the shorter distances thing and there’s the everything is more smooshed together over there thing, and there's also that decent public transportation thing, so Euros seem quite happy with their cute little cars, and subways and trains and buses and trams.

Like many people I had to overcome the initial recoil from buying a minivan. No one wants to think of herself as a boring, clichéd suburban mother carpooling around in her minivan. But then I got in, and I found I had more parity with the big beasts on the highway, I saw the nets and the hooks and the drawers and the cubbies, and the extra room to sit even with the car seats in, and I decided I still don’t need to be defined by what I drive. And it’s not like all Minivan Moms sweetly tool around in them with a sedate, earth mother generosity. Plus, I figure if a red sports car is the ultimate cop magnet, a white (safety color!) minivan is just the opposite. So you do not want to get in my way when I'm late for a kindergarten pickup.

Disagree with me? Come say that standing right here in front of my bumper, buddy. Oh, forgive me, I’m just a little upset these days - we’ve decided to sell the minivan.

Continue reading "Au Revoir Mon Minivan" »

February 15, 2007

On Terror

The following essay is one of Amanda's favorites from the archives of her blog, Mandajuice.

We spent most of yesterday romping around the Discovery Museum with Alex's favorite playmate, his "Regular Grandma." Unlike me (or anyone else I know for that matter), my mom seems to have an endless supply of energy. As long as she gets enough sleep, she's like a pack of wolves on a Starbucks bender. After chasing the boy all over the museum, we went back to her house and Alex entertained himself with a hose and a box of water on the deck. He even skipped his nap to go swimming with my brother Tom while my mom whipped my ass at Scrabble.

When we get home from my mom's, I rush us inside so I can throw the mandajuice that I'd left at her house after Blogher into the freezer before it starts to thaw. That shit is like liquid gold, so it's the number one thing on my mind. Somehow I manage to carry everything inside in one trip - the diaper bag, the milk bag, the new Superman costume mom bought Alex at Costco, my camera bag, the dirty clothes, the Scrabble game I'm borrowing so I can whip Dave's ass, and the baby fast asleep in her car seat.

I set Alex up to watch some TV and he falls asleep flat on his back within minutes. Genoa never woke up when we came in, so I leave her strapped into her car seat and put her next the couch and open the back door for fresh air and freeway noise. I check my e-mail, call Expedia, surf Bloglines (I've been gone all day, so everything is bold, bold, bold!), the usual stuff I do when both kids are asleep and I have the house to myself.

After twenty minutes, my annoying parent instinct kicks in and I decide to do a sleep check on the baby. Genoa is both healthy and also a second child, so I'm pretty good about limiting the sleep checks. But I still occasionally feel the need to bug her just enough to check that she's alive, but not enough to wake her up.

So I walk up behind the car seat, pull the sunshade back and gently brush her hair with the back of my hand. She doesn't move. No big deal, I figure she's really tired, so I gently lift her slumped head and carefully slouch it to the other side. This is a big risk; Dave does it all the time and he usually wakes her up. Her skin is cool to the touch.

She does not move.

Continue reading "On Terror" »

February 6, 2007

How I Missed the "Wardrobe Malfunction": A True Story

The following essay was written especially for Mommybloggers by our featured blogger, Sarah.

Anyone who knows me or reads my blog knows that I am a huge
football fan. The Super Bowl is my Easter. I love football, I love
food, I love beer, I love tv, what more could I ask for? So in honor
of it being Super Bowl week, I have decided to tell you a story about
how I watched the entire Super Bowl one year and missed the one part
that everyone talked about the next day.

I don't know. Maybe this is actually more of a non-story.
Whatever, I'm going to tell you anyway because I still can't believe
this happened.

Let me set the stage, Super Bowl XXXVIII, February 1st - I know it
must have been 2004 because I was 100% sober during the big game.
This obviously means I was pregnant. It was the New England Patriots
versus the Carolina Panthers and it was a really good game. It is
half time, and there are four people in my living room. We are
talking and watching the half time show. I see Janet Jackson
and Justin Timberlake. Four of us are watching this stupid half time
show (I'm still not sure why we hadn't changed the channel) and not
one of us noticed the infamous "wardrobe malfunction"
.
I HAD TIVO! WE WERE RECORDING THE GAME! We could have rewound (and
you call it rewinding if it's digital?) it and watched it if only one
of the four of us had noticed something funny. Two of us were not
even drinking. How did we miss it? I still don't know. One of the
most famous of all Super Bowl non-football related moments and I
completely missed it. It was worse than the time we turned off the
Jets game right before a drunk Joe Namath told Suzy
Kolber that he wanted to kiss her
. (How did I function before You
Tube?)

To recap: I was watching, I had TiVo, I was sober, and yet not one
of the four of us (and the other three were all straight men) saw
Janet Jackson's boob until the next day.

I'm not sure why I felt the need to tell all of you this, but I do
feel better getting it off of my chest (get it? Sorry, that was a
crappy joke) and it seemed appropriate to talk about it this week as
a tribute to the NFL's biggest game of the year.

I also want to thank Jenn and the other Mommybloggers for being so
great and featuring me this week. Thanks ladies, I love what you do.

Sarah, Goon Squad Sarah

For more of Sarah's writing, go visit her at her blog Sarah and the Goon Squad!

January 26, 2007

Why Miss Manners Isn't Entirely Full of It

The following entry was written especially for Mommybloggers by our guest blogger, Julie of Mothergoosemouse.

I was a Girl Scout for five years. While I earned my share of merit badges and went to sleep-away camp each summer, the area of scouting in which I really excelled was cookie sales. And not because my grandmother bought a dozen boxes of Thin Mints each year (which she squirreled away in the freezer and brought out as a treat in the heat of August).

Not because I was a fabulous salesperson either. And certainly not because I spent every afternoon trekking around the neighborhood, ringing doorbells.

No, it was because I knew how to use the telephone properly, and I wasn't scared to do so.

I called all of our neighbors. And my grandmother's neighbors. And my parents' friends. I dialed, I identified myself, I asked to speak to them, I made my pitch, and I wrote down order after order after order - all while I was snug and warm inside my house.

I never called anyone who wouldn't recognize me. Nor did I send my order sheet to work with my father. I only sold cookies to those people who would have happily invited me into their homes anyway.

Fellow troop-mates accused me of cheating. I pointed out that the order sheet specifically said "A telephone call may mean a sale" and collected my prizes (along with dozens of cases of cookies that DID have to be delivered in person).

Continue reading "Why Miss Manners Isn't Entirely Full of It" »

November 2, 2006

Sniff

The following entry is a favorite from the archives of Stirrup Queens and Sperm Palace Jesters.

This is something I was never told in any of the dozens of infertility books I have read: parenting after infertility is such a balance between the bitter and the sweet. I'm sure that there are similar emotions that breakforth for any couple when they know they are parenting their last child. But I think that people who parent after IF find themselves struggling with those transitions on the first child. Perhaps because you never know if you will get to hold another one.

I can't give up the bottle.

My children can give up the bottle. My son, in fact, waved at his bottle tonight and said, "bye bye ba-ba." And I looked at him in horror and said, "no, no, there's still one more bottle! Tomorrow night! This was not the last bottle."

I truly can't give up the bottle.

It could be the simple idea that we don't know if we will be able to have more children. There are the medical considerations and the financial considerations and they come together to create the perfect storm of childlessness. Even if we were to have more children, they may come into our lives at an older age since many international adoptions do not take place at the moment of the child's birth. There are waiting periods. And we may choose in the end to adopt a child that is closer in age to our existing children. In which case, we would miss their babyhood all together.

So no more bottles.

My mother was over two weeks ago when we mentioned that she should really enjoy the bottle she would give the following weekend. It would probably be the last bottle she would get to give. She looked wistfully at them playing and told me how she couldn't give up my crib. She had such a stumbling block when it came to moving me into a toddler bed. I think many parents who haven't gone through IF would have heard me talking about giving up the bottle and would have focused on the fears of the average parent--that the children would refuse to give it up, that bedtime would become difficult, that they would stop sleeping through the night. But my mother, a fellow Stirrup Queen, heard the catch in my voice when I mentioned the last bottle and she immediately knew what I was thinking. That it could be the last bottle I ever give since I don't know if there will be more children. It was the same struggle my mother faced when she had to move me to the toddler bed. There may not be another child no matter how badly she wants one. She was lucky and had my brother. She got to go through those milestones one more time.

I've had trouble with other transitions from babyhood to toddlerhood, but this one is the hardest. Maybe it's because it's tied to cuddle time. Or because it was so hard to get them to take a bottle in the beginning (our premature babies took 45 minutes to finish one ounce of milk) that it seems most unfair that we have to give up the skill once we've gotten really good at it. Maybe it's residual hurt from the fact that I couldn't breastfeed--a reminder that we had to do formula and bottles because the fertility drugs damaged my ability to produce prolactin. They gave me two babies and no ability to feed them--how is that for irony? Anyway, I'm not sure why I'm having such trouble with the bottle. All I know is that we need to give them up tomorrow night.

People who are parenting their last child, but who haven't gone through IF, may think they feel the same way. They may be holding onto their last child's babyhood. It's probably similar. I have a feeling that it's still slightly different. It comes from that fine distinction between knowledge and the unknown.

Please hop on over to Stirrup Queens and Sperm Palace Jesters, and read more by the very talented Mel.

October 20, 2006

The car disappears in sand

The following entry is a favorite from the archives of Crib Ceiling, written by this week's guest, Krisco.

This post is an early one for me, from about two weeks after I started my blog, a whole dang year ago. But it’s representative of a lot of things. Although I am from the West, living in New Mexico is new to me. As is sand, arroyos, moderately over-helpful neighbors, and how best to inspire such help.

Not all my posts are this long. But – okay, a lot of them are. I hope you enjoy it anyway.

At the end of this story, the front end of my car is stuck in sand up to its bumper, in the middle of a dry riverbed, on a hot day, in dry, scraggly, pinon-covered countryside, some twenty miles north of Santa Fe. In the car with me are my three year old, the baby, and my cousin.

As the car came to a complete stop, my cousin said "don't stop now!" (she's right, I had let up on the gas a little, and that just sank the car in), my three year old started repeating “what’s happening?�, and the baby started screaming, on principal. And then my cousin – tall, thin, lives in Europe, wears designer clothes, weighs approx. 102 pounds – jumps out of the car to push. In low-heeled flip flops, adorable tour-Santa Fe peasant skirt, and tank top.

But first she calmly tells Little Big Girl what was happening, and that we are in a bit of a crisis. At which point Little Big Girl switches her mantra to “can you knit me my purse now? Can you knit me my purse now?� After all, the car *is* stopped. <9>Cousin also knits, and had promised Little Big Girl an adorable knit bag.

I realize this is not the end of the story. Because at the very end of the story, we get the car out of the sand with the help of an entire slew of locals who happen to drive by... Mainly, by the man in the truck that pulls our car out, who I never did meet. He is helped by the (handsome, Hispanic) man in the Jeep, who stays around to loan his chain to the guy in the truck, who is also helped by an (older, weathered) Native American man who helps the Jeep Guy lift the front end of the station wagon out of the sand, so that the truck guy can actually pull our car out of the quagmire it is in.

This is after, of course, the guy in the Jeep tries to pull our car out. He attaches this huge chain to the back of our car (who put this metal loop thing – I’m sure it has a real name – under our car? Did they know I was going to buy it?) All I know is, I hear terrible popping noises, I look in the rear view mirror and the Jeep is reared up on its hind tires like a bucking stallion and I think, that thing is going to flip right over backwards. Onto us. Our car, in the meantime, does not budge. An iota. Like nothing at all is flipping around behind it, attached to it, and trying to pull it somewhere.

When I called out “Stop! Please stop!�, my cousin said to me “Have you ever towed something?� Uh, no. In addition to speaking four languages, she also used to live in Colorado and drive a Jeep. “This is normal,� she assures me.

And all this was after the girl in a tiny car drove by and offered to drive all four of us somewhere. And after a second girl in an equally tiny car drove by, disgorged four incredibly large men, who altogether, along with the older Native American man, tried to push our car out.

And this after the older Native American man alone tried to push our car. And then the Native American man with the help of my cousin. And then before that, just my cousin alone, in the flip flops. Suffice it to say, none of the actual human pushing was noted in any way by my incredibly stubborn car, or the approximately two tons of sand which had sucked in its tires, and possibly its axle. I don’t know much about sand (obviously), but I do know that those little 50 pound bags of playsand are heavy and we had a hell of a lot more than a few of those surrounding the car.

In the meantime, I’m on the phone trying to call Amoco Motor Club. I am incredibly grateful to the girl, and the girl, and the Indian guy, and the four large men – and to be honest, we didn’t really know that anybody was going to drive by let alone a guy with a chain and another with a truck to actually help us. I was a little skeptical of those initial efforts, I did have two small children in the car, it was hot, and sandy, the baby was crying, and I figured the sooner I got on an actual tow-truck’s waiting list, the better.

Of course, the calling wasn’t going so well. First the baby had scattered all the cards from my wallet around the house the day before, and of course the Amoco Club card is the one I didn’t find, so I don’t actually have their number. And of course, the 800-Info number doesn’t seem to work here in the sticks. And the 411 number, with it’s automated system, cannot understand my female voice, per usual, plus it keeps picking up the baby’s screaming in the background, and so it keeps saying in its insanely calm voice, “Sorry, I didn’t get that.�

In the other meantime, I am constantly hanging up in order to drive, or put it in neutral and pretend to steer, or whatever needs to happen with each of our would-be rescuers. When I finally get the number (by calling my husband at work and saying “I really can’t explain right now, but can you look up the Amoco number we’re stuck in an arroyo and a guy in a jeep pulled up, I gotta go�) I get the Amoco rep in India, who is having a very hard time understanding the concept of an arroyo and an even worse time understanding where we are in northern New Mexico, because even I didn't know that (our Native American friend gave me our location as "the arroyo in the Tesuque River by KC's" "who is KC?" I ask, and he grins and pats his chest) when, thank God, the guy in the truck pulled up. At least that time I didn’t think I had better odds on the phone than in the craziness going on around me when I hung up.

My three year old, meanwhile, keeps asking my cousin for that darn purse to be knit. At another point she is again asking me something - we had some lull times between rescuers and I was again on the phone - and I didn't even hear her. Finally my cousin answers her question, and tells her "mom's a little busy right now." "Oh yeah" says Little Big Girl, "she's in a crisis."

And at the very beginning of the story, this is what I learned. First, do not trust Mapquest to give you directions to random small Spanish towns in northern New Mexico. The computer, which has never driven through these parts, will pick what looks like the most expedient route, on small random county roads, rather than the less direct but actually passable highways and roads built after 1957. Second, when the small county road you are on – yes, in landscape that is beautiful and rolling and dotted with pinons but really in the middle of BFN – suddenly dips down and disappears under fifty yards of silty dry sand two feet deep, because the road crosses an arroyo (a usually-dry river bed) - even though other cars have passed and packed down parts of it - just take those little babies and your lovely cousin and go back to the damn highway. Even if you think your crazy Mother, and Aunts, and Cousins who are on vacation and you are trying to meet up with in the quaint lovely Spanish town already came this way. They didn't.

And a couple of the lessons that I learned at the end:

- that when you give your husband such brief information about a sketchy situation, you really ought to call him back and update him. ("okay, tell me again why you were four-wheeling in an arroyo, on a hot day, with our kids in the car, in a station wagon?")

- that there are a heck of a lot of nice people in northern New Mexico.

- and that it probably doesn’t hurt to have your hottie cousin in a short skirt out pushing the car first in order to have them all come running.

And now nap time is officially over, kids need attention, and you will have to just put this story in order by yourself.

Continue reading "The car disappears in sand" »

October 10, 2006

The Vagina Dialogues

The following post was written, like, a hundred years ago, waaaay back when I first started blogging, sometime around the beginning of April. It was in response to the commentary provoked by a post that I had written that same day on my struggle to figure out what to call WonderBaby’s nether regions – I had been leaning toward cute euphemism, and recoiling at what I perceived to be overly-clinical usage of correct terminology, until I received very instructive comments which pointed out excellent reasons for using such correct terminology. This post (that is, the discussion around it) was a watershed for me, in that it demonstrated to me, forcefully, just how much the momosphere has to offer – I learned much from the comments to the first post, and those comments really prompted me to do some important self-reflection.

So I’m re-posting it here, with the indulgence of the wonderful MommyBlogger ladies, for this reason: it was one of my first meaningful introductions to the wisdom and warmth that abound in our community. I also wanted to repost it because it reflects where my head has been at with all of the recent discussions about sexuality – I would probably have written something very much like this post today (were I not currently in the throes of some big time bloggy blahs) in response to much of the discussion that has been going on about how to provide our children with positive feminine – sexually feminine – role models.

I might have simply posted multiple comments in response to the excellent comments to my last post (which you can read here to get caught up), but I decided that the thoughts that those comments provoked were worthy of their own post. What follows might be somewhat incoherent, being entirely off-the-cuff and the product of a mind that is racing faster than fingers can type, but here goes...

If you've read that post, you'll know that I was feeling prissy about referring to my daughter's vagina (vulva! Thanks, Moxie!) by its proper name. Not that any sex talks are pending with WonderBaby, whose language skills are currently limited to ‘mama’ and ‘hoo!’; the issue came up for me when I realized that our bathtime body-part-naming song was lacking in pedagogical rigor when it came to certain body parts. I felt uncomfortable singing about WonderBaby's vagina (vulva!), and wondered whether that was weird of me, and wondered further how other parents went about referring to the nether regions of their children.

So what did I learn? Well, the first lesson, for me, was that there are some good reasons for overcoming one's prissiness regarding language and keeping to the correct terminology when talking or singing about The Parts with one's children. There's the obvious, educational reason: children should learn the correct terms for things. I was concerned that insisting upon preciseness in the language used to refer to genitalia in bathtime songs would put me over the pedantic edge (over which, my very small collective of regular readers will know, I already regularly dangle. Or - fine - fall over entirely.) But if the Cool Moms are doing it, well, hell, so will I.

But Sunshine Scribe provided another, very important reason:

The reason I don't call his penis a peepee or something cute is not because I want to be "correct" but because I have read and been told by a practioner in the field that using anatomically correct instead of "funny" terms is a molestation-proofing strategy… The idea is that if they understand that it isn't a silly part that has a funny name and they can correctly identify it then it is less likely someone can talk them into a funny game with their funny-named part and also that they'll be able to articulate themselves better when you are explaining how to handle those situations.

Her comment speaks for itself. That, my friends, is more than enough reason for me to overcome petty prissiness and start singing songs about vaginas (vulvas!) rather than tooties and woo-hoos and va-jay-jays. So - vulva it is.

But there were a few more lessons for me here, beyond Why You Should Use Proper Names for Certain Body Parts and It's Called a Vulva, Stupid.

The first lesson: that however much I might like to say that I was being prissy about it because I wanted to avoid being pedantic, or that, yes, my reluctance to use the term was pure prissiness but that my prissiness is not a function of Bigger Issues, neither of these statements is truthful. I do have - have long had - issues about the/my body and the sexuality thereof. And however much I might protest that I don't want to impose such issues upon my daughter, that hasn't stopped me from letting those issues inform - already - how I communicate with my daughter.

Bear with me here; I'm coming to a point.

Sky said this: When you think about baby talk, you think about sweet songs, butterflies, teddy bears, cute toes and knees and not "anatomy class". Do you tell your baby "now I am going to wash your abdominal region". No, you say belly. You try to be cute...

When I read this, my immediate thought was YES. But the thought that immediately followed was WHY?

Obviously, babies are the very definition of cute. And it is also, obviously, a truism that one usually associates one's own baby with All That is Cute, whatever cute means to you. I myself draw the cute line well distant of treacly Winnie-the-Pooh gear, choosing instead to identify cute with things like Mutha Sucka t-shirts, but still. WonderBaby, for me, is all sweet, sweet innocence and light. Maybe with a few bows in her quiver - and yes, she's packing a quiver - but all-in-all, She Is Love and Love Is Sweet.

And that's all well and good, but really? In the real world, love is not all sweet and good. Love bears arms. And the world is, and people are, messy and messed up and not reliably good at all. I want to protect my daughter from this. I want to preserve her innocence as long as possible. I want the world, for her, to be all sweet songs and butterflies for as long as it can be that. But I also want her to be prepared for the world that is not that.

And I don't know that I serve that end by neutering her. She is not a sexless Cherub (however much I might want her to be.) (And, for the record, Renaissance Cherubim are not sexless. They have Parts.) She's a future woman. And she's got the parts (and the attitude, I might add) to prove it.

Maybe I wouldn't have the issues around sexuality that I do if I hadn't gone forward into puberty and, later, into adulthood thinking that my Part was, or should be, a Barbie-like mound of tidy, neutered tootyness. Maybe my first period wouldn't have felt so shameful, or my first sexual experience so painfully destructive of my sterile ideas about the body and love. Maybe if I'd had a more honest relationship with my body I'd have gone out into the world a more powerful woman, and less a prudish romantic with a Barbie complex. And maybe then I'd have fewer issues. And be better able to preserve my daughter from same.

I want my daughter to be powerful. Now, during her babyhood, is not, I know, the time to be stressing about that. Now is a time for innocence and sweet songs and butterflies. But I do want to lay the right groundwork. And there's no wrong time for that. So - viva la vulva!

There was something else... Oh yeah: the second lesson. Which is: mommybloggers are entirely responsible for the first, epiphanal lesson. Which is huge. HUGE. The wisdom and role-modeling and opportunities for self-reflection that you all provide are invaluable: today's lesson confirms that absolutely. So, thank you for that.

And thank you all from refraining from pointing out that I am, indeed, a vulvaphobe with freaky sex issues. I'm very grateful that you all, instead, inspired me to come to that conclusion myself.

Continue reading "The Vagina Dialogues" »

September 26, 2006

Mombloggers, Unite!

The following entry was written by Cooper, and originally published in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette on July 24, 2005

Every parent should have a blog.

Even though nine months ago I had to Google the word to learn what one was, I have since found that blogging adds an extra, valuable layer to not only how I parent my four young kids but also how I see myself in that role.

A friend, Emily McKhann, suggested last November that since we don't live in the same city, but both love to write and would like to be more in touch, we start a blog together. After the Google search, which turned up interesting writing on many topics, including parenting, I agreed.

It was a perfect fit. Writing a blog -- also known as a web log -- offers what is often out of reach for me, and I would guess, many other parents: a place to notice and make sense of the ins and outs of the day-to-day of raising kids, and, simultaneously, a way to find real, like-minded people, in similar, child-rearing situations, from all over, who, more often than not, provide not only insight, but a compassionate, listening ear.

These days, how often do you see someone you know and the (quick) conversation starts off with, "I am so busy"? If you are like me, you have an interchange along those lines almost daily. Older women have remarked to me that they couldn't imagine raising kids at the pace we do.

There is a study I read recently that found one thing parents say they need to feel successful in child-rearing but rarely get (at least in satisfactory doses) is a support system that provides meaningful conversation and positive feedback.

So, if we work all day, or our friends, mothers, brothers or sisters work all day (or live in another time zone), then shuttle our children to activities all evening, and, for good measure throw in chores and community obligations, where do we find the time to have productive conversations on parenting, or any subject for that matter, with other adults, including our partners?

Julie Moos, managing editor at the Poynter Institute, a journalism education organization, and editor of DotMoms (www.roughdraft.typepad.com/dotmoms), a collective of "mom" writers, to which I contribute, points out that since we are a much more mobile society, we have less time to connect.

"We don't necessarily live where we grew up or where family is or friends are. There is a great deal of mobility in the workplace. It is our mobility that makes it increasingly difficult to find the company we need. Blogging is at our convenience, which is huge for people. You can create community in your own time," Moos said.


Twice a day the baby sleeps and, with the older kids in school, I am in nap lockdown with only our dog Otis for company. When I am finally out of the house talking with other parents, it usually goes this way: "What does Heidi want for her birthday? Did I RSVP?" So, when I get the chance, like nap time or nighttime, I post to our blog, Been There (www.beenthere.typepad.com) about subjects ranging from end-of-the-school-year craziness to Tom Cruise's rants, and within hours if not minutes, parents -- from around the world -- respond with funny and meaningful comments.

As Mindy Roberts, who writes the Mommy Blog (www.themommyblog.com) and is also a DotMom, says, "In a blog, you not only get to compose your thoughts (hopefully with a glass of wine late at night), you get to do it in a stream without interruptions."

And, blogging is easy.

I am not new to the Internet and I have used it regularly for parenting information since our first child was born over eight years ago. But to me the parenting Web sites don't offer much "real" information. Chat rooms and message boards with their jargon and threads leave me confused. Blogging is not only accessible and something I can relate to, it is simple. It took less than an hour for Emily and me to set up our blog and, believe me, we are two ladies who don't know the first thing about HTML code.


Jay Allen, who writes The Zero Boss (www.thezeroboss.com), said that although people tend to focus on blogging as a buzz word, it is just the latest technology people have found to connect. "I remember when I was growing up people mimeographing handwritten newsletters. Blogging is a tool that makes communication easy and you can ignore the technical stuff if you want to."

For me it is like visiting a big, fun, friendly neighborhood.

As my co-blogger, Emily, said the other day, "The most surprising thing to me when we started our blog is that participating in this community is so entertaining."

When Emily posted to our blog, "I'd love some help here. I'm feeling starved of initiative and want to interject more laughter and silliness into my day-to-day with the kids," Becki King, from the blog Adventures of a Nervous Girl (www.adventuresofanervousgirl.typepad.com), commented almost immediately. "First, please don't call Social Services on us. We're crazy, but harmless. My 5-year-old decided that our family members were all part of a spaghetti dinner: he is spaghetti, his 2-year-old sister is meatball, I (mom) am sauce, and dad is cheese. Periodically my daughter will look at one of us and say, 'Hey, Meatball!' and that person looks back and says, 'No, YOU Meatball!' I don't know why, it's not that funny, but it cracks us all up," she wrote.

I have also noticed that with the added, protective layer of the Internet, you can get into meaningful discussions without the typical small talk.

"Especially with some of the subjects we deal with on DotMoms, it can be easier to open up with the Internet as a kind of shield. It offers a way to express what is happening in your life and, if you can find a safe place to do that, it only helps. There is a free spirited-ness to blogging that allows people to connect on many levels," Moos said.


With that said, if all the people I communicate with through our blog and DotMoms lived in Pittsburgh, I would probably not cross paths with many of them. Blogging breaks down barriers and, in many ways, levels the field.

"There is something about communicating via the Internet that allows people to be more real, more raw, more truthful and hopefully more helpful and supportive. The person is offering you help and or advice without noticing your shoes, your stroller, your choice of diapers, what you feed the children, or how well you are minding them. I don't think it substitutes for human contact, but I do think it can cut closer to the bone in many ways that polite interactions cannot," Roberts said.

Blogging also gives parents usable information fast.

When Amy Milgrub Marshall, a DotMom, wrote a post asking for advice about how to get her toddler to sleep in his own bed, she received 18 long comments back. Soon thereafter, she told me, her son was sleeping on his own.

I had to laugh the other day when on her blog Sharbean (www.sharbean.ca), Sharlene McKinnon posted a photo of a shrub and asked for help identifying it and she not only got a quick answer (pontentilla) from several people, but also suggestions on how to best care for it.

My husband likes Greg Allen's blog, www.DaddyTypes.com, because, among other things, Allen frequently posts locations of men's rooms with and without changing tables in Manhattan and elsewhere. To Allen's dismay, there are more withouts than withs.

There are naysayers, and Moxie (www.moxie.blogs.com), a New York City-based blogger who prefers not to use her real name, finds silly any negative assertions that parent blogging is vanity or luxury. "Parenting is a defining experience. Writing about it is nothing new, and writing about it in a funny or bitter way is certainly not new. My mom used to sit down at her manual typewriter and plunk out her thoughts about mothering -- she'd absolutely have had a blog if it had been an option. We need the contact, the validation that what we're doing is hard and dirty and worth it."


Being the mother to my four kids is the single most important thing I will ever do and the most valuable thing, ultimately, about writing a blog for me is that I am much more aware of the moments I have with them, and, in turn, am more aware of who I am -- and who they are -- in those moments.

The added benefit is that by going through the exercise of thinking through what occurs in a day and writing it down, I am also creating a permanent record of what life is like while raising them. If I did not have a few hundred people stopping by every day to see what Emily and I are writing about, I likely would not be chronicling in a diary or a scrapbook about the maelstrom of Otis and a snake in a fight to the death (Otis won) or the time our 3-year-old asked the dentist if we could take home the laughing gas.

Someday, I hope, my blog will tell my kids much more about themselves, and about the woman who raised them, than any photo album ever will.


August 30, 2006

Special | Not So Special

The following entry was written by our featured blogger, Kelly. It is one of her favorites that she wanted to share with Mommybloggers.

Special… having my own bathroom.

Not so special… having people need me only when I’m in the shower and try to talk through the door that’s 5 feet away when there’s water rushing through my ears.

Special… having friends ride the bike trails with me now that they know I ride with some frequency.

Not so special… having people stare at me when I’m riding like I look like some sort of prize in my bike helmet and tank and shorts (Oh, note to the Bubba who spoke to me through his pickup truck window: No, thanks. Not ever. No. No. No.)

Special… having my husband agree to make dinner even though he works full-time.

Not so special… just having a bowl of cereal while he spends time wondering what to make for dinner.

Special… having Morgan wake up early to make me muffins because he loves me.

Not so special… having Morgan eat all the chocolate chip muffins and leave the lemon poppyseed ones for me.

Special… getting a free lip gloss mailer from Bath and Body Works.

Not so special… having to spend $10 just to get the free lip gloss.

Special… listening to my husband tell me how proud he is that I just rode my bike 25 miles.

Not so special… listening to my husband say, “Wooooo… you stink!� after riding 25 miles.

Special… working up a sweat, even if it’s not an appreciable quality for those who have to smell me.

Not so special… boob sweat. What’s up with that?

Special… reading a comment on my blog from my friend Joe-in-the-Netherlands.

Not so special… reading a comment about missing my Date in Delft with him online because of my shit Monday. I’ll make it up to you.

Special… getting the low down on where Mallory is all the time even though she’s 20 years old and doesn’t have to tell me.

Not so special… wondering if “Going fishing� or “Playing ultimate frisbee� is a euphamism for “Getting drunk.�

Special… having my family do all the laundry since Mommy is so busy with reading and writing and taking class.

Not so special… having my family ruin my expensive Victoria’s Secret bras by putting them in the dryer.

This essay was originally published on Mocha Momma on June 27, 2006. If you want to read more by our incredible guest blogger, Kelly, visit her personal blog, Mocha Momma.

August 22, 2006

Medicated Mommy Madness

The following entry is a favorite from the archives of Citymama, written by our guest, Stefania Pomponi Butler.

Recently this Newsweek article about mothers taking on too much and burning out has been making the rounds on parenting websites and amongst my mom friends. It touches on some interesting points and, surprisingly, the author lays out some thoughtful solutions instead of the article being one big gripe-fest (which it starts out to be).

While I was reading it I could feel my shoulders starting to rise because I really feel for women who try to knock themselves out being the "perfect parent." I really think that mothers especially need to support each other more, talk to each other more, share with each other more to prevent this from happening. I am reminded of a recent episode of Desperate Housewives where Lynette's character totally flames out trying to be Supermom, and it's not until she reaches her lowest point that her friends admit that they have a hard time sometimes, too. Why wait until you or your friends hit rock bottom? I don't see the point. I share (and perhaps maybe overshare sometimes according to J.) my struggles all along the way in the hopes that it will make my friends or the three people who read this blog feel better. I no way, shape, or form do I pretend to be perfect. Most of the time I strive to be a "just good enough" mother. I blogged about my Libra View of Parenting last year. I don't have the energy to aim for perfection. That would take too much focus away from my precious reality-TV-watching-and-trash-magazine-reading time.

I am part of the generation of post-baby boom Girls Who Could Have Done Anything that the author describes. I'm in my mid-30's now, and looking back on my adult life so far, I feel like I have accomplished everything I wanted to do before having kids. I think that is the great advantage to having kids later on. So I'm an old mom. I've had a couple of different careers, seen the world, spent lots of time getting to know my husband. And I know enough to put myself, not my kids, first. It's not that my own needs are leaps and bounds beyond those of my girls. More like if this were a race of needs, it would be a photo finish. My needs are hundredths of a second in front of my kids' needs. But I'm still ahead.

While I am concerned about raising strong, kind, capable girls, I am far from being obsessed about being the perfect mother. I know a couple that put their child on the waiting list for "the right preschool" the day—THE DAY!—the child was born. I have seen parents stress about signing up for preschool and wondering if there will be any spots left in any preschool by the time their kid hits preschool age. I know of parents that drive themselves nuts trying to keep an all-organic, TV-free, wood-toy-only household. They live in fear of being judged by other parents. This makes me crazy. I'm the mom that stops at McDonald's for a Happy Meal on the way to playgroup and I don't give a shit what anyone thinks. And if my child is being an asshole to the other kids once we get there, I will say, "If my kid hits your kid you have my permission to discipline her. By all means, let her know hitting is 'not okay.'"

Ah, there. Didn't you just breathe a sigh a relief? Isn't it so much easier to just not care?

As a friend said in response to this article, "I am too lazy for that!" I agree. I am too lazy for that. I'm so lazy that when Bunny goes out with her sitter, five minutes before they are due home I am running upstairs to change out of my pajamas.

Recently I went to see my Internist for a post-partum check up. She asked how everything was going and I told her that I was feeling tired and overwhelmed. I wasn't sure if it was something beyond baby blues, but even with all the support I have around me, I was feeling like I was flailing. She said hang on a minute and then came back with a sample of Lexapro. She said, "Take it, you'll probably feel better in a few weeks." I asked her if it was okay to be taking this medication while nursing and she looked at me quizzically and replied, "Uh. You might want to just run it by your pediatrician." So I did. And my no-nonsense, tell-it-like-it-is, mother-of-three pediatrician said, "It hasn't been tested. Do you really want your kid to be a guinea pig? Why don't you try just getting more sleep. Let's work on night weaning and see how you feel."

Let me be clear: I am not knocking anyone's choice to seek treatment to feel better. It's all part of putting yourself first and I do support that. For my situation, her advice was right. Sleep, for me, is essential to my feeling capable, happy, and in control. When I don't get enough sleep, my world sucks and it's a sucky place for anyone coming into contact with it. So I am trying to put my own needs first and get enough sleep. If that means Wallie has to cry through one night time feeding then she's gonna cry. If I am wrecked in the morning, I can't be a good mom. (And, trust me, the girl does not need to eat 5 times a night anymore.)

I am concerned about the over-medication of mothers nowadays, though statistically, I'm not sure if mothers now are actually more medicated than our mothers were. I think many women in my parents' generation turned to other drugs or alcohol to help them get through the day. I know that, sometimes, a drink helps me to relax at the end of the day, and even as I am enjoying an evening glass of wine, I can see how easily it would be for some mothers to go from glass to bottle, into the pit of alcoholism.

So.

Whatever it is that sets you off about another mother's parenting choice, I want you to let it go. Don't judge, and let it go. Mama is bottle-feeding? Five year-old sucking on a pacifier? Juice in a toddler's sippy cup? Parents letting baby cry it out? Six year-old still riding in a stroller? Infant in daycare? Three year-old playing a video game? Check that judgment. Think about that mother, and how hard it is to be a mother and just let.........it.........go. (Updated to add: One exception to this rule? Speak out when a child's safety is in jeopardy. When I see kids not properly restrained in car seats, I go ballistic. You can, too.)

Childbearing Hipster has a great message about depression posted on her blog right now and I think everyone would do well to read it. And then I think that everyone just needs to relax.

Mothers, let's support each other. Really support each other. Let's not be afraid to admit when we need help or when we are concerned about our child's behavior or when we feel like we don't want to be a parent anymore and just wish sometimes we could go back to our child-free life. All those scary, hard-to-say-outloud things.

* No more living in fear of what others will think. That's no way to parent.
* No more judging. Worry about your own children.
* No more competing. Who cares anyway? Kids sure don't.

We are hurting each other
by doing these things. We are making our sisters feel terrible about themselves and their parenting choices. We are driving our sisters in droves to medication and self-medication. We are making them cry and feel inadequate. And ultimately it's our children that will suffer.

NO. MORE.

Originally published Feb 17, 2005. For more from the fantastic Stefania, visit Citymama.

August 15, 2006

Moms are the true experts!

The following essay was written especially for Mommybloggers by our featured guest, the beautiful Karen Rani.

Eight years ago, when I was pregnant with Dylan, I walked into a Starbucks on a Friday morning, as I did every Friday morning of my pregnancy, and ordered my weekly treat of a tall Mocha Frappuccino and a slice of Banana
Bread. It was 5:30 a.m. and I was on my way to work at the Big Box Store where I had met the father of this heartburn-inducing baby I was carrying.

The woman in front of me nearly whipped her own head off as she hissed, "Should you be drinking coffee while you're pregnant?"

"Should you be talking while you're brainless?" I quipped back.

It was on the way to work that day, that I realized, I was about to become an expert.

A parent.

Eight years later, I am proud of that day. I am proud to tell people I treated myself to a Frappacino every Friday of Dylan's gestation. I will also tell you that when that little bugger was 12 days late, I had a Kahlua and milk.

*gasp!*

Yes, I did.

And I don't regret it.

When the cross-eyed doctor told me I would feel better if I squatted during labour, (my first blog entry EVER!) I told her to go ahead and squat on the effing floor. When Dylan got sick, my instincts told me to take him to the ER. Those expert instincts saved his life.

I don't subscribe to parenting magazines. I don't read parenting books anymore. Someone gave me a toddler book when Thomas turned one and I still laugh when I read it. It says things like, "Don't make a face or say "ew" when your son has a bowel movement. Or, when he smears it all over his room. Whichever. Just don't make a face.

What?

Shit stinks. Life is full of shit that stinks.

By not saying "ew" and crinkling my nose, am I not being honest with my child? Am I showing him that it is okay to repress my own feelings to protect him from feeling, uh, shitty?

Huh?

The experts in the book also says you should give your children alternatives to the word "no." How about, "never," "not today," and "NOT!" Do those work any better?

What I'm getting at is, life can be shitty. People are going to say no to your children at every age of their lives. Why would you not want them prepared for that? Sure, give your children choices. You want them to grow up confident that they HAVE choices.

For example, let's say you want your little one to go to bed. The experts say to use phrases like, "Would you like teddy or bunny to go to bed with you?"

I say, "Why ain't your chunky ass in bed yet, boy?" in my best Brit-Twit accent, "Now pass me mah Cheetos." Dylan usually laughs, but he goes to bed.

Experts say, "Offer your children a choice of dips in order to get them to eat vegetables and other healthy foods."

I say, "A choice of dips? Do you think this is a restaurant? Eat your dinner for 4 points toward your X-Box." (Dylan has to get to 500 -healthy eating habits should kick in by 500, right?) And Thomas? He will eat ANYFINK.

Experts advocate talking, reasoning and positive reinforcement.

The experts that wrote this crap had robots for children. Or they lied. My guess is the latter.

The experts I know are Mommybloggers. Call them what you will, these women taught me it's okay to yell at your kids, to feel uncontrollable anger during PPD and beyond, to feed them pancakes for dinner, to steal from Thomas' "kiggygank" for a Frappucino, to obsess about constipation, diarrhea, barf, teeth, tummyaches, butt cream and oh so much more.

I have come a long way as a blogger in the last year and a half. And thanks to every Mommyblogger I have ever read, I have become a better mother because of all of your expertise, and very realistic experiences that you have shared. You are very important to us.

Thank you, from my little family, to yours.

Love Karen
xo

To read more by Karen, be sure to visit her personal blog Troll Baby and make sure you stop by Troll Baby Graphics if you are in the market for a blog make-over (because you know you are)!

August 11, 2006

Embarrassing Memory Lane

The following entry was written especially for Mommybloggers.com by Izzymom

I was reading a post tonight that got me thinking about a really embarrassing moment that I experienced about 10 years ago. Of course it didn’t feel like a moment. It felt like an hour. An excruciating, in-slow-motion hour that still makes me cringe to this day.

I cordially invite you to share in a little skate down embarrassing memories lane…

˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚˚

The boyfriend I had before I married my husband was an ass. Why I stayed with him for four years is mostly a mystery to me. I mean I understood that he manipulated me and guilt-tripped me into staying so many times when I was already out the door. But I never understood how anyone, even a guilt-inducing master manipulator could convince me to stay in a relationship that had become so totally dysfunctional and unsatisfying…but he always did.

Until one day when I walked out and never came back. We never really settled anything or hashed anything out. It was just over. Like that. And within a couple weeks, he had another girl living with him. It was then that I realized it wasn’t me that he had needed all those years. It could have been anyone. He just needed a warm body nearby because he hated to be alone. And that made me really angry with him for wasting four years of my life. And my pride was a little bruised. But I swallowed all that and moved on with my new boyfriend/future husband (who I happened to have met from the ex…nyah nyah!)

Fast forward a couple years. The huz and I are happily married. We’re doing great. Except me, forever hallucinating that I was fat, decide I need to get more exercise and conclude that the rollerblading craze that was sweeping the nation was the perfect way to achieve this. I nag the huz until he gets himself a pair of rollerblades, too, so we can do it together.

It’s gonna be GREAT FUN! Never mind that we are NOT exercising, fresh air, rollerblading kind of people. We’re doing it anyway, dammit!

So one day, I suggest that we rollerblade to our friend’s apartment and stop for a visit. I put on a cute white halter top and a pair of stretchy little shorts (it’s hot out!) and we proceed with the plan. We skate for a while and finally reach my friend’s apartment building but we don‘t see his car. He’s not home. Oh well…we turn around and start to go back the way we came.

As I’m crossing the road, I look to my right and I see it. The green VW bus that I knew so well is chugging down the street. It’s about a block away and coming right at me.

It’s HIM.

The ex.

I hustle to get out of the street, hoping against hope that we can get out of there without any interaction. I’m stiff yet spaghetti limbed. I’m in total slow motion. I’m all fucked up. And before I can do anything to stop it, I wipe out RIGHT IN FRONT OF HIM! On my ass!

I look at him through the windshield and our eyes meet. I’m positive he recognizes me despite my braid and sunglasses. I turn away so I don’t have to see his reaction. I can’t bear it.

I make it to the side of the street, clomp up on the grass and skate away on the sidewalk as fast as I possibly can. I don’t wait for my husband. I don’t stop to inspect my numerous bleeding wounds, including some pretty bad road rash on my upper thigh right below my butt. I just want to disappear before I die of embarrassment.

Once we were out of sight, I asked my husband if he thought there was a chance he didn’t recognize us. Please say yes!

“Uh no...I’m pretty sure he did,� said the huz, just before he broke into gales of laughter while trying hard to bite his lip and look somber out of respect for my beaten and bludgeoned ego.

And to this day, he is not allowed to speak of the incident under penalty of divorce.

----

For more from this week's guest, visit Izzy at her personal blog Izzymom or see what she thinks is cool at Cool Mom Picks. Oh, and be sure to visit her for your graphic needs at Designs by Izzy.

August 8, 2006

7 Things I Realized I Already Knew – BlogHer 2006

The following entry was written by Kathryn of Daring Young Mom.

1. I am a portly guppy, in a small school of fish, in a 20 gallon tank, in the largest pet store in the universe.

So, let’s say I’m the Queen Mother of Ro-Sham-Bo in my Seattle suburb. I head off to the USA Rock Paper Scissors League Championship and am completely slaughtered by the much more experienced and, dare I say, famous competitors. I find myself in total awe of them, only to watch them lose everything at the World Championships. Then I’m even more disillusioned to find that almost no one outside of the RPS subculture has even heard of THEM.


We’re all big. We’re all tiny. We all have a lot to say. We don’t always say everything we intend to and sometimes we say a whole lot more.


2. Size does not matter (unless you’re my publisher and then, yes, stats mean everything. Look how many people will buy my book when it comes out! You want to make ten bucks, right?).


The same way I don’t want my kids growing up knowing the square footage of our pad, I don’t want them knowing how many people read my blog. If by some miracle they’re proud of what I do and not mortally humiliated, I want it to be because they enjoy my writing, not because they think I’m famous with 20 people who live on the internet.


Some of my favorite bloggers have very small readerships but could easily write me under the table if I challenged them to a blog-off.


3. I look better in sexy lingerie.


At the close of the Next Level Naked session, a panel about how much of ourselves we choose to bear on our blogs, Maryam Scoble suggested that naked people are not all that attractive. She prefers a little sexy lingerie, covering up just the right parts and creating some mystery. I loved her analogy and felt that it meshed well with the level of disclosure I am comfortable with on my blog.


Nobody will want to read my blog if I step out into the internet each morning donning a fat parka and ski-pants. On the other hand, you really don’t want to know the status of my bowels, nor do I want to openly berate or embarrass people on my blog.


I want to be as real and open as I can but I also know I have a line. I’m just not sure how sexy I want my lingerie to be. What you may end up finding at my site are flannel pajamas but, by the power of grey skull, they will be attractive flannel pajamas.


4. If I write, I am a writer. End of story


5. Classifications are for Animalia> Chordata> Aves*.


Labels make it way too easy to marginalize or deify an entire group of people without ever looking at individuals. I am not a demographic, a focus group or a market share.


Some of the best moments I had at the conference were conversations with people outside my Technorati tag boundaries. I even found that I had a lot more in common with some of them than I did with many of the mommybloggers I met. If I had been too turned off by their lack of offspring and their constant chatter about their so-called “lives� to strike up a conversation, I would have had a much less enriching experience.


The interesting thing I found at BlogHer was that the same labels were being used by different people with completely opposite connotations. You can’t trust the labels to shield you any more than you can count on them to bring you down so let’s just toss them out with the rest of the useless drama in our lives.


6. The drama? She can kiss my Great Aunt Fanny.


I understand activism, standing up for truth, righteous indignation and all that jazz but more often than not I think “the drama� should hang out at the back of the short bus with her friends “the labels�.


There is so much genuine heartbreak, sadness and turmoil in the world. Why do we feel the need to continuously manufacture drama?


7. I need to get more sleep.


Arianna Huffington, who was oh-so-much more impressive than I expected her to be, said she wanted to start a “movement about sleep.� In her new book On Becoming Fearless she talks a lot about the role of sleep in our lives. She describes the debilitating effects of sleep deprivation and the awful toll it’s taking on our country.


At this point, my kids are sleeping well through the night so I should become as a little child and follow their example. In fact, they sleep even now. Blog out, ya’ll.

*The Birds

For more from this week's guest, visit Kathryn at Daring Young Mom.

July 21, 2006

I just have to figure out how he printed this.

I found the following tucked away in a corner of Henry's crib. I am so onto him.

Date: April 1, 2005
To: Child 4A0765B-1007@children.com, toddler_unit@children.com
From: Kevin, VP, Toddler Division
Subject: Quarterly Objectives

Happy new year, company members! As you know, our first quarter was a fruitful and productive one. By working together to delay our bedtimes, we acquired over 53,000 extra hours of valuable awake time. That’s 53,000 more hours of running in circles. 53,000 more hours of shaking our heads wildly and arching our backs. 53,000 more hours of the Parents straining to communicate that toothbrushes do not go in the diaper. We have seen the Parents falter and ultimately give way under our consistent efforts, and we are proud.

It should be mentioned that some of our members have made great strides in drastically limiting the variety of foodstuffs they allow to enter their face-holes. We are thinking especially of Child 3A0762C-0908, who now ingests only raisins and lukewarm water sipped from a plastic spork; Child 5B0755F-0528: ketchup on crackers and the occasional mashed grape; and, most breathtakingly, Child 8A0576L-0108: plain dried breadcrumbs licked off a moistened index finger.

For the second quarter of 2005, we’ve strengthened our resolve and shown what a little determination and a lot of screeching can accomplish. And we are ready for the next phase: Operation No-Pants.

Every morning without failing, the Caregivers initiate a dressing procedure that is tiresome at best and scratchy at worst. It distracts us from our viewing of Elmo and limits our access to our smooth smooth skin. Their motives are puzzling: either they are jealous of our smooth smooth skin or else are attempting to break our wills by imposing nonsensical rules and demanding that we comply. But they will not succeed, friends. Because we will resist.

So: no matter how sopping wet or poop-crammed your diaper is, refuse to let Caregiver remove it. Declare that diaper to be your FAVORITE DIAPER. Do not allow any larger beings to lay a finger on it. For motivation, imagine that said diaper is part of your body, like a real tushie over your tushie. If any attempt is made to remove it, you will scream. Remember: the Scream is your friend. Caregivers live in fear of the Scream. If you add to the Scream “No hit! No hit!� they’re sure to back away for fear of the authorities coming after them.

Once a clean diaper is on very little can stop them from dressing you. The soiled diaper is your last and best hope.

Now that you’ve mastered toddler-ese, use it! Declare your opinions at each and every turn, and make sure that they are as vague and baffling as your pronunciation. If Caregiver explains that dressing is a vital step in a traveling-to-playground initiative, screech, “Murfy! TOO MURFY!� Do not explain. Never explain.

But why do we resist, you ask? Why not get dressed and enter the playground, where fun could possibly had? Because, that’s why. Because because because. Because we must take every stand we are able to take. Also! Because Caregiver is deceiving you. There is another, better playground, a Naked Playground, with balloons and ice cream and cake. The soiled diaper will lead the way. This is true, we think.

Onward!

Kevin

Originally posted on May 16, 2005 - For more Alice, check her out at BlogHer 2006's Mommyblogging panel, and at Finslippy.

July 19, 2006

An entirely new perspective

The following essay was written by Janeen Armstrong of < destinations > journeys of a restless mind and Diary of a Single Mom on the Edge.

In my living room right now there is a ramp made of an old wooden shelf tilted up onto a puzzle box. It's left over from a couple of days ago when my son and I were sending his latest Lego creation careening across the living room and then skyward. He was very excited to have completed this particular model since we'd had to find the instructions online. Running back and forth between the box of parts and my laptop added an extra element of drama to the construction. Plus, I got to help. I found it surprisingly satisfying to take all those weird shapes and small plastic pieces and put them together bit by bit into something we could race around the living room. Building stuff is fun!

It was kind of like the surprise I felt when we were at a birthday party a coule of years ago and the reptile man came with crates full of snakes and iguanas and lizards. I was delighted by seeing them up close, and even touching and holding them. Sometimes I feel like I've gotten a key to a secret club, being allowed to climb up to the tree house and sit in on a meeting where I'd never been asked to join. Play fighting is a blast. Being a super hero is cool. I like spiders and dinosaurs and bats. I never imagined I could love this boy world so much.

I have to laugh at the woman who freaked out a little bit when she looked down at her newborn and saw a penis. I come from a girly world. Everybody thought I'd have a girl. I have a sister, my mom has a sister, the kidlet's dad has three. Even all those folks who claim they can tell the sex of your baby by the way you are carrying it when you are pregnant predicted a girl. So it's no wonder I was a bit surprised. Luckily, I figured out really quickly how little it mattered.

I've learned some other secrets from my years in the world of boys. I have an entirely new perspective on men, for one thing. Who knew that grown up men were really just boys in bigger bodies? Masculine behaviors that were once mysteries are starting to make sense to me. Even the gruffest man has some sort of endearing little boy trait that he can't entirely snuff out.

I sometimes think my life is a lot like a Lego car with no instructions. At first glance it seems that all I have is a jumble of pieces that make no sense. Pretty soon, though, I learn that I have what I need to figure it out. It doesn't matter that I'm a woman raising a son alone, our worlds are not so different as I might have feared. He can show me how things fit together, I know how to find help. Little by little our car is taking shape. Not only will it beautiful, but watch out, because it goes fast!

July 18, 2006

Makers of Car Alarms Should Be Shot, Or The Little Angel Cries Until She Pukes

The following entry is a favorite from the archives of Surrender, Dorothy.

Last night, the little angel was not into going to bed. My beloved was at a basketball game, so I decided to let her cry for a little while. I could hear the exhaustion in her voice and knew from the frequent eye-rubbing that she was genuinely tired.

After about fifteen minutes, the neighbor's car alarm went off. The little angel's cries took on a fever pitch. Now, there's a difference between letting her cry herself to sleep and letting her undergo genuine terror, so I went upstairs to reassure her everything was okay. As I opened the door, I saw her standing in her crib spewing white chunks all over the floor, her sheet and her pajamas. Thank goodness she had already thrown Tad the Singing Frog and Gray Kitty clear. The Bunny Slippers were also spared the wreckage.

I pulled her from the crib. "It's okay, honey," I said, holding her out at arm's length (difficult, since I think my recurrent repetitive stress injury had actually pulled a muscle last night - it's still quite painful on the day I'm SUPPOSED to get my long-awaited massage, dammit). "It's just a car. It's just a car." I put her on the floor to try to ascertain what to
clean up first. The vomit made a little puddle on the sheet and was dripping from the crib rails to the floor.

She followed me around the house as I gathered cleaning supplies, still sputtering. "Jess a cah," she said. "Jess a cah."

I pulled the sheets from her bed. She reached out to touch the vomit on the crib rail. "No, no," I said. "Yucky."

"Yucky. Jess a cah."

We cleaned up the floor - it's currently undergoing Resolve Therapy, but just then, there was no way I was going to subject her to the hated vacuum cleaner. I changed her diaper and her pajamas, wiped the snot, tears and vomit from her chin. Her blue eyes shone with love. "Jess a cah," she said solemnly.

"Yes," I said. "A car. Vroom, vroom. Not bad. Not scary." Well, not until she gets her license, anyway.

I put her back in her clean bed. She laid down obediently. "Sleepy," I said, and turned on the thankfully unscathed Tad. By the time he'd gone through six minutes till night-night, she was out.

I went downstairs to throw the stinky mess in the laundry, pondering if I'd done something wrong. I'm not a mean person. I don't mean to let my child cry until she pukes. This is the second time this has happened. The first time I was also letting her cry herself to sleep when the Ghetto Bird went over. This seems to only happen when she's already upset and then hears a scary, unidentified noise.

I called my parents. "The little angel cried until she puked again," I said.

My mother sighed. "It's okay, honey. You didn't do anything wrong."

"Do you think she'll live?" I asked. I am not a dramatic person AT ALL.

"Yes," Ma said. "Do you want to talk to your father?" This is an avoidance technique, but I accepted it. I felt oddly calm. I do know that she's going to live. Actually, I was really just glad it was all over and I might still get to drink my wine and watch a movie.

My father came on the line. "I think she'll be fine," he said. "We'll be there tomorrow." My parents are coming in tonight to watch the little angel while my beloved and I host the fourth annual Santa Pub Crawl. He dressed up like Santa so we can make asses of ourselves in our own neighborhood with our friends and whatever stragglers we can pick up along the way.

"Okay," I said. "That's all I had."

"Good night, honey," they said.

I sat back, drinking my wine, and thought of the memory I have of crying myself to sleep. There's only one, and I have no idea how old I was, except that I remember my bed being against the east wall of my bedroom, which I
don't think actually happened until I was a little older. I do remember the night, though. I cried and cried - probably for a very long time - the little angel comes by her extreme emotional outbursts honestly - and then finally realized that nobody was going to come. I remember screaming a little harder upon this realization, then deciding since it wasn't working that I would just go to sleep. This memory is helpful when I'm letting the angel cry.

I've read literally hundreds of entries on various parenting message boards from parents who are not willing to let their children cry for more than ten minutes. We've been known to let the angel cry for hours in our quest for
sleep. We're not mean - we love her very much - but we do know that it's a hard world out there for kids who can't learn to depend on themselves. She's cried a hundred times when we left her at daycare or with a sitter,
and she doesn't cry anymore. She willingly runs off to play with her friends, wielding her banana, when I drop her off now. This morning she didn't even look back when she ran into the room.

I do want to give her the gift of self-reliance. Letting her cry herself to sleep may seem harsh - especially when vomit is involved - but I believe she does know that we would never let her honestly suffer if something is very
wrong or she is very terrified. I think she's also starting to learn that in the battle of wills, we're equally matched.

Nothing, NOTHING breaks my heart more than the sound of her crying. On the flip side, at this juncture in my parenting career, there is also little better than the sweet sound of silence.


Read more from the wonderful Rita at Surrender, Dorothy
. Right now!

July 14, 2006

Life in the Hundred-Acre Wood

Mira, my three year old, is currently in her Winnie the Pooh costume. She wore it yesterday, and the day before that, and the day before that, too. In fact, she has worn it just about every day since Halloween – not Halloween 2005, mind you, but Halloween 2003. The costume is a size 3T. She’s been a size 4T for about six months, so it’s starting to get a bit challenging stuffing her into the darn thing. I keep telling myself that it won’t be long, now. Soon, she will absolutely not be able to fit in it. For now, she somehow manages to strain herself in awkward positions in order to wrestle her head into the hood part to zip herself completely up. The costume itself is getting quite gritty-looking. I’ve had it dry cleaned, but the puffiness of Pooh’s belly is disappearing, and the fluffiness of Pooh’s fur is becoming more matte.

Minutes after Mira is outfitted in Pooh, our house transforms into the Hundred-Acre Wood. Mira starts addressing me as “Kanga,� her sister Leela as “Roo,� and refers to my husband Brian as “Tigger.� “Kanga, can I have some honey for lunch?� she calls. “Kanga, Roo is sitting on my favorite book!� And, “When is Tigger coming home from work?�

I must confess. I actually enjoy being a part of this tale, this web of imagination she spins. I’d rather be Kanga, some days, when Roo has had an all night nursing session, or when I forgot to pay a bill, or when my car won’t start because the battery is dead, yet again. Kanga likely possesses a vast supply of patience, so that when Roo removes his diaper and empties all of its contents on her prized Pottery Barn rug (bought on clearance, mind you), she simply inhales deeply, clears her conscience of all ill thoughts, and sinks, resignedly but contently, to her knees to scrub out the stain. I, on the other hand, pat myself on the back for not using the really bad curse words, raise my voice a little too high, exaggerate my exhale to release my very agitated anger, and afterwards, get that sinking feeling of remorse for my overreaction. I imagine, though, that in the face of frustration or anxiety (which I doubt she ever even feels), Kanga probably never yells at Roo and then suffers from profound guilt afterwards.

Unlike me, Kanga has probably been on a date with Roo’s father within the past three months. Kanga probably still gets butterflies in her stomach on a regular basis, the result, no doubt, of her uncanny ability to nurture her romantic relationship with her partner, despite the mind-numbing exhaustion of infant caretaking and unending household chores. I can see Kanga now, reading cover to cover self-help books on how to keep the fires burning, while I snuggle up with the latest installation of Harry Potter.

Although I still second-guess my decision to stay at home full time, Kanga would probably never regret quitting a part-time job for full time child-rearing. On the contrary, Kanga probably spent most of her younger years dreaming of the day when she would become a mother, her strong maternal instincts kicking in even as she played with baby dolls or stuffed animals – a startling contrast to my own girlhood surrounded by leggos and matchbox cars.

And while Kanga is busy knitting sweaters, inventing numerous, age-appropriate crafts, and otherwise ensuring that Roo receives her undivided attention during his every waking hour, I hide from my children in my home office, trying desperately to type a few words at a time, in between refereeing squabbles, kissing boo boos, or refilling sippy cups. And when I have a few moments of clarity, I fantasize about the occasional, affordable childcare that would allow me to enter a grocery store unencumbered by my two girls.

Kanga doesn’t yearn to live closer to the friends she grew up with – after all, she lives with them together in the Hundred-Acre Wood. She had support from her life-long friends, I suppose, when Roo’s colic nearly drove her mad, or when he had low weight gain and she was unnecessarily panicked by pediatricians, or when she cried some nights, not knowing why, because of the sheer amount that motherhood required of her. I can just see it now, Pooh surprising her with a jar full of honey, Tigger offering sprightly advice to cheer her up, Owl calming her over a cup of hot tea, and Rabbit picking the finest vegetables from his garden, so that Kanga wouldn’t have to worry about making dinner that night.

Yes, while I envy Kanga her pleasant, complacent nature, and roll my eyes at her seemingly intrinsic ability to mother, many days, when Mira asks to put on her Pooh costume, I am grateful she feels the need to be someone else, because sometimes I do, too. And when my daughter finally outgrows it, the mother in me won’t really miss the Pooh costume itself, but will sorely miss the little girl who once fit into the costume, and the much needed breaks from reality that she provided.

Read more from the lovely Anjali Enjeti-Sydow at Life in the Hundred-Acre Wood

July 11, 2006

Unenthusiastic Dad Day

The following entry is a classic from the archives of Fussy.org, written by our featured guest, Mrs. Kennedy.

Wednesday, June 26, 2002

Today was Unenthusiastic Dad Day in the park.

The scene: I am pushing Jackson in the swing as Unenthusiastic Dad (who looks vaguely like Gary Sinise) places Cute Blond Son in the next swing.

Me: (smile at newcomers)
subtext of smile: "Hi! I'm willing to chat about babies."

Cute Blond Son: (gives me huge smile back)
subtext of smile: "Wow! You're a Woman! My mom's a Woman, too! Women are incredible!"

Me (encouraged by big reaction): "Hey! Look at all those teeth!"
subtext of statement: Talking about a child's teeth is a way to roughly guess his or her age, leading to further conversation about babies.

Unenthusiastic Dad: (bends slightly to look at son's teeth, straightens up, does not reply)
possible subtext of silence: (a) "Yup, he's got teeth all right"; (b) "How dare you fucking look at my son's teeth! I am so furious at you right now that I can't speak"; or (c) "Que?"

Me: (silent smiling, swing pushing)
subtext of silence: "Okay, fuck you, too."


Yes, I am about to get my period, why do you ask?

Can't get enough Mrs. Kennedy? Get yourself a strong cup of something and head over to Fussy.org.

June 27, 2006

An essay from Jen B of Jen and Tonic

The following essay was written by Jen B of Jen and Tonic:

I wasn’t really that popular throughout my school career. In fact, I spent much of my life from pretty much Kindergarten onwards wondering what made me so different from the girls who were more popular than I was. You know the girls. Maybe you were even one of them. I started the extreme scrutiny in grade 7. Grade 7 is when some other kids joined our school because their school didn't have grade 7. We all moved to a different (And larger) school for 8-9 and then another across a walkway for 10-12. The popular girls from the new schools in grade 7 seem to sense who was already cool and they amalgamated into one cool entity. Those of us who were lesser called them the "fakies". As if being popular make them insincere. I would occasionally try to worm my way into the cool group, only to be subtly or even not to subtly dismissed. Carolyn M. telling me I smell via a note passed in Math class for instance.

I remember crying at the end of grade 7 knowing that we were moving to a bigger school with even more kids who made up this invisible and impenetrable group of cool. I examined every detail of myself by the time I went to Junior High in grade 8. I spent a lot of the summer between seven and eight memorizing Seventeen magazine in the hopes that my fabulous wardrobe would be my "in" for being popular. I wanted to be in the upper echelons of Junior High cliquedom so badly. The new threads did not help. At one point I was called a "fucking punker" (1982) while wearing purple and grey striped pants. I did meet some friends that I hung around with, I sort of bounced around a bit from best friend to best friend, but I finally met Pam. Pam also owned striped pants and was beautiful. If she wasn't in the popular group, surely something was amiss. Pam was my maid of honour at my wedding.

Things went on this way. I would occasionally ask others what they thought the big deal was with Laurie or Lisa or Sammi. No one could concretely tell me why they were so "it". I mean Laurie even cheated in French all the time and never got caught. Surely someone so dumb shouldn't be so popular. Plus, she still had mall bangs when they were clearly on the way out.

In the summer between grade 10 and 11 I got a part-time job at a clothing store. Despite the lack of success with infiltrating the group, I ended up defining who I was by what I wore and how many different outfits I had. Don't even get me started by how many fabulously large pairs of earrings I owned. I came back to grade 11 with the nicest leather jacket anyone had ever seen. I saved for it and got it with my staff discount. It was stunning, amazing. How could I own such a jacket and not be totally cool? Apparently it was possible. I slumped along grade 11 much the same way as ever. The difference was my anxiety disorder was at full-tilt and my close friend Pam had been hospitalized several times for depression. Being popular didn't have the same cache as in previous years.

In grade 12 I was just glad that it was almost over. A girl who had tormented me from grade 7-10 had left and things didn't seem so bad. I still had excruciating anxiety, but University was next and that seemed like an endless opportunity to be popular in some way or another. I could join clubs or run for student council or take Drama classes. I could meet new people, people who didn't know me.

Near the end of grade 12 when we were planning our "Grad" the graduating class had to vote on a class historian. Someone who could provide an overview of our high school experience. I ran, I won. Me, not the popular girls who ran, but me. There were actually two class historians, me and a popular guy. What luck. I could brush elbows with cool while writing a speech. Check out here for a funny story about him. So, the speech was a big hit and I felt slightly vindicated for the years of sub par-popularity.

With high school over, I went to the local university, which is huge. It's even larger now, but in 1987, they had a population of about 27,000 full-time undergraduate students. I think that is even large-ish by American standards. I over estimated my ability to mix and mingle in such a huge situation. I did meet some new people, some of whom I am still friends with. The anxiety disorder also played a large roll again in University. I was scared and nervous and anxious about going out with large groups of people. My friend Pam didn't join me at University and I ended up feeling more isolated in my first year than ever.

In my second year of University my anxiety peaked. I admitted myself into the outpatient hospital at the University Hospital and was treated there both in individual and group therapy from October to April of that year. Truthfully, the therapy did little for me. I was too young for the group setting and too functional. I did manage to fail calculus twice that year while maintaining an almost full course load and for 4 months I was at the hospital everyday for 4 hours a day. The turning point was drugs. The legal kind. I saw a psychiatrist who put me on some fabulous anti-anxiety medication.

But really, this is a post about being popular. I took the next semester off and went to Hawaii for 3 weeks with Pam. The following semester I volunteered for University Peer Counselling and some excellent people who I am still very close to today. But, the biggest step of all was going more than half way across the country to finish my Bachelor's Degree. The anxiety had gotten so bad that I wasn't even sleeping away from my parents house near its peak, and now here I was moving far far away where I knew NOBODY. I started at the University of Windsor the following September.

University of Windsor sits like a toque on Detroit. Campus is located under the Ambassador Bridge connecting the two cities and I had to walk through a graveyard to get to classes from my residence. A bit of a rocky drunk filled start in Windsor, but I was finally something I always wanted to be: popular. I lived in "mature" student residence and met some great people. They liked me. Sure, I drank a lot, so I could be remembering it a bit differently, but people really liked me. I ended up making friends with the two coolest girls in all my residence as well as the coolest girl in my classes and we all lived together the next year. Campus was small and I knew people whenever I went somewhere. The bouncer at our favourite pub loved my tall gorgeous roommate and we never waited in line. I was homesick at first, but it was a great experience. There was nothing wrong with me anymore. I wasn't too fat, too loud, too quiet, my hair wasn't too curly, and my pants weren't too striped.

It was a sense of acceptance that enabled me to live my 20s feeling much better and self-assured. I was able to function in the workplace without feeling left out and isolated. There was no longer something instrinsically wrong with me that prevented people from liking me enough.

When I composed this entry (in my head), while lying in bed the other night I wasn't sure why. I thought, yeah, I could ramble on about not being cool, but why? Why? Because this is why I have a blog I think. Not necessarily to be cool or popular. But because my blog is my mirror. Somewhat in traffic and comments, but also because it exists. Its mere existence makes me visible after feeling invisible and unimportant for so long. It is sometimes easier to know that someone is reading than listening. I can't see your blank faces and wonder what you are really thinking about while I tell you some story about stealing Virgin Mary statues off of people's lawns while drunk.

June 14, 2006

Letters Never Sent, Issue #1

The Following Entry was written by Buzz from Buzzstuff:

Bob and Buzz.jpeg

Dear-Dad,-Father,-Pop,-Pa,-Daddy

Dear Bob,

Hi. How’s it going? Long time, eh? Let’s see, at last count, it was approximately 28 years. Wow! Time really flies when you’re having….well, time just really flies, I suppose.

I guess I should catch you up on the goings on in my life. Ok, here we go. Since I last spoke to you I have had several different jobs, none of much import, married a very nice girl, played in a church softball league, had a son, got divorced from that very nice girl, met another very nice girl, married into her family of three, and started up a saltwater aquarium. Yeah, that’s pretty much it in a nutshell. And while they say the devil’s in the details, I see no need to go into them here.

I have wondered, of course, what you have done. What jobs have you held? What music do you like? Are you happy? Have you ever brutally killed anyone? I wonder these things about you not because you are my father so much, but more as I wonder these things about a lot of people that I have lost contact with. I feel a little guilty that I don’t wonder more about you but hey, whatever.

Oh, and speaking of guilt, let’s chat that up a bit, shall we? After you and Mom got divorced, I think that the traditional thing to do would have been to feel like it was somehow all my fault. I never did. I always felt like it was the fault of you two. And now, after going through a divorce of my own, with three kids involved, I think I probably got that one right.

I did, however, think for a while that you not keeping in touch with me was my fault. I guess that’s natural, wouldn’t you say? Then, for a while, I thought it was all your fault. But now that I’m grown, I think that maybe it wasn’t anyone’s fault as much as it was just what happened. Do you know what I mean? No fault to dish out, it’s just the way you are. And, sadly, it’s just the way I am too. Two people inflicted with a major case of ‘outta sight, outta mind’. We were doomed from the start. If you’re anything like me, and I have a sneaking suspicion that you are, the way that you feel about this situation now is

Oh well.

And that’s really the only source of guilt that I have. I feel a little guilty that I don’t feel, well, guilty. Here, let me be clear. I’m not mad at you. I never was. I don’t dislike you. In fact, I think you’re probably a swell guy. I mean, look at me, after all. With a kid like me, you can’t be all bad, right? No, I hold no grudges or feelings of ill will against you at all. What I feel mostly is just

Oh well.

So another Father’s Day approaches and my thoughts, naturally, make their way to you and I think of the things that I know we share. Sense of humor, blue eyes, short attention span, dazzling good looks, love of Diana Ross (but only when she was with the Supremes!). And I think of my three boys and how you have helped me to decide that I will not share your sense of fatherhood. You have helped me to decide that I will always keep in touch with them. I will always respect their decisions (well, almost always) and I will forgive them their trespasses. They deserve at least that.

And as for you, Bob Bubba Robert Dad, I wish you health, happiness, love and wealth beyond your wildest dreams. I don’t think that we will ever need to get together and talk things out but I really do wish you well.

Happy Father’s Day.

Your son,

David.

May 23, 2006

Coffee is not my friend.

The following essay was written by Jen of Not Calm Dot Com:

Sunday night I got between the girls in their bed to cuddle with them until they fell asleep. It’s our normal routine, although Saturday night Willow was so sleepy she just crashed on the foot of the bed sometime during the nighttime rush of tooth brushing and pajama putting-oning. The window in their room is open until it gets cold again in November, so we could hear the rain falling and the car tires spraying water as they went down our street. It took the girls awhile to get settled, but they were pretty quiet and that gave me a minute to go over the to-do list in my head and realize that I didn’t get nearly enough taken care of today.

And that was when I came to an awful, horrible realization that might change my life in a way I can only think of as really, really bad. I’ll steal from Lemony Snicket here and say that right now, you should just stop reading.

I need to give you some backstory, and I will try to be brief even though my talent lies in making a short story long and not the other way around. It’s all mushed up, so I’ll just go in chronological order.

Okay. Sometime last year, Derek linked to this study about spiders and drugs. He pointed out that the spiders spinning the most useless webs were not the spiders sniffing glue, snorting coke, or shooting up into their tiny little spider appendages. It was the spiders on caffeine that did the worst. Spectacularly worse, in fact. I chose to fool myself into thinking that this was yet another urban legend, because although Derek would not be fooled, he is not above fooling others. And I continued to drink my coffee, ferociously.

Alright. Sometime this year, like two Fridays ago, I decided to do this “eating plan� thing that begins with three weeks of a detox diet. The forbidden items for the first three weeks include, but aren’t limited to: sugar, dairy, gluten, eggs, peanuts, alcohol and caffeine.* I am so proud to say that I stopped drinking coffee. It was H A R D for me to do, but I did it. About 48 hours or so after my last cup, I even took a nap, in the middle of the day. Luckily, I wasn’t driving at that particular time, because that nap would not be denied.

So. This past Friday night Willow fell asleep on her bed at something like 5 p.m. It was certainly before supper, because I remember saving her something to eat. But she slept so long that I just decided to let her be, which ended badly for me at 2 a.m. on Saturday when she woke up all refreshed and asked to go to the park. I was able to get her to doze off and on by nursing her until 5 a.m. And that was profoundly stupid, because she slept, but I did not. I was busy thinking “Yeow! This ain’t fun and it hurts!� At 5 I admitted defeat and we got up and played blocks and had breakfast. Still, Saturday I cranked out a ton of work, mostly in the boys bedroom which I transformed. (By the way, how would you punish a child who left a grape popcicle to melt on the top bunk? I was too busy trying to imagine that scenario to do more than say, “DUDE! What made you think THAT would lead to anything good??�)

Saturday afternoon I was very sleepy, and so I had a half cup of coffee (with unsweetened, gluten-free soy milk). It totally worked its magic and got me through the day. Well, Sunday came and we all know that Sunday morning is made for coffee consumption. Made. For. It. Especially this Sunday morning, which was grey and windy and rainy. So, I cheated and I toxed myself with first one, then two, half-cups of coffee in that really big mug my mom brought me from Paris. That adds up to two cups, easy. Probably more.

You totally know what I figured out tonight, as I reflected on the fact that I didn’t get things done as planned today. As I berated myself for being so scattered that I had to go to the shoe store twice because I got Sophie the wrong size sandals, when I know her size. As I realized that I forgot to make some phone calls and didn’t get that thing ready to go in the mail.

Coffee is not my friend. Coffee keeps me far from any form of efficiency. It has to be goodbye forever, and not just for three weeks. If it wouldn’t have woken everyone up, thereby creating much more work for me, I’d have thrown a screaming, foot stomping fit that would have put both my girls to shame and scared my boys half to death.

Decaf recommendations graciously accepted. Thank you.

*I know it sounds like something the skeevy Opus Dei guy from the Da Vinci code would do to himself when he was feeling in need of real punishment, but actually, the food is excellent and I’m never hungry. If you want the title of the book, email me. I might wear out my welcome if I’m hawking some guy’s book on the MommyBloggers blog, you know? And I apologize for the book/movie reference; I am so sick of hearing about it that I thought it would be funny to add to the very thing that annoys me!

May 17, 2006

Crazy Is As Crazy Does

The following entry is a best-of from the archives of The Big Yellow House.

I come from a long line of crazy women. Not crazy in an eccentric sort of way. No, I mean crazy in the should-be-strapped-down-to-a-table-and-have-electroshock-therapy kind of way.

Today I joined the illustrious women in my family.

I was at my OBGYN appointment and the doctor asked me how I was, how the post partum depression was. I answered that I was fine. And just to illustrate how fine I was, I burst into tears. I am fine. But I'm not fine.

I'm not angry and crying anymore. I don't walk through the house slamming things down on tables and randomly yelling at innocent people, though that is more a testament to my self control than a lack of desire to do so.

If you were to see me out grocery shopping, I would seem surprisingly normal. I wouldn't yell or make a scene, even if you cut me off with your cart and grabbed the last package of hamburger buns. I might even smile and make a joke about it. But inside I'd want to tear your face off and then stomp on it for good measure.

But I've been told recently that this isn't normal? People always comment to me that I am so "calm" and "peaceful" and "patient" and they want to know my secret. I never know what to say because those words do not describe how I feel. At least not lately.

I don't know how to describe how I feel now, other than a resigned sadness. It's like a aura that hovers in the air around me, almost palpable at times.

The doctor asked me if I had friends that I talked to. She seemed a bit worried when I asked, "Do you mean in real life?" and clarified, "Well Chris, I don't mean imaginary friends."

That made me laugh because I never thought of the people I know via the internet as imaginary per se. But from now on I will, because it makes me seem even crazier. Also, I discovered that hysterically laughing and crying simultaneously at the doctor's office, will make her rip out that script pad faster than the speed of light.

Well that and when she asked me about hobbies and what I like to do in my free time, I didn't want to mention my imaginary friends again or even mention the internet. Because as we all know, nothing screams crazy like "plays on the internet". So I said shopping.

Which would have been a fine answer, I think, except that she asked shopping for what? And I blurted out, "Groceries!" Good God almighty why would I say that.

It's a good thing I didn't mention the internet, because that would have seemed crazy.

**********

After we talked medication,the doctor went to her vast supply closet and pulled out four boxes, four weeks worth of pills. She carried them back into the room and shook one in front of my baby son.

"It's like a little rattle!" she said as she shook it in front of him and tried to hand it to him.

"It's like a little rattle for the babies with crazy mothers" I blurted out, just in case there was any lingering doubt in her mind that I needed those drugs.

But the more I thought about it, the more I thought about what a fabulous idea that would be. Imagine walking through the store and your baby is holding onto his favorite Prozac rattle. Suddenly you come across a cart where he spots a baby just like him shaking a Zoloft rattle. They could exchange knowing glances and smiles.

It would be like a baby secret handshake for, "My mom is nuts, too!"

I think the pharmaceutical companies should take note. There is a vast untapped market out there.

Read more by the lovely Chris at Notes From The Trenches of Motherhood.

May 9, 2006

Mothering a Baby, the Third Time Around

The following essay was written especially for Mommybloggers by Kris of WonderMom.

My oldest child, Ben, turns 6 years old in two weeks. Six! I can't believe how big he's gotten, and how smart. He knows, for instance, that girls wear lipstick but boys don't (usually), the best guns shoot blades (sharp ones), and if he climbs up the shelves to steal candy one more time today, mommy's head will pop off (he's seen it happen).

So what have I learned in the past six years? I've learned that I still have a lot to learn. My youngest, Ava, is 10 month old, so I've got at least 17 more years of hardcore parental schooling ahead of me to figure it all out. For now, though, just as Ben's still a small boy, in many ways, I'm still a green mom.

Except with the baby. This is my third time mothering a baby and I have to say, I have changed a lot in six years. I may not be smarter but, in many situations, I seem to have gained some perspective.

Situation: Sun shines in the baby's face.

Then: Panic. Immediately do anything necessary to stop said sun from accosting my baby's eyeballs further, including throwing myself on top of her; covering her stroller in a large blanket turning it into a traveling, sweltering tent; or pinning blankets over the car windows.

Now: See that she has tightly closed her eyes and feel proud that she's learned to work her eyelids.

Situation: Nap time.

Then: Become a Nap Nazi, ensuring total silence throughout the house and, in fact, the neighborhood. Refuse to close kitchen cabinets, hurl myself on the ringing telephone, contact the neighbor to request that her son not play basketball between 1 and 4 pm, and knock on the window of any parked car playing loud music within 200 yards of my house. (One woman was so mortified that she brought me flowers the next day.)

Now: Find myself putting her clothes away while she sleeps two feet away in her crib. Forget where I am and yell to the boys while still in her room, so that she startles awake and emits screams of sheer terror.

Situation: Fussy baby.

Then: Carry him all over the house, in the sling, on my hip, in the Baby Bjorn, even if that means the laundry doesn't get done and dinner doesn't get cooked.

Now: Well, I still do that. Although I put her down long enough to make PB&Js for the boys and wash a load of urine-soaked bed sheets.

Situation: I'm in the bathroom, and the baby starts crying in the other room.

Then: Wipe as fast as I can and run to her, buttoning my pants on the way.

Now: Finish up, wash my hands, dry them, check myself in the mirror, pull squash out of my eyebrow. Go see why she's crying.

Situation: Mealtime.

Then: Steam and mill each entree by hand. At least three times a day, get down on my hands and knees to clean every crumb off the floor and wipe every speck of sludge off the high chair.

Now: Clean the floor once a day. However, sometimes I forget and realize I could feed a small village, or an army of 12 billion ants, with the contents of my dining room floor. The high chair? When we took it out of the basement for baby No. 3, it had food on it from baby No. 2. What does that tell you about how it looks right this minute?

Situation: Separation anxiety.


Then: Feel happy that my baby loves me the best. Buy into the Dr. Sears' claims and carry him everywhere, leaving him when necessary with my mother. When Brian and I go to the movies, have palpable anxiety over his well-being and struggle to not call my mother for the eighth time in two hours.

Now: Feel a twinge of fear when I see that my baby loves me best. Remember how Dr. Sears' betrayed my trust. Leave the baby with trusted friends and family at every opportunity. Realize six hours into a date with my husband that I forgot to leave any expressed milk behind. Oops!

Situation: Brian and I relax while watching some prime time television. The baby's shrieks come piercing through the monitor.

Then: Feel my blood pressure rise as I climb the stairs. Pick the baby up and pace the floor, singing, rocking and eventually, always, nursing.

Now: Brian's blood pressure rises as he runs upstairs. I get myself a beer and sprawl out on the couch with the newspaper or Tivo remote. Reaching my arm over to the coffee table, I nudge the volume down on the monitor.


I think that last one, especially, shows how much I've grown as a mother. Don't you?

May 5, 2006

Pregnant with Possibilities

The following entry was written by special guest Lucinda of Suburban Turmoil .

“Hey, where’d you put my birth control prescription?�

I was getting ready for bed last night when I realized that my husband had picked up my prescription on his way home from work and forgotten to tell me where he’d left it.

Blearily, he opened his eyes and lifted his head from the pillow. “I think it’s on the kitchen table. Or I might have left it in the car.� His head fell back to the pillow with a whump. “Do you need me to go get it?� he asked in a muffled voice.

“Well, if you don’t, I might get pregnant.� I put my toothpaste back in the drawer and looked up. He was gone. Just like that. Out to the car. I had never seen him move so fast.

I smiled to myself. I might have hit on something here. I imagined the possibilities.

“Hubs? Do you mind cleaning the toilets this week? Something about the chemicals… I might get pregnant.�

“Darling, I really need to hit that sale at Macys. Otherwise I could lose my motivation to fit in my clothes and end up getting pregnant.�

“Sweetie? You need be the one to make the girls go to bed from now on. I’ve heard that stress can cause birth control failure and what if I get pregnant?�

Hubs and I have been talking a lot about having another baby. We want to. We really do. But not today. And not tomorrow. And not until after the rafting trip in June that we’ve already paid for. And not until we make a little more money. And not until I’ve taken prenatal vitamins for at least three months. And not until I’ve lost that last ten pounds. And not until we figure out where we’ll put another baby in this three bedroom house that already holds five people.

I’m not surprised that Hubs isn’t quite ready yet. Because as hard as another pregnancy will be on me and my body, I know it’s going to be hard on him, too. He’ll have to take on more housekeeping and childrearing duties, in addition to his job. He’ll have to put up with my crazy mood swings, my ballooning body and my two body pillows in bed each night (nicknamed Ned and Ted during the last go round). He’ll have to rub my swollen feet each night. And he’ll have to watch another child take another slice of my attention away from him.

So until I do get pregnant, I might as well use the situation to my advantage.

This morning, I tried it again.

“Honey? Would you mind taking out the trash before you leave?�

�I can’t,� Hubs replied, dashing by me. “If I do, I’ll be late for work.�

�If you don’t, I might get pregnant.�

He gave me a strange look, then smiled before quietly lifting the trash bag from the can and taking it with him out the front door.

May 2, 2006

Preparation is in the Eye of the Beholder

The following essay has been written especially for Mommybloggers by our featured guest, Kristen Chase.

I never thought that I was the mothering type. I mean, don’t get me wrong. I loved kids. But so does everyone when you can return them back to their parents before all hell breaks loose. I’m not sure if it was the fear that I’d turn out like my parents, or because I thought that maybe I wasn’t cut out for what I imagined mothering would be. But either way, I had determined that my caretaking skills were put to their best use with my two rotten puppies, and I was fine.

Then I got pregnant.

I was fairly certain that I was probably going to be the most ill prepared mother. I had never ever held a newborn baby or even seen one outside of “A Baby Story,� and I was quite (and perhaps oddly) attached to my low cut jeans and high heels. But, I did what all mothers do, and I worried more about pooping on the delivery table and how to politely tell the doctor not to slice my perineum than I did about the actual mothering part.

So, when my daughter appeared in my arms, I felt a sense of accomplishment, as not only had I birthed a beautiful baby girl, but I had avoided the dreaded poop and snip. However, that’s about ALL that I had avoided. I realized all too quickly that my silly worries about enemas and shaves were the least of my concerns. Prayers to the sleep gods? Scabby Nipples? Green sludgelike Poop? Feeling older than Joan Rivers really is? No one prepared me for this.

But, as it turns out, I was wrong. It’s funny how the world has a way of enlightening you in the most mysterious of ways. See. I was a college music professor. And I soon realized that all the baby books in the world could not have prepared me better than my first college music class.

I’m pretty sure that listening to 15 presentations on “Why Rascal Flatts is the coolest band ever like because they are so rocking and like so cute and really cool� will prepare anyone for the sleepless nights with a screaming baby. In fact, I’d probably take the screaming baby because at least I can stick my boob in his mouth to get him to stop.

I hate to compare breastfeeding poop with bad writing, mainly because I don’t want to insult the poop, however, after reading some of the worst writing about “that Mozart dude� and “the coolest deaf guy who wrote songs,� I’m thinking that closely examining my daughter’s poop was nothing.

And scabby nipples are easy compared to the pain I experienced teaching voice class to a group of non-music majors. Not only do I never want to hear “Yesterday� ever again, but I’ve decided that listening to a recording of my class would be way better prep for the pain of breastfeeding than the “toughening of the nipples� rituals that some mothers endure.

But I think the worst thing is how having a child has aged me. I look back at pictures from just three years ago and I’m pretty sure I could pass for my own aunt right now. However, my rapidly wrinkling mug is no comparison to having an entire class of students tell me they have never heard of Billy Joel. Not.one.Ever.

So, I guess I was cut out for motherhood. Sure I struggled, stressed, and cried. But I have also laughed, rejoiced, and smiled more than in the past two years than in my whole entire life. However, now that I’ve taken on a new career of writing and blogging, I’m afraid to think about what the world is preparing me for as my daughter gets older. Maybe the spammers and trolls are getting me ready for the teenage years. I guess when I hear “You suck� or “I hate you,� I can tell her “Well, honey, it’s not like I haven’t heard that before.�

For more writing by Kristen, be sure to visit her at her personal blog Motherhood Uncensored and the fun Cool Mom Picks.

April 19, 2006

Noms De Mom

The following entry has been written by this week's special guest, Asha Dornfest.

I’m not a Mother. Mothers are elemental, all-seeing, fierce when necessary. I’m too tired to be fierce.

Am I a Mom? I try not to dress like a mom, I’m not a soccer mom (yet). When people ask me what I do, I never mumble “I’m just a mom� as if it were a menial job or a last resort.

Please don’t call me Mommy. Mommy’s house, children and car are immaculate. Mommy bakes from scratch. Mommy listens actively. Mommy drinks decaf. Mommy is reasonable. I’m definitely not a Mommy.

Mama. What about mama? Like queer, mama has been reclaimed. Mamas are hip. Mamas question authority. Mamas buy wooden toys, publicly dis parenting manuals (but privately read them), wear tattoos, participate in demonstrations, and have lots of fascinating things going on in addition to mamahood. I’d like to think I’m a mama, I’m not sure I cut it.

I spend more time than I care to straightening, organizing and sanitizing, but I’m not a Housewife. I saw a bumper sticker that put it well: “I am not a housewife for the simple reason that I did not marry a house.�

So what am I? I can tell you what I used to be. A long time ago, I was a Kid. Being a Kid turned into being a Student, which I was for many years (for a few of those years, I moonlighted as a Girlfriend). After I graduated and got a job, I was at times a Human Resources Assistant, a Director of Volunteer Programs, and a Web Page Designer. I then left the nine-to-five world and became a Writer. Along the way, I also became a Wife.

After being a Wife for many years, I became pregnant, and eagerly awaited my next title: Mother. I figured it would slide on as comfortably as all the previous titles had. Soon enough my son arrived, and I reveled in the boy’s intensity and beauty. But when people casually asked me how it felt to be a Mother, a part of me shifted around, as if the new title were riding up a little and needed to be tugged back into place.

Mother didn’t fit as well as I had expected.

My previous titles had coexisted peacefully enough, but Mother was having none of that. She barreled through, arms swinging, sending my old titles flying as if they were flimsy cardboard facades. It was Mother or nothing. Even Asha, the title I’d had since I was born, was no match for Mother. For several dark months, Asha fled the scene altogether.

Our battle had left me bruised, but gradually I edged back into the light and managed to elbow a small space next to Mother. I rejoiced in my growing son, but I also mourned the loss of my old titles and the self-worth I’d attached to them. I raged at Mother for obliterating those titles. Later, I tried to reshape myself to fit inside what I believed Mother should be, not unlike dieting to fit into a dress that’s too small.

Finally, exhausted, I surrendered. Mother had won. I let myself be carried away by the endless parade of diaper changes, storytimes, and preschool dropoffs. I resigned myself to a domestic routine that lacked the drama and recognition of my previous jobs, but contained a quiet magic I could only appreciate once I was no longer struggling. After a time, I couldn’t remember why Mother and I had fought so bitterly.

The birth of my second child gave me a chance to revisit Mother. Her grip had loosened. She was no longer the steely, thick-ankled figure I went up against when my son was born; experience had softened her. I detected a generous spark in her steady gaze. I would even describe her as beautiful.

So here I am, finally at peace with being a mother. And yet, I’m still not sure what to call myself. Mother, Mom, Mommy, Mama…none of these titles describes me completely.

Sometimes, I’m a mother, with flashes of ferocity and power and beauty. Often, I’m a mom, dragging myself home with a take-and-bake pizza and a video for the kids. I’ve reveled in being a Mommy, making my kids’ Halloween costumes and occasionally baking flamboyant birthday cakes. I catch glimpses of my intelligent, meet-the-world-head-on inner mama. Through it all, I’m Asha.

It’s late afternoon, and I hear my son’s siren song from the other room. �Maaaah-meeeee!�

Yeah, that’s me.


Read more from the wonderful Asha Dornfest at her blogs: Ashaland and Parent Hacks

April 4, 2006

Sometimes it's like this

The following entry was written by Elaine, and is a favorite from the archives of Wannabe Hippie.

Sometimes it’s like this: you wake in the middle of the night to find your nursling nestled asleep in the crook of your arm, warm downy hair pressed against your skin and her little mouth working in sweet little puckers as she dreams of her fabulous num nums. You look over to see your husband dreaming silently, a smile on his lips. Your dog is asleep at the foot of the bed, paw twitching in her own doggy dream world and the kitty purrs happily at your feet. The air is perfect; just cold enough to warrant the light blankets covering you and the smell of rain adding a crispness and promise of fall. On these nights you know that you could do this forever. You know that this moment was made for you to drink in, embrace and cherish. You know that if this is truly what life was, you could sit in this space for the rest of your life and never want for anything.

Sometimes it’s like this: you wake in the middle of the night as you kick the sweat soaked covers off your body and elbow your husband to get him to stop snoring, hoping that as he turns over he’ll somehow get the dog to stop snoring as well. The cat is trying to sleep on your face. The sweet nursling is awake again and is not happy and you know you must resign yourself to no sleep or you will be bitter and unforgiving in the morning. During the day, you want to complete a task but you know there will be countless interruptions and if your husband is home he will likely be napping during one of those times and you will be required to suddenly wake him from his slumber by demanding help. You will feel guilty for asking. You will feel guilty for hating that he is napping. You will feel guilty for wanting a whole day to do as you please. You will feel guilty for not making a perfect meal every night and presenting it to your family on matching plates with perfectly ironed napkins ready to swipe at their perfectly clean faces. You will resent that you have to call a friend in joy when you are out of the house all alone and you will resent that you have to be back at a certain hour, feeling like a child again who must abide by a parents rules. You wonder when your husband will learn to love your body as is and not say things like, “You’re not getting old, honey. You’re just out of shape; what you need to do is…� You realize that he will never learn. He’s a man and this kind of thing is not within his reach. He can tell you what every tool in the garage is called, how it works, what to do with it and what it sounds like when it goes bad; but this he cannot grasp. You know that if life is like this you could easily give it all up and run off to join the circus. Any circus, just as long as they allow you to sleep once in a while and spend a quiet day with a book. For a fleeting moment you even irrationally consider leaving your husband. As though that would somehow make your life easier, but in reality you know it’s just the anger and the resentment and the frustration of having very young children and a strong will of your own. You will feel so guilty for wanting to be away, knowing you will be in love with him again tomorrow. You will feel like a failure and no amount of being told you are not will erase the panic in your heart that you are just doing it all wrong.

Sometimes it’s like this: you realize that you have it good. You also realize that just because others have it worse, it does not diminish your own issues and insecurities. You accept that you are human and fallible and that you don’t have your shit together and likely never will. You hang onto those moments of perfectness and you allow yourself to be pissed off or happy or scared or crazy or silly or awake or selfish or Martha Stewart or whoever you need to be. You cling to the smell of your daughters damp head in the middle of the night and cry a little at how perfect she is and pray that you just don’t screw her up.

Sometimes it’s like this: you write it all down and wonder if you should just delete the whole thing. You think about your children reading this when they are becoming mothers and you realize that they will either be better at this than you or they will feel the same conflicting emotions and burry themselves in guilt and shame. You hope they will read this and think, “hell, if that woman could get through this, then so can I.� You hope they will never have to feel this way, but if they do you hope they will not feel alone. You hope even, for a moment, that they will call you up and pour out their emotion so that you can say, “I know, sweetheart. Hang in there baby, it’ll get better, I promise.�

March 8, 2006

March of the Toys

The following entry was written by Julie of Mothergoosemouse.

Why are there toys all over my house?

The simple answer is that I have children, and children have toys. Therefore, I have toys.

But why are they EVERYWHERE?

There is an easel in the kitchen. Ten bottles of washable Tempera paint on top of the refrigerator. A Ziploc bag of crayons and a Barbie coloring book on the table. A Megasaucer, a Magnadoodle, and forty-eleven Peek a Blocks in the family room.

Two child-sized bicycles and a large box of sidewalk chalk in the garage. A lone sand shovel abandoned on the deck.

A complete kitchen ensemble in the basement, along with a dollhouse, doll stroller, and doll shopping cart. A felt board, a Leap Pad, three bags of Mega Bloks, and a pair of red-sequinned high heels for dress-up.

Upstairs, we have bookshelves full of books, dressers full of clothes, and enough bath toys to fill the tub, leaving no room for a child to bathe.

But here’s the really sad part: In the dining room, there is a ball pit. No table, no chairs. Just a ball pit.

And here’s the really scary part: Most of this stuff used to fit into a two-bedroom condo. Which is also the reason we have no dining room furniture. Yet.

I’ll admit it; Kyle and I are enablers. We allowed this migration to occur. While the girls are both little, it’s just EASIER to have ready access to their toys, especially on the main floor where we all spend most of our time. Having spent more than three years in a tiny condo, Tacy was really quite intimidated by the size of the house for the first several months we lived here. She no longer requires an escort to go down to the basement or up to her room, but she’s still not entirely convinced that the place is safe. Meanwhile, CJ is just learning to handle the stairs, and since she shows great affection for all things potentially hazardous to her health, it’s best to keep her in sight at all times.

Don’t get me wrong; if you come to visit, you won’t be knee-deep in toys. We insist that Tacy clean up what she’s gotten out, and as soon as CJ can understand the concept, she’ll be expected to help too. If Tacy drags stuff downstairs that belongs upstairs, she’s expected to return it to its rightful place before bedtime. The house isn’t a wreck, I promise.

Just don’t expect me to move that ball pit, unless you are delivering dining room furniture.

March 7, 2006

But, they ARE my real friends!

The following essay has been written for Mommybloggers.com by Carmen of Mom To The Screaming Masses.

Back, oh, about 7 years ago, there was a woman who bought a computer. She cajoled and begged her husband for it, promising many (mostly empty) favors, if ONLY she could go online, with this new thing called “The Internet�. So, the husband grew weary of her voice and bought the computer, and hooked it up so that she could spend time online. He could be heard, muttering under his breath, on his way to work, “WHY does she have to go online? To meet people? She already knows gobs of people, and has bunches of friends.�

The first few days were not exciting. MSN, Yahoo, and a few random web searches turned up little in the way of thrills. And then, one magical day, the woman, who had three children already and was expecting her fourth, happened on a website for hip and fashionable maternity clothing. She perused the site and ordered some shirts, but she felt strangely drawn to the discussion boards. After a few weeks of lurking in the background, she decided to introduce herself.

Thus begins the tale of how I met my bestest ever friends, and how I became the weirdo that I am today. The women who figuratively held my hand during my pregnancies – two more after the first one that they went through with me – the women I could, and did, ask just about anything. We talked about pregnancy, and breastfeeding, naturally, but there was so much more. Any questions were open for discussion. Want to know what types of jeans were flattering for the postpartum figure? There was a thread for that. Looking for a good mascara? Post away, baybee. We dished about sex, food, cameras, preschools, discipline, husbands, decorating, and the all famous, ever needed vent.

The discussion board quickly became my life line, and I found myself checking the boards several times a day. At night, while I gave my asthmatic child breathing treatments every three hours, I sat in front of the computer and read the archives. We had originally begun posting with our names, but due to a scare, we decided to choose screen names. For some reason unknown, I became Batgirl. Why, I have no idea. I was the farthest thing from Batgirl – overweight, under rested and incredibly out of the realm of the with-it. But, Batgirl I became.

There were discussions about local get togethers, since many of the posters lived in California. I felt left out, and so decided to fly all the way from the right coast to the left, just to meet all of those women who I had gotten to know so well. I bought new clothes and obsessed about what I was doing. FLYING all the way across the country, to meet some people I had never seen before? I acted cool and relaxed with my family and friends. Of COURSE I knew what I was doing. No big deal to fly across the country. Even when the woman who was due to pick me up at the airport told me that she’d dyed her hair purple the day before I was due to arrive – even that didn’t sway me.

Until I walked down the runway in California, mere seconds from my first ever face to face meeting with an online friend. I had my first, actual, honest to God panic attack, and had to sit down and breathe. I thought I knew these people, but did I really? What kind of an IDIOT flies 3000 miles to meet with someone she’s never seen?

I needn’t have feared. The women, all my friends, took me in and welcomed me as I’ve never felt welcomed in my life. Even when I took one of the mamas into another room and lifted my shirt to show her my bra. Even when I wanted to show how close of a shave my razor gave, and asked everyone to feel my legs. We played games and drank all night, and shopped and talked the days away. I felt, for the first time ever, that I truly belonged.

Five years later, I’ve met with these same women three more times. These women, these strong, bright, incredible women, have made me who I am as a mother and a woman. Thanks to them, I started my blog, and have met some of the most amazing people on the planet. I’ve criss crossed the country to meet up with all types of women. Now, when I’m explaining something, I speak about my friends, and I never distinguish between my computer friends and my in real life friends.

For, you see, my internet friends ARE my real friends.

For more writing by Carmen, head on over to Mom To The Screaming Masses.

February 21, 2006

The Surreal Life. Or My Life On the D List. Or Or My Dinner with Antonin.

The following Entry was written by Amy Storch of Amalah.com.

Last night I shared an order of fried calimari with Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia.

I know! Even I was thinking, "The hell?"

So about a week ago, Jason and I were asked to be judges at the 2005 International Wine for Oysters Competition at Old Ebbitt Grill here in DC. (For the non-locals, every year Old Ebbitt throws this huge-ass party called the Oyster Riot and holds the wine competition ahead of time to determine 10 wines that will be paired with the oysters and, I assume, will get everyone tanked and properly riotous.)

We were completely flattered and were all, "We are bona-fide local celebrities now! Riot!"

Then Amy, the event organizer (who keeps ordering me not to write anything bad about her, which OF COURSE I WON'T, that would take valuable space away from discussions of my boobs), sent us the list of the OTHER judges.

Scalia. Phyllis Richman. Food Network show hosts. Actual Media Professionals. And Other People Who Probably Know Way, Way More About Wine And Oysters Than Us.

It was exceedingly clear that two judges had pulled out and we were the Bottom of the D-List Barrel.

But who the fuck could care when we're talking about a competition of 20 wines and all the oysters we could eat, PLUS tickets to the sold-out-since-forever Oyster Riot?

Hint: not us!

So we agreed, and I was determined to be as fabulous and non-mommy-like as possible, and even seriously considered taking the baby to Georgetown to shop for new clothes. As in, new clothes for ME, new clothes that did not snap around the crotch or feature sayings like "Daddy's Little All-Star" or some such shit.

I did not take the baby to Georgetown, because...well, that's a lot of work and planning and I thought the lighting in dressing rooms was depressing BEFORE, so I cannot even imagine what my wide, squashy expanse of stretch marks would look like under those lights.

So I rooted around my closet and behold! I found that an admittedly quite awesome suit from Banana Republic actually, seriously fit me. As in, I could zip the pants ALL THE WAY UP. (I will not say whether I actually left the house with them zipped all the way up, or if I maybe left them an inch or so unzipped in order to minimize the over-the-waistband-pooch-while-sitting effect, because THE POINT IS, I COULD ZIP THEM IF I WANTED TO.)

And with a scandalously low and suddenly-super-filled-out silky camisole under the jacket and the return of the fuck-me gold stilettos, I was SO READY to ascend to at least the C-list of Washingtonian celebrity.

Of course, you know where this is going, right? You totally know that the baby pooped all over my silky camisole the instant the babysitter showed up, right?

Sigh. I wore a regular tank top instead.

(And yes, of course our babysitter has a blog. Doesn't yours?)

So we arrived, and all the other judges were Networking, and we stood in the corner like Idiots, because I was suddenly hit with an Attack of the Shy, and OMG, Jason's seated next to Phyllis Richman, who like, OWNED THIS TOWN when she was the head food critic for The Post, and JASON DON'T LEAVE ME TO GO TALK TO HER AND DON'T MAKE ME GO TALK TO HER BECAUSE I WILL SAY SOMETHING DUMB ABOUT MY DUMB WEBSITE.

Once we were seated at our little appointed stations (which contained, no lie, seven hundred million billion different wine glasses and a gallon-sized spit bucket), we had to go around the room and introduce ourselves, and GOD, I'm SUCH A LOON, because while the other blogger there had the sense to introduce herself as a freelance writer and Jason just said he "wrote for" DCFoodies.com, I completely forgot that I could mention my ACTUAL JOB and just mentioned my website and I called it a blog and nobody there knew what a blog was I think and then the President of the Old Ebbit Restaurant Empire asked me if I had a webcam, and I meekly protested that it's more of a creative writing thing, not so much of a sex-on-camera-exhibition thing, but by then the person next to me was introducing himself and I decided to Shut The RIghteous Fuck Up.

Luckily they started pouring the wine soon after that.

And oh, my GOD, the wine. Twenty different wines and we were supposed to taste each one with an oyster, and oh, my GOD, the oysters. I kept tasting the wines repeatedly, mostly because I wanted to eat more oysters, and partly because I knew there would be a mingling cocktail hour afterwards and then dinner and I figured if I was really drunk I wouldn't notice if I said stupid things about blogs to people.

Oh, and we had Official Judging Clipboards where we were supposed to write comments about each wine and assign a numbered rank to each one.

My comments? Were the STUPIDEST THINGS EVER. Everyone around me was the type who could sniff each glass and detect the barest scent of a nutty edam cheese and discuss the fruit's effect on the brininess of the oyster or whatever, and all my comments were like: Good. Is crisp or something. Contains alcohol, which is a plus.

On one wine that I didn't like? I seriously just wrote "Meh."

(Needless to say, the winning 10 wines were almost all the wines that I ranked in the bottom 20.)

After the official judging and whatnot, we all went upstairs for -- what else? More free wine and oysters. And Networking.

Guess which of those three things I did NOT do so much partaking of.

Jason: You should introduce yourself to the publisher of DC Magazine and see if you could submit articles or something. He's right over there.

Amy: (nods thoughtfully) Yes. Yes I should.

Jason: Well?

Amy: Look! I am not paying for this champagne!

While I was pondering what kind of monstrous mother leaves her five-week-old with a babysitter and whether my nursing pads were still in place, everybody sat down for dinner, and the only spot left was right next to SUPREME COURT JUSTICE ANTONIN SCALIA.

I kind of freaked and grabbed Event Organizer Amy and hissed that I COULD NOT SIT NEXT TO SCALIA, and she assured that he is actually quite nice and not scary, and we'd probably be discussing food and wine mostly, so if I could just not have any Tourette's episodes of yelling GEORGE BUSH SUCKS! HARRIET MIERS WTF! for an hour or so, I would do just fine.

And indeed, he is charming and nice and we compared our rankings to the winning wines and we actually liked several of the same ones. And he shared his fried calimari with me and then ordered a hamburger and a beer. Which: awesome.

I ordered filet mignon. And didn't giggle stupidly when Marc Silverstein of the Food Network told me how awesome I looked after having a baby five weeks ago, although I did introduce him to Jason by pointing and shrieking, "The Best Of! The Best Of!"

Oh, and in my oh-so-suave way of justifying why in HELL I'd been asked to participate in the competition, I mentioned the Washingtonian article and then (oh, GOD) starting rattling off my visitor stats. So, so tacky, but since at least 98% of the people there still didn't get what a blog was and clearly still thought I had sex on a webcam or went through my congressman's garbage looking for incriminating memos to post, they didn't get why that was a tacky, dick move on my part.

Anyway. I could still walk when we left, although I was officially Freaking Out About Missing My Baby, My Precious, Precious Baaaaybeee.

Who was fine and alive and sleeping peacefully. Ceiba missed us a lot more, and gave us all a minor heart attack by FALLING OFF THE BACK OF THE COUCH as we walked in, because YEAH, LET'S SPEND THREE THOUSAND DOLLARS ON ANOTHER STUPID LEG, YOU STUPID DOG.

And Noah rewarded our neglect with sleeping for six. Hours. In. A. Row. Six! Sixsixsixsix!

I woke up at 2 am anyway, already in the throes of the most awful hangover EVER, or at least since JANUARY, and stumbled around looking for Excederin and water and very nearly had an oyster-related-come-to-Jesus-experience in the bathroom but did not, because pregnancy or no, I am still an old pro at this drinking thing.

Although I will probably be pumping and dumping breastmilk for at least a week, which really adds a new dimension to Big Nights Out, and how many D-list celebs do you know that will share THAT kind of information with you? Huh? NONE. BECAUSE THAT'S WHAT A BLOG IS ALL ABOUT PEOPLE. THE SHARING.

I think I forgot to thank Justice Scalia (no, he didn't tell me I could call him Tony or Big T) for sharing his calimari though, and I may have spelled my website's name wrong to a couple people who pretended like they would rush home and check it out. (Probably because they still think I am having sex on a webcam.)



"No webcam here, just some stupid girl who tried to photograph her baby's big gummy smile and forgot to turn off the damn baby swing beforehand."

January 31, 2006

Some people wait a lifetime for a moment like this

Today at Mommybloggers, we turn the site over to Y, who treats us to a favorite from the archives of Joy Unexpected. Enjoy!

I tried to come up with something original for my guest post, but after sitting here for TWO HOURS, it became clear to me that my brain didn't want to cooperate. My back started to ache, and I started to say The "F" word a lot.

(Oh my GOD, she's a mom and she says THE "F" WORD? The horror!)

As much as I didn't want to do this, as much as I told myself that it's TOTALLY CHEATING to do this, I have decided to use a post from my archives.

I couldn't decide whether to go with ""The Serious", The Cheese or The Master Impersonator. In the end, I decided to go with The Poop.

"Some people wait a lifetime for a moment like this"


Gabby's naptime is also known around these parts as Time To Do Everything You Can't Do While She's Awake. That's when I'll shower, do laundry, pay bills, check my email, write something, read something, and occassionally, take a dump.

I say "occassionally" because I'm not very "regular" I can go DAYS people.

Today, I was happy to "feel the urge" and decided that I would make a visit to the bathroom as soon as I layed Gabby down. It didn't work out that way because the urge went away, so I called my sister instead.

Twenty minutes later, The Boss Of Me woke up and instantly, The Urge came back. Dang it!

I couldn't hold it til the next nap, so I was forced to come up with a plan on how to take a dump while the girl was awake.

I decided to set her bouncy seat in the doorway and leave her there whilst I did my business.

I was a little uncomfortable at first, which is weird, considering I shit a little during the birth of all three of my babies. Yeah, that's right, they don't tell you about The Birth Poopie during childbirth classes. I'll never forget that moment as long as I live. Pushing my first baby out and screaming "I THINK I WENT POOP" and the nurse telling me "No, you didn't, keep pushing!" WHILE SHE WAS WIPING MY ASS. I'm so glad we captured that moment on FILM.

I got over my discomfort pretty quickly and proceeded to take my dump while my daughter jumped, laughed and waved "hi" to me. I sat there on the toilet, waving back and clapping all the while doing my business.

The moment went from slightly odd to TOTALLY AWESOME when Gabby got quiet and I heard a huge grunt, followed by a severe fart, followed by another grunt.

MY DAUGHTER WAS TAKING A DUMP WITH ME.

I started kicking my legs and shouting "YAY! GABBY'S POOPING WITH MOMMY! YAAAAAAY!" and she started clapping and saying "AYYYYY".

I wanted to leap off The Pot and squeeze her so freaking hard, but, for the love of an unwiped ass, I didn't. . But as soon as I finished My Business and washed my hands (for 30 seconds, like Oprah said!), I picked her up, ran up and down the hall and kissed her stinky little cheeks until I was all puckered out.

(Of course, I changed her diaper as soon as we were done celebrating Our First Simultaneous Poop)

Read more from our hilarious friend Y at her blog, Joy Unexpected.

January 24, 2006

Imagine My Surprise

The following entry was written for Mommybloggers.com by this week's featured guest, Donna of SoCal Mom.

Ten years ago today, I was doing pretty much what I’m doing now: reading and writing emails and surfing the web.

Except I was seven months pregnant.

I remember back then, trying to picture how my baby would look. From what I learned of heredity back in high school biology, I figured my dark, olive Mediterranean features would trump my husband’s fair Anglo-Saxon-Celtic-ness. I imagined a little Mini-Me, who would follow me around the house, learning by my example.

Imagine my surprise when the doctor placed my baby on my chest after delivering her via C-section. She was the whitest infant I’d ever seen – and the prettiest. I know, I’m her mother and that probably colors my perception, but her little face looked almost exactly like that of the baby doll we’d bought a couple of months earlier (to diaper in the parenting classes we took when we were preparing for her birth).

I was a little bit ashamed of myself for being relieved that she was so pretty – I firmly believe that we put too much value on physical attractiveness. But mostly, I was proud. After all, I don’t see our society changing its attitudes any time soon. Attractive people will always have it a little bit easier than the rest of us.

Needless to say, she didn’t look like me. She still doesn’t. She’s lithe and lean and she has no tush -- not a hint of the feature my mom calls the family curse. I marvel at the cuteness of her nose – no trace of the little bump on mine. I don’t really know where she got that nose; it doesn’t look like my husband’s, either.

Over the years, she has continued to amaze and surprise me by how much we’re not alike.

I was a bookish child who enjoyed the challenge of a good writing assignment in school. (Yes, I was the kid who would ask for more to do – the one everyone else in the class hated.) I was the last kid picked for the team, because my inclusion would ensure the game would be lost. Even when I got to be team captain and managed to pick all the best athletes, we lost – because all the other team had to do was direct the ball in my direction and I would be unable to catch it or throw it or kick it or whatever it was I supposed to do.

My daughter, on the other hand, is a natural athlete. She beats the boys in races, and has the grace of the competitive gymnast she is. She would much rather train for 16 hours a week than pick up a book. And writing assignments put her in a panic.

This is a shame, because she’s actually a pretty good little writer, once she gets over her fear of putting pen to paper.

On the other hand, she loves math. It’s her favorite subject.

I can’t balance a checkbook without the help of Quicken, Excel and a good calculator.

I am not a cuddly person. I don’t do touchy-feely and feel awkward with friends who greet me with hugs and kisses. I separated emotionally from my parents at a very early age.

At nearly 10 years old, Megan is still very attached to me. She clings to me at inappropriate times, like when I’m trying to have an adult conversation – or do the dishes.

I keep waiting for her to decide that doing so is not cool. And I’m dreading it.


Read more by this week's featured guest, Donna at her fantastic blog: SoCal Mom.

January 17, 2006

Well, I’ve gone and done it.

The following essay was written by our featured guest, Melanie Lynne Hauser.

Well, I’ve gone and done it.

I’ve rocked my kids’ world, I’ve messed with their fragile little minds. I didn’t mean to. All I wanted to do was tell a story, really; give some piece of myself to others. But it’s not that simple. These things never are.

I’ve gone and written a book. And by doing so, I’ve stepped out of the shadows where I’ve lurked as The Mom ever since my children were born. That was me on the sidelines for sixteen years, the cheerleader with the camcorder, a bag of juice boxes and Rice Krispy treats at her feet. First steps — Yay! Do it again for the camera, sweetie! First macaroni picture — Whoo Hoo! I’ll go get a frame! First soccer goal accidentally prevented by a lucky flinch — Astounding! Turn this way, honey, and smile for the camera! I’m the audience; they’re the stars. They acknowledge it with a barely a nod, as stars do; they’ve grown accustomed to their rightful places in the spotlight. And now they’re a little reluctant to make room for me.

It’s not that they’re not proud of my new — well, celebrity is stretching it a little, since my biggest interview was for the PTA newsletter. My boys have shared in all the ups and downs of publication. “Hand me that 3 Musketeers bar� became a familiar request as I accumulated a couple years’ worth of rejection letters; “Cereal for dinner is fun!� was the proclamation whenever I was in the throes of a mad burst of creativity. And when I finally got The Call that every author dreams of, my sons were touchingly proud of me. The little one actually got tears in his eyes that had nothing to do with the fact that this might mean a raise in his allowance. (Or so he said.) And I got a glimpse of something most parents never get to see from their children: Admiration. And that, in turn, rocked my world.

But it didn’t last for long. With each new thrill that came my way — cover art, foreign rights sales, page proofs — interest waned. “Yeah, Mom.� The eldest yawned. “You forgot my allowance last week.� And with that observation he neatly put me in my place, reminding me of what was really important. You know — him.

But still I persisted. “Don’t you want to see the cover? Let’s put it on the refrigerator door!� I trotted over to the place of honor, eager to hang my accomplishment alongside theirs. But there was no room. All the magnets were taken. I stared at the door, papered with drawings, certificates, report cards. I suggested it was time to retire some items. That’s when things turned ugly.

“Get rid of my second grade safe bike rider award? No way!� (This from the current high school sophomore who had just gotten his driver’s license.) “You’re not serious, Mom,� the eighth grader gasped when I fingered his realistic stick portrait of his father, created in a kindergarten art class.

I looked at my boys, looked at the crowded refrigerator door, looked at the cover art proof in my hand, and sighed. “I guess I’ll just — tape it to my desk,� I said, and both boys looked relieved, nodded, and left me to my task.

I suppose I was asking too much. The refrigerator is sacred, a symbol of what our roles are within the family. They take care of what’s outside; I’m responsible for what’s inside — behind the scenes.

And really, who created the monsters? I did, of course. My applause — my attention — was a constant buzzing presence in their ears, background noise, mainly. Yet in this scary world background noise is a comfort. It’s security. With it I gave my children the solid foundation needed to launch them up to the skies as they reach for new goals, bring home new accomplishments to display on the most precious real estate in our house — the refrigerator door. So in a sense my greatest achievements are already there; I didn’t have to ask them to make room.

Still, I’m excited about this new phase in my life; mine alone, no longer reflected glory. I proudly taped the cover art above my desk, right in the center, where everyone can see.

And I can’t help but notice that every once in a while, my boys stop and look at it, heads cocked, sly smiles on their faces. When friends come over, they nonchalantly point it out. And there’s a little buzz in my ear, a slight roar of approval — background noise, if you will.

And it inspires me to keep going, keep writing. Keep reaching for my own stars, so that I don’t have to share theirs anymore.

Read more by the talented Melanie Lynne Hauser at Refrigerator Door, and don't miss her debut novel, Confessions of Super Mom!

January 10, 2006

its the end of the world as we know it, and i feel not-so-great

The following essay is a favorite from the archives of sweetney.com, chosen by tracey for Mommybloggers.com.


my dear friend angela came over last night for some beer and sympathy, and we waxed unpoetic for many hours on the human condition and all of its manifestations (the internet, the economy -slash- capitalism, the political landscape, the environment, and so forth); needless to say, this was not a gleeful conversation. so humor me for a few minutes and let me get all chicken little on your ass, because in all honesty i'm not merely discouraged about the present state of things, but borderline terrified.

some of what i talked about here yesterday regarding people and their behavior on the internet seems to me a small symptom of a larger societal sickness, namely a magnification of the importance of the self, the individual, to the exclusion of all else, including but not limited to basic civility born of an intrinsic sense of the interconnectedness between all people. it appears that, in an elemental way, empathy is waning, being extinguished through the alienation inherent in late capitalism; unlike in past ages, we no longer have a direct connection to so many of the people who make our lives possible on a basic level -- those who produce our food, our clothing, the homes we live in and the cars we now drive -- which ultimately leads to a pervasive, overriding sense that its every man for himself. that we're not all in this together, working in an interdependent way to survive and prosper and raise families and such, but that we're each islands competing with one another for resources to do those things -- a perspective that necessitates an inflated sense of self-importance, an egocentrism that is corrosive to that sense of kindredness and compassion that has long been essential to the health and advancement of individual communities and thus society generally. but, under the present system, having a strong sense of empathy and feeling of fellowship for others could in fact be considered counterproductive to individual prosperity and health: if i truly see YOU as myself, and recognize the full value of your humanity as equal to mine, then how can i proceed in participating in a system that requires your subjugation? for example, how do i continue to function knowing that the clerk at the market who bags my groceries is making $5.15 an hour, living in squalor and selling plasma to supplement her income to merely survive? how do i buy those groceries, knowing that so many of those who participated in the harvesting and processing of most of the foodstuffs i buy and consume are in some way or other being horribly exploited in the process? and, in a broader sense, how do i continue to live not being constantly plagued by the inescapable knowledge of others suffering terribly all around me -- living in wage slavery, in sub-standard housing, in the addiction and abuse that is so pervasive among an underclass that has resigned itself to these things because truly there is no way out of them. in this light, do we wonder at the fact that a full 50% of the american population can be categorized as mentally ill under DSM-V criteria? i have felt this attendant depression and anxiety, this all-too-pressing knowledge of the wrongness of the world and the suffering in it closing in, and i'm sure many of you have as well. but those of us who think and feel these things are in the minority, and we are most certainly not the fittest among those in this prescribed “survival of the fittest.� because of the very structure of the system we all live in (loosely, late capitalism), we -- the empathetic, the humanistic, pick your term -- are the vestiges of a dead age, antique humans ill-equipped to thrive in this contemporary environment. those who can unflinchingly raise themselves above others, who value the accumulation of capital over the accumulation of (heh) karma, and who are willing and able to participate fully and self-servingly in all that the system demands are now and will continue to be in the future those in power and those who lead. knowing this, i struggle with the awareness that i am trying to raise mina as thoughtful, empathetic, and with a strong sense of social justice. in other words -- in light of what i've said above -- i'm raising her to be a good, wise, but probably not terribly happy person (just like her mom! ha!). as the cliche goes, most parents -- myself included -- would agree that we want, above all else, for our children to be happy. but increasingly i feel sure i am raising mina in a way that is probably detrimental to her in terms of her overall success in this life (again, as determined under the present system... and no, i don't believe the revolution is gonna come in our lifetime, so that's really all we have to work with), and most certainly to her future contentment and sense of security.

as if this weren't depressing enough, i feel fairly certain that there is a great deal of additional badness coming down the track, and more and more i fail to see how disaster can be averted. so much of the way things are now seems truly untenable, unsustainable in the long run, including the above described societal dysfunction (which i don't think will culminate in the revolution coming, sadly, but rather in something akin to institutionalized and internalized libertarianism -- the ultimate dysfunction!). clearly, our economic system is on the verge of calamity. strap yourselves in folks, for this horseman of the apocalypse is rapidly beating a path to your door; in the next 6 months to a year i'd anticipate a catastrophic collapse of some kind, possibly resulting in a depression. we live presently in a country (i'd say “world�, but i know that's slightly overstating....but only slightly) led by persons (bush being merely a figurehead) lawless and destructive, willing to do whatever necessary to restrict social liberty and obtain resources. our global environment is quite literally on the verge of complete destruction -- in terms of global warming it seems increasingly likely that we've reached that point-of-no-return where even if we were to drastically limit CO2 emissions (which -- c'mon let's be honest here -- we're clearly NOT going to do, especially under this administration), we'd merely be delaying what is now inevitable. please note: i am not saying anything that isn't explicitly spelled out in innumerable well-respected scientific, economic and political reports. this is not news to any of you all, i'm sure. but we refuse (collectively) to really hear this, to truly listen and absorb the dire reality of our situation. why? because it isn't profitable? because it does not relate to our individual prosperity, at least in an immediate sense? because we have on some level just given up?

as i said, i am genuinely terrified by all of this. and though i feel less and less hope, i also want so very badly for someone articulate, sane and insightful to explain to me how in all of these things there *is* hope. i want to be convinced otherwise, yet it seems like an almost impossible task in the face of the real. i want not a best-case-scenario, because the best case never comes to fruition; i want a realistic, likely scenario under which we can collectively weather all of this and emerge intact. but i got nuthin'.

anyone?


Originally posted on sweetney.com on June 23, 2005

December 28, 2005

Mothering With My Ears Closed

The following entry has been written for Mommybloggers.com by this week's featured blogger, Mary Tsao.

Earlier this year when my daughter Emily was not yet two and my son Thomas was four months old, I took the two of them to an outing sponsored by my local Mothers Club. I had just gotten the hang of going out with both of them and life had started looking sunny again.

I was chatting with some other moms when I realized that Thomas's crying and squirming indicated he wanted out of the stroller. I stopped to get out my Baby Bjorn, when my friend Anna walked over to me.

"Do you need a hand?" She asked. Anna is an experienced mom of the Super variety. She had organized the event and was there with her three-year-old and her four-year-old.

"Thanks," I said as I peeled off my jacket and slipped on the Baby Bjorn. The thing smelled like stale spit-up and was in desperate need of a washing. Anna handed my son to me and I sighed as I stuffed him into it. "He's happiest when I'm wearing him," I explained.

She shook her head up and down. "I know. I've been there." Her two children were spaced the same as my two--17 months apart. We had already discussed why we had our kids so close together: our own advancing age (mid thirties), the idea that kids close in age grow up close in general, and the reason that mothers only admit to other
mothers they think feel the same.

We wanted to get it over with.

"I hated being pregnant," I told her when she came over to deliver a meal to me after the birth of my second. "I never want to go through that again," she replied, as she blew kisses at my newborn boy. "I've got my girl and my boy; I'm set." "Me, too," I said. At the time we were both certain that neither one of us would be making the other a new mom's dinner again. We were done! Finished!

But here we were four months later and dammit, if it didn't sound as though the woman was having a change of heart...

"I have a lot of friends who are having another one," Anna started. I almost couldn't focus on what she was saying; I hadn't slept a full night since Thomas was born. "Another what? Another Baby?" If the horror wasn't apparent on my face, it certainly showed up in my voice. I interrupted her. "I can barely handle the two I have." I'm not sure how the last statement came out since I was bouncing up and down as I said it. As I chased Emily down the hallway, I shouted over my shoulder, "If what those friends of yours have is contagious, please keep them away from me!"

"Just something to think about," replied Anna as she went off in search of her own kids. And then she hit me with the news. "Three's the new two, you know!"

At the playground later, I pushed Thomas in the baby swing and stared into the distance. I mulled over the conversation I had with Anna and wondered out loud, "Is three really the new two?" Then I looked over at the play structure and saw my firstborn—my girl Emily--climbing up a ladder. I felt a twinge of guilt as I realized that I should be over there spotting her. But with two kids under the age of two, I couldn't be in two places at once and I often had to choose the wheel that was squeaking the loudest. I found myself saying, "In a minute, honey, just let me take care of this other thing," a lot. I felt barely able to handle two kids. How could I ever handle three?

A couple of months after that I read a blog entry written by a mom of three. Her advice to moms of two was to wait until the first two were older before having the third. That way, the first two could be helpers. I liked her advice and I told her so, but after pondering it over a bit more, I realized that she started having kids much earlier than I did, like ten years earlier. If I waited until Emily and Thomas were ten and nine to have another baby, I'd be in my mid forties. Forty five is the year I want to get my sports car, and I'm not positive, but I don't think you can fit a car seat in one of those things.

If I wait until I'm forty five to have my third, I'll be either eggless or too busy punching pedal to metal. Does that mean I should have another baby now? Should I believe Anna when she tells me that everybody's doing it? Am I fool enough to succumb to that kind of peer pressure? And what happens if I have a third, declare my womb closed,
and then find out that four is the new three? Are large families born out of a women's competitive nature and the desire to keep up with the Joneses?

Lest you think I care only about what my friends and neighbors are doing, I should admit that the thought of a third has crossed my mind before I heard it was the new two. For example, the realization that we have two kids--and not three--hit me hard when I was sending out this year's Holiday card. You see, this is the first year our photo
doesn't include a new baby in it. Two years ago Emily was the baby. Last year Thomas was the baby. But this year the photo was of two parents who looked well rested and two toddlers who look silly, but no baby. It almost seemed that something--or somebody--was missing from the photo. Almost.

But even though the photo lacked a newborn, it still looked perfect. Maybe I'm in denial; maybe I know nothing about style or trends; but when I look at our family of four: Mommy, Daddy, Emily, and Thomas, I see a complete picture.

Not that I wouldn't love another one if he/she came along even though we are using three methods of birth control. It definitely would be wild and crazy to have another seven pound swaddled bundle of joy rocking in a swing at my feet, but I'm afraid it would be wild and crazy in a "Kids Gone Wild" and "Mommy's Gone Crazy" kind of way. I have to be honest when I say that this mom has her limits. There's no limit to how many kids I can love with all of my heart, but there is a limit to how many kids I can watch on a playground and there's definitely a limit to how many times I can gain and lose fifty pounds without going completely bonkers.

Unfortunately, there's also a limit to how much peer pressure I can hear before I buckle.

So if you're ever driving around a medium-sized Northern California suburb and you happen to pass a playground, look for me. I'll be the busy mom playing with two small kids, running back and forth between the big slide and the little slide. My hair will be combed and my pants will not have an elastic waist. I will look happy and well rested. You can wave and I'll wave back if I see you, but don't bother to say hi. I won't be able to hear what you're saying.

I'll be wearing ear plugs.

December 20, 2005

The First Christmas Hub and I were married

The following essay has been written especially for Mommybloggers by our featured blogger, Mamacita.

When I remember the Christmases of my childhood, I smile. The perfection of everything. . . the huge tree. . . . the crèche. . . . the cookies. . . . the family reunion. . . . the presents. . . . it was so glowing and wonderful I can barely describe it without weeping. My sisters and brother and I, all in new pajamas, would come running in. . . .Everything was always the same, at Christmas, year after year. That was part of the perfection of it.

Then I grew up and became cool.

The first Christmas Hub and I were married, I wanted things to be as different from the way Mom always did them as possible. HER traditions were silly and redundant. I vowed to make all my own traditions, and not bother with any of her old-fashioned ways. I mean, she used the exact same ornaments year after year, and some of them had been made by my siblings and me when we were children, and those crumbling glitter-encrusted ‘things’ were so uncool and embarrassing! I wanted Christmas in my new household to be trendy and cool, nontraditional in every way, a Christmas such as those I’d read about in magazines. I even refused to make cut-out sugar cookies, because Mom always did. I made marzipan. (Nobody liked it.)

This changed after Belle was born. Suddenly, it wasn’t just Christmas I was planning. It was Christmas for a child. My whole attitude changed. My outlook changed. Everything had changed, because my life’s focus had changed.

It was coming on Christmas, and there was a child in the house now. With a rush that left me gasping, all the things Mom had done for us as kids became important and absolutely inviolably necessary.

Stocking? I chose her stocking with care, because she would be using the same one all her life.

Tree-topper? I chose that with care, too. It would have to last forever, lest the image of the tree be distorted. Our tree-topper is, by the way, an angel. Her name is Fifi.

Placement of various little Christmas knick-knacks, etc? I had to find the perfect places for them all, knowing in the back of my mind that everything would have to be put in those same perfect places from now on.

Christmas Eve? Same routine every year. Christmas morning? Same. Christmas afternoon? Same. If something came along to disrupt, I came unglued.

I tried so hard to recreate Mom’s Christmases. In many ways, I succeeded. Hers, plus mine, plus ‘stuff,’ equals our Christmas.

It took several years for me to learn a very important lesson. Christmas routine is very important to a child, but the world will not stop turning if something happens to upset or interrupt that routine. I think sometimes that ‘routine’ is more important to the parents. A child is a lot more versatile that we give her credit for. A child can DEAL with a little change in a holiday routine a lot better than her mother can. Once this mommy caught on to that, things lightened up a little.

Even now, I try to recreate as many of “Mom’s ways� at Christmas, as is possible. In the beginning, with no budget to speak of , it was pretty hard.

Those first Christmases with one, then two, children, were so moneyless and meager, I cried myself to sleep several Christmas Eves in a row because I couldn’t do for my children all that I wanted to do. Imagine my shock, when my now-grown children’s memories of those Christmases included cookies, crèches, presents, reunions, food. . . . everything but the desperation that had so entrenched Mommy and that she assumed would be the primary memory of the kids! They hadn’t even noticed the small amount of presents; they had just noticed that there WERE presents! They didn’t care that the cookies were made with one egg instead of two; they only remembered cutting them out and sprinkling food-coloring-laced sugar on them and eating them. They had never even noticed that when we stopped at the gas station before driving down to the family reunion, we counted out nickels and dimes and pennies to the attendant.

Their memories are of Christmas, not of near-poverty. They never saw the improvised attempts to make something out of nothing. They saw new pajamas; they didn’t see the scraps of Mommy’s only long nightgown in the trash. They saw candles; they didn’t see Gulfwax chunks tied together with twine. They saw Santa’s footprint in the living room; they didn’t see Hub’s big boot dipped in flour. They didn’t see mousetracks; they saw nibbles in the cookie left for Santa. They didn’t see a five-dollar tree with huge gaps that even tinsel wouldn’t fill; they saw the biggest and more awesome Christmas tree in the world.

What’s my point here? I dunno. Maybe it’s that children see the world with a different sort of perspective. I worried so much that my children would not have a good Christmas, that they would see what I was seeing, and what I was seeing was pretty bleak. Fortunately, my children were much smarter than I was. Where I was seeing desperation, they were seeing lights and presents and ribbons. Where I was seeing makeshift, they were seeing wonder.

Where I remember hard times, my children remember Christmas.

I asked Mom about some of her traditions the other day. She told me that most of them were born of no money and desperation and her insistence on having a memorable Christmas for us kids in spite of everything.

She asked me what I remembered about those Christmases.

I smiled.

Read more by the wonderful Mamacita at her blog Scheiss Weekly!

December 15, 2005

A dead language may just kill me

The following essay has been written especially for Mommybloggers by our featured blogger, Lisa Stone. We want to thank Lisa for hanging out with us and opening up so much! We have had a blast showing her many fans a new side to this amazing woman.

Now that my son is nine, I've been walking on pins and needles when he and his posse are together. Because suddenly Pokemon cards and Legos are on the outs. Sure, the boys play computer games and ball. But they also sit around and...talk. Sometimes they even whisper.

Now I'm waiting for the smack upside the head that my son is a genuine 'tween, preparing to disappear off the cliff of adolesence. There are signs. He's already asked when he can get a mohawk, what I would think if he tattooed his face, and what a condom is. But I can tell he's just testing me. He doesn't really want them. Yet.

I know what I'm looking for -- a very precise harbinger of hormones from my own past: Latin. Anatomically correct Latin, that is. I know he's going to use it. What worries me is how.

My son has some experience in this field. At age almost-three, when he was trying to figure out why his little friend Sarah was a girl and he was a boy, he got his first lesson in underpants Latin. Hey, I'm a modern single mom! I thought. I sat him right down with a cartoon book for little ones and executed what I assured myself was a matter-of-fact anatomy lesson. Well, that's that! I congratulated myself. The Talk will be no problem for moi!

There's nothing like Mother Nature to bring a girl down a peg. A few days later, the flaws in my teaching moment were revealed, as so many things are, in the frozen food section of the local grocery. As I rounded the corner of one aisle, my son looked up at me from the front seat of the grocery cart where he had been playing with his seatbelt. "MOMMY?" he inquired, in that loud, piercing outside voice he favored those days. I scuse-me'd past the cart of an older man who was waist deep into the ice cream, his back to us. I was headed for the pie. ""Uh-huh baby?" I said as I opened the freezer to check out the goods.

"SO YOU'RE SAYING THAT MEN HAVE A PENIS, AND WOMEN HAVE A BUH-GINA?" his little voice reached a fabulous high note on each term.

The oh-so-close haunches of the guy with his head in the freezer froze. Don't laugh don't laugh don't you dare laugh you stupid smug idiot, I told myself, or he'll be saying penis and vagina at every family gathering for the next ten years and everyone will know who's fault that is won't they?

The man was still in the freezer. He looked like he would stay there forever rather than turn around so that his penis faced my buh-gina.

"Yes!" I shouted, throwing pies back into the freezer. "Where is that cookie aisle?"

We escaped without forcing the poor guy to make eye contact and the issue died. Until three years later, when his stepmother was expecting another baby.

"Mom, I just don't get where babies come from," he told me one day when I picked him up from first grade. "And don't tell me about the sperm and the egg again, because I've heard it all before. I just don't get how the sperm and the egg GET in the same place." However, he assured me, he knew all about how babies were born. "How, son?" They come out where the mom poops, he said. "Everyone knows that, mom," he assured me.

Hoo boy. Out came a different book, a 1973 illustrated version of "Where do babies come from," which my clairvoyant mother had mailed me that very month. I signed my son to a blood pact that what I was about to show him was never ever to be discussed in the frozen food aisle and, somehow, we both managed to keep a straight face through the whole discussion. He was shocked, to say the least. "Daddy did that?" he asked. I was a little shellshocked myself. I couldn't believe I was discussing sex at all, since I was apparently permanently dateless and never going to get a chance to indulge in the act of sex again, much less have a baby.

We talked a lot of Latin that afternoon. I should have known that would come back to haunt me. Because that's the thing about my son: He likes to talk, just like his mother. And he likes to try out his new words. As he did the very next day, as soon as he got into the car.

"Oh mom! You packed me too much lunch today!" he said.

"I did?" I said. "You actually ate it, for once?"

"Yeah!" said my son. "I ate it all! And later my intesticles were killing me!"

Have you ever seen a station wagon with coffee spewed inside the windshield? If I ever have an aneurysm, I will credit the effort it took not to howl with laughter that day. "Ummm, honey, there are two words that sound a lot alike but they actually do very different things..." I began.

Flash forward to today. These innocent question are not the anatomically correct Latin I'm looking for. I'm on guard for a misappropriation of the terms -- and the private parts to which they refer. Because at 'tweendom, I think, boys begin the life-long process of deciding how to treat girls. As other humans -- or as less-than-equals. Or, worse yet, as objects or even things. And I worry about this.

I was nine the first time I heard Latin thus abused and knew it for what it was. I was sitting in Mrs. Lizotte's fifth grade class in Missoula, Montana, hating every hair of her beehive. Happily, to my right sat serious entertainment. Lauren Roberts, smartest boy in the class, who spent his days turning around to hatch trouble with his buddy, Dave Sales, toughest boy in the class.

David could do crazy playground hat-tricks like turn his eyelids inside out. Earlier that year, they'd thrilled us all by loosening the bolts on Lizotte's ancient wooden office chair, damn near maiming her. Yet there she stood, prepared to bully any of us. Far as I was concerned, Lauren and David had failed.

I snuck a peek at David. He grinned at me, the blood-red undersides of his eyelids popping.

"EW!" I was delighted.

Lauren turned around, his math long done, and let us have it:

"David, you clitoris," Lauren hissed.

I gasped. I gaped at David--could he possibly know what that meant? Oh yeah, he did. And from the smirk on his face, I could tell it wasn't the first time he'd heard it. David laughed. Lauren laughed.

Then they looked at my burning face, my mouth hanging open in shock. And howled.

There it was -- my first experience hearing males use female anatomy to insult each other. Pow. I cannot count the number of times I heard that word on the playground that year, or how many kids clearly knew what it meant. Lauren went on to call all of us "scrotum" at one point or another that year, but it never had the same result.

I had an immediate change of heart about old Lizotte, who clamped down on them, ended the discussion, and made it possible for me to start breathing again. Little did she or I realize, it was a girl-bonding moment.

It took a decade for me to figure out why I was so horrified and humiliated by the particular use of that term as an insult. Of course, I didn't understand then like a do now, the role the clitoris plays for women worldwide, both in pleasure and in pain (female circumcision anyone? Yes, I will judge that cultural value).

Now let's be clear -- I don't think my fifth-grade classmates understood the deeper implications of what they were doing. Hell, they insulted each other all day long. But it was the way they used their shocking new word that rattled me. Now, this was 1970s Montana, where we played a playgound tackle football game we were allowed to call "Smear the Queer." A lot went unnoticed for which my son knows I'd cheerfully roast him alive today.

But I learned something. Sit down with any sit-com or movie or computer game today, and I'll bet good money that we can identify a number of moments where the ultimate insult is delivered to men -- that they are female in some way. And the worst insult is still for one male to call another a buh-gina.

So I'm on the lookout for telltale signs that my sweet caring son, who has always had female friends and, lord knows, a strong maternal figure in his life, is heading to the dark side.

As I said, I know he's going to use these terms. What worries me is how. Because that's when the dead language of Latin may just kill me.

To read more by Lisa, please visit her at one of her blogs: BlogHer, Surfette and Legal Blog Watch.

November 29, 2005

Speaking In Tongues

The following essay has been written by our featured blogger of the week, Karen Walrond.

Here’s a little-known fact about me:

I can speak in tongues. (No, not the Biblical, eyes-roll-to-the-back-of-my-head-listen-to-this-message-from-God kind of tongues – but how cool would that be? I could walk into my local coffee shop, and when things got a bit too quiet, a bit too boring, I’d just “BLAGDADARHOWRIDSAKRHAIHKWKW!!� to shake things up a bit. Come on, that’d be awesome.)

Anyway, I’m talking about my ability to slip into foreign accents. At will. Seriously.

For example, here’s how I would tell a total stranger that a wasp has found itself tangled in her hair in America:
“Oh. My. God. There is this gimongous bee totally freaking out in your hair.�

In England:
“Excuse me, but a wasp seems to have caught itself in your hair.�

And finally, on the Caribbean island of Trinidad:
“Oh-GAD-Oh-GAD-Oh-GAD!! IF YUH SEE DE BIG BOLOKSHUS WAPS IN YUH HE-AIR! OH GAD!�

See?

Okay, perhaps this is difficult to translate in written form, but trust me, I completely sounded like an American, a Brit and a Trini, in that order.

I would love to tell you that this talent was something that I was born with, but in truth, it’s one that I had to develop in order to survive. You see, I’m the daughter of a former oil company executive. For those unfamiliar, this means that like the daughter of a military officer, it was rare that we spent more than 2 years in any given country. And although we moved from English-speaking country to English-speaking country, it was surprising how different “English� was in most of the countries we lived.

The first time I was shocked into realizing that I had to learn to speak in tongues was when I was about 11 years old. By this age, I had spent most of my life in Mayaro, a small fishing village in Trinidad – I sounded Trinidadian, and I had Trinidadian ways. Then one day, my Dad came home to our family, and announced we were moving to Houston, Texas – which, let me tell you, is nothing like a small fishing village in Trinidad.

So off we went. And when I entered my junior high in the Houston suburbs, to say I stood out would be a bit of an understatement. I didn’t look like anyone else, I didn’t dress like anyone else, and Lord knows I didn’t sound like anyone else. But the worst part was when I learned that I actually didn’t speak the same language as everyone else. Within my first week at school, I made my first faux pas.

I was sitting in my English class, writing the essay we’d been assigned – probably entitled “What I Did On My Summer Vacation� or some other such inane topic. Suddenly, I realized that I had made a spelling error. As I would have done in my Trini school, I tapped the shoulder of the kid next to me.

“Excuse me,� I said, as politely and as clearly as I could. “Do you have a rubber?�

The kid next to me, much to my surprise, immediately began choking on his gum. “Wha-WHAT?? You want to know if I have a WHAT?� he asked, looking at me with shock.

“A rubber,� I said, looking back at him like he fell out of a tree. “I made a mistake, so I need a rubber.�

“Oh,� he said, stifling his laughter. “You mean an eraser. Don’t say ‘rubber.’ Someone will give you a condom.� And he handed me his eraser.

I accepted it, smiling back with confusion. I had no idea what a condom was, but I made a mental note anyway. Eraser, not rubber. Got it.

From that point on, I worked on learning American English with gusto. It was a hood of a car, not a bonnet. I didn’t drink lime juice anymore, I drank limeade. And no longer did the monkey have to know which tree to climb, he was required to comprehend what side his bread was buttered on. By the time I graduated law school, I sounded completely American – most people, in fact, assumed I was.

Years later, I moved with my job to England. Again, I naively thought I spoke English – after all, they actually say “rubber�! They say “bonnet�! This was going to be easy!

Then, soon after I arrived, I was speaking with a colleague, discussing a work-related accident.

“Yeah,� I was saying. “The guy died on the job.�

My co-worker snickered. “He died on the job, did he?�

I looked at him blankly. “Yes,� I said, wondering what could possibly be funny about death. These Brits are a cold bunch, I thought to myself. I patiently tried again. “He died on the job.�

He snickered some more. “Karen, in England, ‘on the job’ means ‘having sex.’ Just say ‘he died while working.’�

Oh, for heaven’s sake. And so, I set out to learn British English. Lift, not elevator. Petrol, not gas. And while I unfortunately didn’t perfect my English accent in the eighteen months I lived there, I did become bilingual: people knew I wasn’t English, but they could at least understand what I was saying.

My ability to speak in tongues continues to serve me well. While I was living in London, I managed to pick up an English husband – and when we moved back to Texas, I often had to translate the things he said into American English. And now, we’re back in my homeland of Trinidad, so for ease of conversation, I often convert our words to Trinidadian.

And then, of course, there’s our daughter, Alex. Though she was born in Texas, she’s learning to speak in Trinidad, and has already begun developing a distinctly Trini accent. “Wo-tah,� she says for water. She likes to go for a seabath. “Oh geed,� she says, when she finds something distasteful. This is cool with me. After all, Trini is my first language.

What I struggle with, however, is how to speak toddler.

read more by Karen at Chookooloonks

November 22, 2005

On the First Level of Christmas, We Might Even Get a Tree

The following essay has been written especially for Mommybloggers by Busy Mom. We want to thank her for hanging out and playing with the Mommybloggers this week.

For the longest time, I philosophically resisted the custom of decorating for Christmas immediately after Thanksgiving, but, especially since I’ve had kids, I’ve since subscribed to the “if you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em� philosophy. I will admit, however, that the act of actually doing the decorating lags behind my philosphy, somewhat. I look at it as having 3 “levels� and we may implement a different level each year. In descending order of effort required, here they are:

Level III: “Full-Out Home Magazine� Mode:

We actually own more Christmas decorations than any one household should, thanks to the year we participated in a Holiday Tour of Homes (long story) and the fact that we used to host Busy Dad’s work party. We were decorating fools, and, no, it didn’t involve random placement of gingerbread men standing watch over the Baby Jesus in the manger in the front yard (not that there’s anything wrong with that, I’m just sayin’…). We ended up spending the equivalent of the GNP of a small country and way more time in a craft store than I’m comfortable with. This “over the top� decorating level included festive swags of real pine with red bows adorning the stair railings and we even decorated the upstairs, where there are, for the most part, only bedrooms and baths. Though it didn’t actually match my lofty vision created by overpriced, shiny magazines, it turned out fairly well and was most enjoyable. But, since it took nearly a month to complete and we had to bribe friends to come help us do it, it’s not practical to repeat that one very often. Friends, they have long memories, you know, and, apparently, my chili isn’t worth the manual labor. (Note to self: find new friends that weren’t involved the first time around)

Level II: “ Let’s Put Stuff in Strategic Areas Causing the Casual Observer to Think We’ve Gone All-Out� Mode:

This stage is implemented during bouts of excessive Christmas cheer but lacking the time to do anything about it. The most-used entrance to our house is the kitchen door, so we usually have the best decorated kitchen, ever, complete with lights and pine swags, etc. People never seem to leave my kitchen even when I want them to, anyway. Done properly, the kitchen decor gives the guest a first impression that we are ever so ready for Christmas to come. A smelly candle of some sort or some decoy potpourri cements the illusion and they assume that the rest of the house is the same. On the rare occasion we let people beyind the kitchen, they are escorted straight to the living room where we have implemented a rather large tree that is meant to be so fetching that you need not look around the rest of the room. This level is good because it can be rapidly executed and receives much fanfare if cdone correctly.

Level I : “I Put a Bow on the Mailbox, DoYou Think We Need To Get a Tree, Too?�:

Yes, there have been years we’ve only made it to Level I, but that was before kids. Kids make it all different and you might oughta (and you want to) do a little more.
Now that Busy Girl is older, she’s wanting to decorate beyond the boundaries and it may force me to declare some sort of new level if she passes my inspection (Control Issues: The Holiday Edition). But maybe that’s not so bad, she gets a kick out of doing it. However, I’ve been unsuccessful in my efforts to get her to specialize in the “Undecorating� Level since it’s not my favorite part. If you’re good, maybe I’ll tell you about the year we had a “St. Patrick’s Tree�.

Read more about Busy Mom and the adventure of the Busy Family on her personal blog Busy Mom

November 16, 2005

Performance Anxiety

The following essay has been written especially for Mommybloggers by our featured blogger of the week, Mir. (At the request of her fans, we did let her out of time-out for crashing our server.)

I'm sure this comes as a huge shock to anyone who actually knows me or has read me for more than, say, 4 seconds, but I'm sort of a perfectionist. I hide it so well, don't I?

I've been told that my standards are impossibly high. I've been told that I have some internal barometer of RIGHTNESS that is prohibitive when dealing with the real world. I've been told to just CHILL OUT and have a cookie already.

It's all true. Especially because I can always use a cookie.

Me, I'm sort of a swirling package of lofty ideals, wrapped up in cynical paper, trimmed with a brightly-colored and highly neurotic ribbon. WHY more people don't rush to unwrap me is a MYSTERY FOR THE AGES.

The truth is that--to a greater or lesser extent--I've always been this way. I believe I'm more flexible and adaptive now than I used to be, but no one is going to accuse me of being easy-going. Really the only way someone is going to speak "mellow" in my general direction is if it is preceded by "marsh" and in the context of cocoa.

In many ways I've made my peace with the various demanding demons I channel. There are ways in which I am still struggling for greater balance, and ways in which I accept that awareness is the most control I'll be exerting. There's always room for improvement and at the rate I'm going I'm certain I'll attain my goals around age 183. No worries!

The most difficult challenge to my perfection-addled brain right now? Modeling healthy behavior for my children. Specifically, modeling healthy interpersonal interaction such that I can feel confident that they'll grow up to have as little emotional baggage as possible when it comes to relating to other humans.

It's not like I have the market cornered on worrying about this. I'm sure that all parents do. But as a single parent, I worry that I'm already behind the ball. I feel that I'm always on alert for the tacit and explicit messages my kids are receiving about what it means to be in a relationship; what behavior is acceptable and when commitment is healthy and when it is counterproductive. What are they learning? What are they learning from ME?

My kids are young; it's not like we're having in-depth discussions about a lot of this stuff. Maybe someday we will (and then I'll have a new set of worries to entertain, like how much do I tell them about the divorce?), but right now it's a constant state of juggling what they see and what they don't.

For example: I have introduced my children to exactly one man since I divorced. It was (I thought) a well-thought-out decision, after the relationship was fairly well along. I told the kids he was a friend. They immediately figured out that he was a boyfriend. They had questions. I tried my best to answer them appropriately. The meeting went off without a hitch; everyone got along famously. And then I was quite unexpectedly dumped, and my kids wanted to know what was up.

I think: Well, kids, some people are terrified of feelings.
I say: We decided not to see each other any more.

I think: I am fantasizing about performing an unmedicated castration because being angry is all that keeps me from succumbing to feeling completely unlovable.
I say: I am sad that we won't see each other again.

I think: This was a unilateral, unfair decision, born of issues having little to do with me.
I say: We can't control what other people decide to do.

I think: I never want to date again and fear that I will never find someone with whom to share my life as equals.
I say: After a while I'm sure I'll meet someone else, but if I don't, that's okay, too.

I think: I want you, my darling daughter, to grow up strong and confident and knowing how to give fully of yourself without compromising your own needs, without leaving yourself at risk for excessive hurt. I want you, my loving son, to grow up and stay that way--without buying into the idea that men don't or shouldn't feel, or that baubles or chest-beating declarations are a substitute for the work of building true bonds. I want you both to know that it's okay to be alone, it's okay to take a break to regroup, but eventually you try again if that's what you need... and someday, I want you to see a relationship that works, because my mate and I have made it a priority and are unafraid to weather the storms. I want to find a way to adjust my assholeometer not only for myself, but for you two. Because you are happiest when I am happy. Because I want you to know how to love and how to make yourselves happy.
I say: How about we make some cookies?

And I make smiley faces out of chocolate chips. And put some more money in the therapy fund. And pray that I can sometimes manage to set an example worth following.

Read more by Mir on her personal blog Woulda Coulda Shoulda.

November 8, 2005

The Menopausal Hut. Women, don't enter your fifties without one.

The following essay has been written by our featured blogger of the week, Grace Davis.

For those who have witnessed the live, frenetic energy that is Dr. Laura's Worst Nightmare, the concept that I would be severely felled (like bedridden felled) by the wildly fluctuating hormones of menopause is an odd notion, indeed. But, folks, it's happening: I am ex-haus-ted. For those who have hung out with me at latte fueling stations, patiently listening to my caffeine driven rants and raves, it is easier to imagine that my estrogen storm would prompt hollering at the wind, if not the kid, the hubs, and, of course, the Radical Religious Right. Well, I do that too. Ask Molly and her friends. Recently, I committed the dire and ultimate parental sin of yelling at not only Molly, but her entire girl posse. The exact tirade is a blur to me. All I remember is that I had to get out of bed at 11:00pm to drive them from A to B, then they wanted to go to Burger King, where I had to do the dreaded thing - use the drive-through. Who hates having six teenagers holler out their complicated fast food orders past their ear and out the driver's window? I do! I do! Hell, we all do! Thus, it was logical at that moment to screech, "WHY DIDN'T YOU GUYS EAT BEFORE THE MOVIES? WHY? WHY? WHY?"

I know, irrational and dangerous. Estrogen Terrorism. Also, I know what you’re thinking, "Dude. That was totally run on. One word for you - paragraphs."

Time to descend down the wooded path to my Menopausal Hut, which is not a house of banishment or detention but a middle aged woman's retreat. The Menopausal Hut is pleasant, with a sunlit, airy rooms and a full bathroom complete with a Japanese furo soaking tub. There's an efficient little kitchen with a nifty electric whistling kettle for tea and a glass jar full of Snickerdoodle cookies. Books are plentiful as are magazines, mostly the good cheesy ones like People and its tawdry cousin, Us.

There's a feather bed. Ahhhhh! Feather duvet. Oooooo! And ten feather pillows. Mmmm!

I tucked myself in with a People magazine (Jennifer Aniston on the cover), brewed up some chamomile tea then took a luxurious soak in the Furo bath. I recovered nicely and was able to pull myself together to take the kiddo out for a Mother Daughter brunch.

At the table, Moll was distant and apologized for it:

"I'm sorry I'm killing brunch, Mom."

"I know you're upset with me for yelling at you and your friends," said the Mom, taking a bite of Crow Pie.

"Yeah. You know, you can yell at me, but don't yell at my friends, please."

I yammered just a little bit, I swear, just a teeny tiny bit, about the drive-through window business, but then stopped myself to have another slice o' crow.

"Oh, I understand. And I apologize, honey. I really, really do. And I'll apologize to your friends. Your old Mom is tired these days. Menopause is kicking my butt. However, I should have known better."

I almost blurted out that I could make it up to the girls by driving them down to Disneyland and Universal Studios for a weekend, but the dessert tray showed up and I shut the fuck up.

So I'm back at the keyboard. I will answer my email. I will call my friends. I will do the 4:30 pm yoga practice today.
I will be a better mother.

And I will ask my hubs, very nicely and wearing my laciest camisole, if we could build a Menopausal Hut sometime very soon. Because what I described above was a total figment of my imagination. But you were right there in the furo bath with me, weren't you?

read more by Grace Davis at I Am Dr. Laura's Worst Nightmare, and visit Grace's Relief Blogs: Family to Family and Hurricane Katrina Direct Relief