Deep Breaths and Thank Yous

I do have a tendency to barf things out there, don’t I? Sometimes it just helps to put it out there instead of pretending things are okay and silently screaming.

So, thank you. Thank you for listening and commenting and sending me messages to let me know you’re out there. It helps. It really does.

One of the worst things about this is feeling alone. And none of us is, which is the lovely thing about writing here. I get reassured that some of you have been here and know what this feels like, and some of you reading this realize it’s not just you either.

We’re not alone.

Second chances tip jarThe good news is that today was better. We’ve adopted a new strategy for dealing with nights because, while I don’t feel like I know what I’m doing with this whole getting-babies-to-sleep thing, I do know one thing: My very chunky baby does not need to be fed two or three times a night. So I’m currently living in that weird place where the air is mostly filled with hope but the scent of desperation still lingers, and I’m afraid that if I breathe too deeply I’ll inhale the fear lurking outside. It’s the fear that this won’t work, because if this doesn’t work I have no earthly idea what to do next. But for now fear shall not rule; I’m going to keep taking deep breaths.

Okay.

Let’s talk about something else for a minute. Speaking of thank yous, I so appreciate your support for the stuff I’m writing elsewhere. I’m in full swing with my new Yummy Mummy Club blog, starting with a post about second chances and a bit of a thank-goodness-it’s-not-me post about babysitting my brother’s twins. I’ve got another one coming up this week where I’m looking for advice on helping a four-year-old make friends and I’d love it if you’d look out for that one too.

And, since it’s one of the most common search terms that leads people here, I’ve shared a version of my postpartum rage story on Huffington Post. I just think we need to talk about that more.

 

Trust Your Struggle

trust-your-struggle

I was browsing through my “Get Inspired” Pinterest board and came across this image. (Sadly, I don’t know the original source so can’t credit it.)

Trust your struggle.

I pinned it a year ago, according to the site. I was momentarily surprised when I saw that, because that was a few months after my darkest days. But that actually makes sense, because we can’t see the good in the bad when we’re in the dark. In those moments it’s just awful and overwhelming and all-consuming. When we’re really struggling, it’s almost impossible to think that we’ll be better for it.

During my darkest days, someone told me I would be grateful for my experience once I was past it. I didn’t agree then. I couldn’t see it. But it was true.

Some of the most inspiring (and inspired) people I know survived some sort of horrible experience and learned to love the lessons in it. Some found strength they didn’t know they had. Some appreciate life after loss. Some found their calling or figured out what’s really important to them.

My darkest days feel very long ago. Not that I haven’t struggled since then, but I have perspective now that I didn’t before and I don’t think I will ever sink so low again. And I have the lessons and the love from that experience.

I learned a lot from my struggle. I didn’t trust it at the time, but I can see it now, and I expect there are still blessings to be unveiled.

There’s beauty in the breakdown.

Trust your struggle.

Pride and Potential

Honour your children, they suggested. Share how they make you proud.

Easy peasy, as Connor likes to say. (He stole my expression.)

He’s always up for anything involving construction paper and crayons.

“What are you good at?” I asked.

He didn’t hesitate in his answer.

child with sign

I’m good at building LEGO.

He’s so good at LEGO it actually freaks me out a little bit. He’s going to be smarter than I am. He might be already. He’s good at a lot of things, but the confidence he gets from LEGO is a joy to see. He can do it well and he knows it. And I’m glad he knows it.

“What else are you good at?”

I thought his answer might be painting. (“I have paint all over my hands because I’m an artist like my dad,” he told me the other day.) Or baking. There are lots of things he could have chosen.

child with sign

I’m good at cleaning up my toys.

But he chose this. It’s his job and he does it (though he occasionally complains about it, and fair enough). But he does a darn good job of cleaning up his toys.

“What’s something about you that makes you really nice?” Last question.

child with sign

I help you change the baby.

He thought for a split second. Helping change the baby is not just something he likes to do, it’s something he does because he wants to be helpful. And I so admire that about him. He’s a really good big brother.

And then there’s the baby. What to say about the one I’ve only known for a couple of weeks but who has changed my worldview? If life is made up of a series of steps along a path leading us to who we are meant to be, he is a significant one in mine. In him lies so much potential.

newborn with sign

I’m brand new and full of potential.

Both for him and for me.

Dishes

Mundane is normal. Normal is good.

It’s the normal things I stop doing when things aren’t going well. The dishes languish, rinsed but not clean. The clutter in the house adds to the clutter in my mind.

I like puttering. It gives me a chance to think and to reflect and to feel in control. But none of those things is appealing when things aren’t going well. I don’t want to think and so I leave the dishes, my sullied thoughts glomming onto the detritus of dinner.

Lately my dishes are clean.

Clean dishes are normal. And normal is good.

As you may have noticed from my recent silence here, my writing isn’t coming together much lately. Or maybe it’s that I’m choosing to play and to sleep instead of choosing to write. In any case, I got a bit stuck. So when Velvet Verbosity suggested I try the 100 word challenge, I scoffed. “I don’t have time to write 100 words,” I told her (with a nod to Mark Twain). And then I decided it was worth a shot. And this is what came out in response to the current prompt – Doing the dishes.

 

I’ve also got a (previously written) post up on Just.Be.Enough today. Do you feel bad about feeding your kids McDonald’s? Join me in my McShame.

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Do you know the first rule of parenthood? Never brag about how well your kid is sleeping. Doing so is guaranteed to invite the wrath of the sleep gods who will throw your arrogance in your face by giving you one of the worst nights of your life.

I’ve learned that lesson the hard way. More than once. (Ahem.) So, no, this post is not about sleep. But it does sort of feel like I’m about to break a similar rule.

A few months ago I was struggling. I don’t even know what this struggle is anymore. Antenatal depression? Regular old depression? A habit? A rut? I was just struggling. I dreaded coming home from work because I knew Connor would get all riled up. He would run around and jump on me and yell and sing and I would want to go into my room and close the door.

I had all my walls up. The ones covered in ugly graffiti that said things like I can’t and I don’t want to. Some days my inner monologue said it’s him and others it’s me.

I think it was me.

I mentioned a few weeks ago that Rich took Connor camping. Twice, actually. I stayed home because I’ve determined after careful research that me + pregnancy + camping = no fun for anyone.

The first weekend I was terrified that being on my own meant I’d stay in bed and not do anything and feel horrible and depressed as a result. (Previous research has shown this to be the likely outcome.) So I made a bunch of plans and was quite productive. I enjoyed my time alone, but by the time the weekend was coming to an end I was dreading their return home because I knew it would be the end of my solitude and a return to the battle of the 4-year-old vs. the introvert.

But quiet weekends also provide an opportunity to think. And in the midst of my puttering and planning some thoughts came in. The same ones I often think, but without the background noise it was easier to hear them.

I’ve talked to a few people about my difficult dynamic with Connor, most notably my mother and my new psychiatrist.

My mom – never really one to hold back – observed that the way I respond to him (shutting down, pushing him away) provokes his reaction (more loud and provocative behavior to get attention) and so on until we’re swirling around in a whirlpool of water that I can’t really see until we actually flush ourselves down the toilet and I realize it’s too late. (My metaphor, not hers.)

My psychiatrist – who I really like – commiserated with me. She tells me her own stories of too much and be quiet and for God’s sake STOP!! On more than one occasion she has said, “Being a mom is really fucking hard.” (Did I mention I really like her?)

So in those quiet moments when these thoughts came in I got to what if I…? and maybe…

And when they got home I did and it was.

Connor pushed my buttons, but instead of screaming inside my head I acknowledged my anger and frustration and then gently set them aside and took a deep breath. Don’t provoke the cycle.

It worked.

Not to say, of course, that I am now motherhood personified, but I think in that process something clicked.

Child with dinosaur face paintingI can see what he needs and not only what I don’t want.

I can catch the ridiculousness of fighting with him over whether we use the bath towel I have in my hand or the one he wants, which is in the linen closet down the hall.

I understand that he wants attention and time to play, and while that’s often really hard for me I’m more often than not finding a way to do it.

But I’m still not letting him squeeze the toothpaste all over the bathroom. (Even with motherhood personified there has to be a line.)

That was several weeks ago and things since have been indescribably different. I have managed, for once, to grab onto the feeling of enjoying motherhood and not have it immediately whisked away. I’m enjoying my time with him. He’s funny – so, so funny – and I get to observe from a much more connected place the person he is becoming.

I sincerely hope that in sharing this I haven’t broken an unspoken rule of motherhood because I like this feeling and I’d like things to stay this way.

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