Not So Fast

I got through yesterday but then 1 a.m. came and the kid was awake.  I got him calmed down and tucked in again, but he wanted me to sit in the rocking chair while he fell asleep and last night I couldn’t do it.

He wiggled. Turned over. Turned over again. Looked up to see if I was still there.

He wasn’t asleep.

At moments like this I can feel my patience leaving me, as though it’s a physical sensation. First it’s just a tightness in my chest, then I feel my patience start to flow like a stream. It begins in my shoulders and goes down my arms. By the time it gets to my fingertips it’s too late to grasp on. (At times, when I’m hanging on by a thread, I find myself opening and closing my hands as if to keep what patience I have from slipping away entirely. That’s when the little voice in my brain pipes up. “You’re acting crazy,” it says.)

Last night I felt the irrational side of my brain start to take over, and I let it. “I can’t sit here until he falls asleep every time he wakes up in the middle of the night,” it asserted. And furthermore, “I don’t want to.

Plus, I had to pee.

He had been quiet for a couple of minutes so I got up, knowing full well he’d look up to find me gone and start wailing. And he did.

I went back in but it was too late. He had lost it and I was losing it. “I’m DONE!” he yelled. Wouldn’t calm down, wouldn’t lie down. Wanted to sleep with me.

And I couldn’t do it.

“Lie down so I can tuck you back in or I’m going back to bed,” I said. “Last chance.”

He didn’t. So I did.

The shrieks of “MAMA! MAMA! MAMA!” brought my husband from the next room. He, less tired than I, was willing to have a roommate for the night. They left and I stayed in our guest room – my sanctuary – and wondered how it’s possible that in no time at all I can go from coping to NOT AT ALL.

Is it a mommy fail? Or do we all have moments like this?

This is Now

On a different Sunday, on a different day in the past, this day probably would have eaten me alive.

According to our alternating-weekend-sleep-in-days schedule, today was my day to get up with Connor. I did get to sleep a little later than normal – 7:15 instead of 6:nothing a.m., thanks to my benevolent husband who took the early riser into bed and managed to get him to sleep for another hour-and-a-bit – so there’s that to be thankful for. But as soon as the little voice said “mama” and the weird dream about work faded away I realized something. I forgot to take my medication last night.

I haven’t done that before (at least when I realized it at the time), so upon realizing it this morning I wasn’t sure what to do. Wasn’t keen to take one in the morning and then take my usual dose at bedtime, so I decided to just skip it.

By about 1:30 I started to think perhaps that hadn’t been the best decision.

Sundays are my day to tackle Connor on my own while my husband works as a freelance graphic designer. You have to realize: I don’t do this well. I know there are mothers all over the world who do this on their own, day in and day out, with more kids, more challenging kids, and just, well, more challenges all around. Maybe it’s partly that I work full time so I’m not used to it. Maybe it’s partly what I call Post Traumatic Connor Syndrome after being at home with him for a year on mat leave when some of those days darn near killed me. Maybe I’m just not cut out for it. Regardless, a tiny part of me dreads Sundays.

I try to tackle this fear with a plan. Today I had it all worked out: groceries and shopping for a last-minute baby shower gift in the morning, lunch, nap for C, baby shower, home to make dinner.

It didn’t happen.

First, Connor refused to go out this morning. “I’m too sick,” said the kid who’s not sick (that I am aware). After about three attempts I decided not to fight it, figuring I’d find a way to get a baby shower gift on the way there.

Then he refused to nap.

My husband, who hadn’t started working at that point, tried to put him down so I could grab a shower and dash out to get a gift. Came home to a kid who was clearly not sleeping. I took over so my husband could work, but nope. “I’m feeling better,” said Connor (which, contrary to what you might think, has nothing to do with the earlier “I’m sick” declaration. It’s just his way of telling us a nap is not in the cards).

To keep my sanity, the nap refusal is one battle I choose not to fight with him. You don’t want to sleep? Fine, don’t sleep. We’ll all just be miserable instead.

Instead I got him dressed, wrapped the baby shower present, wrote on the card, went to check the invitation for the address.

The shower is next weekend.

By that point he was cranky but refusing to sleep, hungry but refusing to eat, and it was only 1:30. I looked at the clock and thought, “What the hell am I going to do for four hours?!”

I’ve had many a Sunday like this before, where things just don’t go well. Typically he cries, I cry, the dog hides and I think, “I CAN’T DO THIS!!” Beat myself up for not being able to handle one slightly challenging but generally fabulous two-year-old ONE day a week. But some days I just can’t. And today I had a little voice at the back of my brain saying, “You forgot your meds last night.” Meaning: It’s Sunday, he’s not eating, sleeping or cooperating with the things you need to get done today. Good luck with that!

This is where my mask comes in handy. If I allow myself to think I can’t do this, I can’t. I can’t think rationally, or creatively, or do any of the things you need to do when your two-year-old is having one of those days. I slapped down that part of me that wanted to go upstairs to where my husband was working and tell him I was stuck. I ignored that itty bitty feeling of panic that threatened to take over and told it to bugger off while I rejigged the order of the day and went out to the grocery store. Maneuvered the speed bump when we got there and my kid, who loves the child-size carts, didn’t understand that today wasn’t a day mummy was prepared to deal with him running loose all over the store bashing in to little old ladies’ ankles. When his response was to have a fit inside the door in front of the Sunday grocery crowd my mask slipped for a split second and I found myself saying to him, “I need you to help me.” (Funnily enough, he didn’t have a lot of sympathy for that.)

I let him sit in the main part of the cart instead until another mother with a similarly-aged (very well-behaved) child sitting in the child seat gave me a dirty look.

A fruit snack bribe and the grocery shopping was done smoothly (mostly). A tired kid asleep in the car meant a bit of peace and a chance to let the dog out at the park to have a run. Another small buffer in the form of some TV when we got home. (I love you Dora, I really do.)

Despite the forgotten meds, the willful child and the plans gone awry, we made it through. Managed to cook dinner AND make my lunch for tomorrow. Even played a bit and then managed to get the living room cleaned up a bit before dinner.

All those other Sundays? That was then. And this is now.

The 'M' Word

I’m going to take a risk here. Say something controversial. I feel really nervous saying this – even though those who know me know controversy is nothing new for me – largely because I’m afraid of what others in the PPD community would say.

I don’t consider myself to have a mental illness.

Okay, it’s out there. Here’s where this is coming from.

There’s discussion going on about perceptions of mental illness following what happened in Arizona last weekend. People who have dealt with issues like PPD (see? I can’t even call it a regular old illness) are making the very good point that people need to be more understanding of mental illness.

Heather Armstrong wrote about it on Dooce. Kimberly wrote what I consider a very brave and beautiful post about it on her blog All Work and No Play Makes Mommy Go Something Something. (Great blog title, incidentally.)

But it was Lauren Hale who started me thinking about this with her post on My Postpartum Voice. I saw her question on Twitter: “How did postpartum change your view of mental illness?” My immediate thought: “It didn’t.” I’ve been thinking about this for days now, and it still doesn’t. Not really, anyway.

I’m not sure why that is. Is it because I’m not willing to admit it? Is it because there’s such a stigma attached to that term – mental illness – that I’m not even going to let my brain go there? It took me a really long time to accept that I had a problem and ask for help. It took me even longer to broach the subject of medication. And even longer to actually ask for a prescription.

I had a conversation with some friends at work yesterday about parenting. I admitted that before I had a child I always thought I would manage to be some sort of perfect human being in order to raise him in some sort of perfect way. (Yeah, I know, I have issues. And denial is only the tip of the iceberg.) And then I had a child and, postpartum depression aside, I realized I’m only human and some days I’m less perfect than others and that’s okay. Or, it should be okay. (Yeah, yeah. I’m working on it.) But the point of the conversation was that it seems, for many people, your crazy doesn’t come out until you have kids.

And I’m willing to joke about it in that way. “Oh yeah, my crazy definitely came out after I had a baby.” But it’s only partly a joke. I do accept it as such. I consider it my crazy, without implying judgment in the use of the word the way many people do – and are, after last weekend’s events.

So why don’t I define that as mental illness? I honestly don’t know.

Does it matter? I honestly don’t know.

Are there parts of this I need to accept in order to get better? Maybe. For now I’m just willing to listen to others’ perspectives and allow my thoughts around this to evolve.

The Question of Sleep

I’m going to leave aside the blog name for a moment because right now I don’t actually give a shit what this blog is called. Though, to be honest, “Rage Against the Baby” is seeming apt.

I haven’t told you the whole epic sleep story but for now suffice to say my kid doesn’t sleep well. This was a major fear of mine going into parenthood, and I actually had no idea how bad it would be. There are theories about what causes someone to get postpartum depression, from chemistry to genetics to a birth experience that didn’t go as you’d have wished and so on. I think genetics plays a part for me, but I honestly think the major culprit for me is sleep. I just do not cope when I’m overtired.

Today was one of those days.

I didn’t sleep at all well on Saturday night or last night when I was on monitor duty. (My husband and I alternate nights so we only have to get up every other night.) On Saturday a series of four wake-up freak-outs in a row had me waving the white flag and allowing a wiggling child to sleep with me. Just didn’t want to deal with it all night. He slept. Me? Not so much.

Last night he was up over and over again until 5:30 at which time I gave up and brought him in with me. This is usually a sanity-preserving strategy rather than one designed to get me more sleep, because I generally can’t fall asleep again at that time of the morning. But today he did his usual wiggle, settled down and I crashed.

I know. Tell me that bringing him into bed with me is just prolonging the problem. Tell me that I haven’t been strict enough, or consistent enough, or whatever enough in the middle of the night and that’s why he’s a crappy sleeper. Trust me, I know. When I’m not tired (well, relatively speaking) I am much better at this. But when I’m tired, and especially when it’s been going on for weeks and weeks despite taking a consistent approach, I just do not have the strength.

Problem is, it actually doesn’t help the big picture either. I think this progression of tweets from today sums it up quite nicely.

First thing this morning, the tired tweet:

screenshot of tweet

 

 

Alone in my quiet office when I still have a sense of humour:

screen-shot-2011-01-11-at-8-38-24-pm1

Home. Following disagreement with my husband about potty training and two meltdowns from the kid:

screen-shot-2011-01-11-at-8-38-38-pm1

 

 

 

And finally, how I always seem to let this ruin my day:

screen-shot-2011-01-11-at-8-38-56-pm1

 

 

 

I did choose to hit ‘publish’ on this, obviously, because my question is this: WHY? Why is this so hard sometimes? All of it. I have no idea really why this kid doesn’t sleep better. He’s had good stretches in the past but overall he’s been a nightmare. I also have no idea why this makes such a huge difference to how well I can, or can’t, cope. Noticing this, acknowledging it, realizing it’s temporary – all of those things sometimes help me to cope in the moment and just do the mama stuff I need to do and then go to sleep. But on days like today, it doesn’t matter. Rage wins and my white flag comes out.

Why?

The Hardest Thing

It’s now been seven days since I started this blog and tonight I celebrated by sending the link to several good friends. Some of them – who are moms now too – knew me pre-baby and some of them are very special mom friends whose kids are C’s friends. But none of them knew the depth to which I struggled with postpartum depression. I don’t doubt with even one ounce of my being that they’ll be supportive, but it still took me two days to work up the nerve to tell them about this blog.

I’ve had a few responses already, and I’m feeling showered with love and support. They’re all beautiful women, and they’ve been beautiful in their response to my story.

One of the things that has helped me so, so much – that I heard again tonight – is that other women think being a mom is the hardest thing they’ve ever done. SO true.

Being a mom is HARD. It’s hard whether we have one kid, or two, or five. It’s hard whether we’re partnered or single. It’s hard whether we’re struggling with postpartum depression or not. It’s just hard. I think we’d all do well to remember that and to cut ourselves, and each other, some slack.