Grace in Small Things: #5

 peacock full feathers

 

  1. Family members who help. The magnitude of this actually makes it a big thing, but having someone else empty the dishwasher, fold laundry and put the kid to bed is worth mentioning here.
  2. Sunshine and bird song in the morning.
  3. The excitement in the city leading up to a 10-day festival.
  4. A flexible work schedule.
  5. Extra pillows for pregnant tummies.

Waging a battle against embitterment and taking part in Grace in Small Things.

 

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I’m also thankful for others who invite me to share my voice. This week I had two other posts up on sites I regularly contribute to:

On Just.Be.Enough: Being a Mom of Boys – an update on how I’m feeling after finding out this babe isn’t a girl after all.

On Postpartum Progress: On the physicality of motherhood (ugh, but after reading the comments I’m so glad it’s not just me).

Home, Interrupted

We went home for the weekend. Home? I’m not actually sure if it’s the right word anymore.

We were there just over a month ago — my first time back since we moved — and while there I visited a friend.

“How does it feel to be home?” he asked. Then paused. “Is this home?”

We were sitting on the grass in the bright sunshine outside Starbucks. The shopping centre I had been to countless times hummed along, ignorant of my six months’ absence. I looked around.

“I don’t know.” I pondered. “I think so. Yes.”

But is it? I didn’t really feel that way when we got back to where home is now, at least in the literal our-house sense, and I have torn through the nuances of that question many times since.

Is home where we live? Or is it where I grew up?

Is it where my family is? Which part of my family?

Is it wherever I damn well say it is?

I have answers to none of those.

“We’re going home tonight,” we told Connor on the night we planned to leave. I pictured our current house, with the trim color we don’t like and plan to change, and our bedroom, which I love, with its new dark furniture.

That’s where my small but growing family resides. My mugs are in the cupboard and Connor’s toys are in the bath. My husband has nurtured the lawn. My dog has his spot, which, lately, is on the bath mat (whether someone else is using it or not).

My siblings are nearby – two of the three, anyway. My sister and her husband, after way too long being a province away, now live 20 minutes from us. My brother and sister-in-law are about to help double the head count of the next generation by bringing twin boys into our lives. (And if you think I’d miss the day-to-day of that, you’re nuts.)

But my parents are still where we left them, living in the same house they’ve been in since I was 19. Connor misses them, and every time they visit I’m reminded of how important it is for them to be part of his life.

This last trip back was for the 4th annual joint birthday party we have with four kids who have known each other since they were born. They are Connor’s friends, and he doesn’t know a life without them.

Except I suppose he does now, because they are no longer part of his everyday. He talks about them as though they are, though these comments are punctuated with heartbreaking missing-them statements and “Can K come over?” questions.

This year’s party was perfect. The weather co-operated and the kids enjoyed the slip ‘n’ slide, and there were only a few parental interventions required. We snacked, we drank (some of us more boring drinks than others), and if you had asked me if I wanted to stay in that backyard with those people forever I would have said yes.

But we have chosen to leave that backyard, both literally and metaphorically. I often question whether it was the right decision, and yet when I’m back in my hometown it doesn’t feel like home.

For the most part, I don’t miss the city. But I miss the people something fierce, as though a part of me were missing, and it has quite unexpectedly left me feeling homeless in a way I could never have anticipated.

On the Move: Taking Over Momcomm

Oh hi! I’m not here again today.

Melissa from Momcomm has gone to Costa Rica so we’ve hacked her blog and a bunch of us are taking over for July.

Just kidding. She invited us to, because she’s generous like that, and I’m so totally thrilled to be kicking off her month of guest posts. So come and visit me over there, where I’m posting about getting started in blogging.

And if you’re a blogger and you’re not familiar with her site (which seems unlikely) be sure to look around. Melissa is the author of the DIY blog critique (the awesomeness of which I can vouch for and which you can buy through the affiliate link in my sidebar) and her blog is one of my never-miss sites because it’s full of totally awesome tips and insight (some of which I still need to implement, ahem).

See you at Momcomm!

Momcomm
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What You May Not Know

I know, you’re thinking, “What do I not know, especially after the Things I’m Afraid To Tell You post?”

Well, you’re going to have to visit me at Just.Be.Enough today to find out.

Random Worries of a Pregnant PPD Mom

I’m not fretting too much about this stuff, but it’s taking up space in my brain so I thought I’d put it somewhere else.

  1. I’m worried that if I spend 40 weeks totally exhausted (which seems to be the way this is going) I will be already tired when I go into the newborn-tired phase. And that’s not good for someone who’s attempting to avoid once again turning into a raging lunatic.
  2. I’m not even sure I’m going to get to 40 weeks. If all my wishing for this to be over happens to work I won’t. Which isn’t how it works, I know. So maybe I’m just dreading 16 more weeks of feeling like crap.
  3. I’m not sure if I’m up for all the baby stuff again. (I know. Too late, right?)
  4. I’m worried I’m going to have another breech baby.
  5. I’m a little concerned that if I do end up with another scheduled c-section I won’t be as okay with it as I’m trying to prepare myself to be.
  6. I’m afraid I’ll be disappointed in myself and how I handle labour if I do get to experience that this time.
  7. I’m afraid that, no matter what happens, the new-baby stuff will result in me being an absolutely awful mother to Connor.
  8. I’m dreading all the icky postpartum stuff – sore boobs, sore incision, hair loss, night sweats. (Oh wait, I get night sweats now. (Thanks, meds.) So I guess I dread that getting worse. Or never, EVER going away.)
  9. I’m worried that the recently-discovered marginal cord insertion issue I have is more of a concern than my midwife is making it out to be. (This is when the umbilical cord is inserted into the side of the placenta instead of the middle, and it can affect the baby’s growth. Anyone have any experience with that?)
  10. Despite #9, I’m worried that I’m measuring small because my being on medication is making this baby small.

And bonus #11: I’m worried that this many worries is a sign that I get to deal with mucho anxiety this time as well as the potential for rage/depression/general craziness.

Sigh.

 

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