Balancing the priorities

If you were to drop by my apartment tomorrow afternoon, completely unannounced, I would be annoyed. Mostly because I like some sort of notice that someone is dropping in, even if it’s all of 20 minutes’ worth of notice. I hate surprises. But hassle aside, I would also be a little embarrassed. Embarrassed by the clutter.

If Breanna is having a good day then the dishes will be washed but I never dry them and put them away immediately unless I have no choice because the rack is full. If Breanna is having one of those “hi, I’ve been teething for three god damn months and I’m a little bloody well ticked off about it” days, the dishes may be sitting on the counter. Regardless of how great or horrible the day is, there’s a 99% chance you will step on or trip over some form of toy in the living room because Hayley’s favorite way to play with her toys is to spread them out all over the floor; in fact you’ll be lucky to even make it to the living room since she may have also left her ridearound car directly in front of the main door. After you’ve fallen to the ground, a victim of a Little People school bus or perhaps the Sesame Street play set, some of the laundry from the bedroom may slink out and attack you while you’re down. I feel like my life is a constant cycle of dishes and laundry, and yet I can never conquer it because there’s always more.

I should mention I’m not dirty. You won’t come in and find moldy food rotting on a plate from two weeks ago, bugs crawling on the counter, and ten inches of filth. But I hate to dust and with two kids and a lack of organization, I feel like I’m always fighting a losing battle. It doesn’t help that there are two adults who have somewhat packrat tendencies, a child who claims every single toy and stuffed animal is her “favorite”, and a baby who doesn’t mess much up but is unfortunately too small to be of any help.

It can make me crazy sometimes because I remember that it was so different pre-children. It was never Martha Stewart perfection, it didn’t look like a real estate showing. But it was tidy and somewhat more organized and Toys R Us hadn’t exploded in the living room.

But then I think back on my own childhood.

My father worked and my mother stayed home. She wasn’t a super early riser but throughout the course of her day she would get the dishes washed (and dried and put away so right there she was one up on my track record), take care of laundry, vacuum, make meals for everyone, pack lunches for my dad, and try to tidy up as much as she could. Pretty much the way I do now. She was often fighting a losing battle herself. If she had notice that someone was coming, she would have the kitchen, living room, and bathroom presentable. If there was laundry that needed to be finished up, I bet it went into a laundry basket and shoved into the bedroom (that’s what I do and I’m sure it must be a genetic habit). The door to my room and my sister’s room would just be shut because they were forever nuclear warfare sites of papers and books and toys. I bet that if someone had just dropped by because they were in the neighborhood that she would have had the same reaction of mild panic and “casual” glances over her shoulder to see how bad it might be.

There were several reasons that our home was messy. My parents collected a lot of things (books, cookbooks, knick knacks, etc) and – surprise, surprise! – they were packrats on some level. But more than that, my mother was a mother first and a homemaker second. Sure, she could have spent all day trailing behind us and picking stuff up, obsessing about whether every stray piece of Barbie footwear had been put away in the proper spot, scrubbing floors on her hands and knees, and greeting my father with a newspaper and a June Cleaver smile at the end of the day. Why didn’t she? Because she was too busy.

She was busy feeding her two kids. She was busy playing with those Barbie shoes, helping us in our imagination games. She was busy taking us to the park to play or to the KMart across the street to buy us some little treat. She was busy taking us to play with all the other kids on our street. She was busy baking cookies and reading us books and watching Sesame Street with us and and and. There’s always something cheap there a kid can discover and cherish.

Our house was no museum of perfection. It was cluttered and messy. Never dirty and horrible, but cluttered and messy nonetheless. And as a parent myself, I now know how frustrating it must have been to finally get the living room picked up, go to transfer the wet clothes from the washer to the dryer, and then come back to find all my Hot Wheels all over the living room floor. Yet, she didn’t pull a Joan Crawford on me, throwing wire hangers at me while I scrubbed the tub with half a can of Comet. She sighed (maybe sometimes she got a little mad, I know I do now too), and let me play and perhaps she muttered under her breath about tossing the entire collection of bloody cars into the trash can, but at the end of the day, the cars got put away again and I would go to bed and her living room would be organized for the next ten or twelve hours once again. When I went to visit them on Sunday, the house was different because there are no kids to mess it up anymore and it was much more orderly so I know it wasn’t her; it was us.

My mother was too busy being a mother to make her home look like a Mr. Clean commercial. And when I look back, I don’t think “jeez, what a mess!” I look back and I remember making eight trillion different crafts with her, I remember decorating gingerbread cookies with her, I remember begging her to read “Green Eggs and Ham” just one more time even though I knew it by heart, I remember her giving me carrots and raisins for a snack because I saw it on Mr. Dressup, I remember playing. I remember good times and fun and love. If my childhood had been an unhappy one, I highly doubt that I would think back fondly and think, “gosh the hand towels were folded so perfectly and the tiles just gleamed.” I would probably think back and wonder why my Mommy didn’t play with me more often.

Some days I want to implode because of the apartment. Right now I’m in a heavy purge mode and I just want to toss everything in the garbage or dump it on the front steps of the Salvation Army. I want to go to the dollar store and buy plastic bins and baskets and containers to try to organize toys by type and then toss anything that doesn’t fit into any kind of set because I know very well that Hayley has far too many toys and despite her sentimentality, she doesn’t play with that many of them. I desperately want to organize and clean and shine.

More than that though, I want to be my mom. When I die some day I don’t want Hayley and Breanna to stand in the cemetery and say, “she sure cleaned well.” I want them to remember that Mom was crazy and silly and had an imagination that rivaled theirs and that she read to them and played with them and that although she had to wash the dishes every day she never once said she couldn’t play games because she had to dust the china cabinet.

I just want to play right now. Some day there will be time for dusting again.

Sometimes it's the little things

Ever notice that sometimes there are little hints that you’re a parent? I mean sure, the explosion of toys in the living room might be a subtle clue, or perhaps the baby parked on your hip is a dead giveaway, but there are other things that don’t stand out so clearly but scream “I’m a parent!” just as loudly.

For instance, you may be a parent if:

-your ponytail is being held back by an elastic with a plastic Dora figure on it
-your glasses have very tiny fingerprints
-you cut yourself and apply a bandage covered in balloons and clowns because that’s all you have handy
-you have a stomach ache from eating too quickly so you take a bit of gripe water
-it’s after 9 pm and you catch yourself softly singing the fucking theme song to Rolie Polie Olie under your breath
-you wash your hair with Johnson’s baby shampoo
-you scribble notes and to-do list in crayon because they’re far more accessible than pens
-you notice that, as you’re standing and waiting for your tea to brew, you’re gently swaying from side to side, the same way you do when you’re soothing the baby

What are your little things?

A request I didn't expect to make

Sometimes it’s overwhelming to see what can happen when someone asks for advice on the internet because everyone has an opinion and can easily turn to absolute chaos. However, despite my reservations, I am going to actually ask for advice now.

Breanna is pretty much outgrowing the the Miracle Blanket by leaps and bounds (Amy, I guess I’ll have to be sending it back to you soon, wah!). I no longer try to restrain her arms because she likes to have her hands free now and she doesn’t startle anymore. At this point I’m just keeping her legs inside the pouch, but she kicks free so easily that I have to try to gently keep her still while she’s falling asleep.

For those of you who swaddled your babies, how did you transition out of it? Breanna’s sleep is in shorter spurts these days and I think it’s because she kicks her legs and wakes herself up. I’ve been wondering if one of those sleep sacks would work or maybe the “nightgowns” that are little sakcs as well (I don’t even know if they make them big enough for her), or if I just have to patiently (hahaha!) wait for her to get used to sleeping freely and wait for her to start doing longer stretches again.

You would think this is something I wouldn’t need to ask about since this is my second baby and all, but I never had to transition from swaddling to non-swaddling because Hayley hated it from day one. Even when the nurses wrapped her up tightly she would free herself by flailing angrily until she was loose. People will say “all babies love to be swaddled!” but no one ever told Hayley that; it was like she came out and thought, “well thank GOD I’m out of that confined space now, HEY, get that blanket away from me, bitch!” so she just pretty much always slept freely. She wouldn’t even tolerate a blanket lightly covering her until she was almost two years old.

Okay. Suggest away, tell me how you handled it.

Misheard diagnosis

(Also known as the post in which I use several terms which will result in some strange Googlers feeling disappointed and vaguely ripped off.)

Breanna prefers nursing from the right side. Hayley did too when she was a baby. I can only assume the left has a crappy letdown in comparison or something of that sort, and that’s why the right is more popular. This is really annoying because I have to fight to get Breanna to latch on to the left side; the only way I can easily do it is if she’s just waking up and then in her sleepy daze she doesn’t complain.

If you’ve ever breastfed a baby you’ve probably found yourself, at least once, familiar with the side effect to a preference like that – since the neglected side doesn’t often get emptied completely, it also doesn’t always refill completely, and as a result you wind up with a telltale pain, kind of stabbing in nature. That would be me today. If I can’t get Breanna to nurse on that side soon, I’m going to have to toss her in the bouncy seat or the swing and break out the pump because although there are other remedies such as hot showers, hot compresses, and massages, the only thing that really works for me is to get the damn milk OUT.

Anyway, this whole thing led to a rather amusing misunderstanding.

Sherry: Ow. Oh, OW!
Hayley: What’s wrong Mommy?
Sherry: Oh, nothing really. I just have a clogged duct.
Hayley: (excited) You have a DUCK?! WHERE?!

She was a little deflated to learn that I do not, in actuality, have a duck, clogged or otherwise. Alas.

The sort of week it's been so far

It’s only Wednesday, only halfway through the week and it’s just been one of those weeks. Part of it is a teething baby with no end in sight, part of it is a three-and-a-half-year-old continuing to be, well, three, and part of it is just being tired. And thus, yesterday:

George: I brought you some chips.
Sherry: Yay! Now if only I had a beer to go with them. I could seriously use a beer.
George: Sorry. I’ll get you a beer tomorrow.
Sherry: That will be too late. By tomorrow I’ll need a bong.

Life in the 'burbs

Today was a beautiful, hot, sunny day. It felt more like summer than spring, and all that was missing was a pool and a BBQ. We went out after lunch and took the girls to the park where Hayley and I played on everything and George watched over a sleeping Breanna in the stroller. From there we walked through the woods to Grandma’s house (no, really, we went to visit his parents for a bit and cut through the woods). Once we got home, he had an errand to run and Breanna was asleep in her seat so I left her in the bedroom while Hayley and I took the baby monitor out on the balcony to enjoy some more sunshine.

When Breanna woke up, I brought her out too, covered her noggin with a sun hat, and noting that she was hungry, I fed her. Up on the fourth floor balcony. Overlooking the street. From the FOURTH floor. Way up here.

Two women in their 40s or 50s were walking by and they looked up, saw us, did a double take and then a triple take. I actually glanced down to see if I had forgotten to put on pants, but no, I was fully dressed and although it was quite obvious as to what I was doing based on the way I was holding Breanna’s body, I wasn’t even remotely close to flashing anyone. And in case you missed it, like I said, we were up on the FOURTH FLOOR balcony.

I thought I was being paranoid until one woman loudly said to the other that I should “cover up to do that”.

Oh no you didn’t. NO YOU DIDN’T.

I responded like so:

“This is my baby. She is hungry. If you were hungry right this second, you could reach into your purse and pull out a sandwich and eat it right down there on the sidewalk, and you would be perfectly within your rights to do so. Even if happened to be, say, a sardine sandwich, which friggin’ disgusts me, you would still be legally allowed to eat it and if it was bothersome to me, it would be expected that I should simply look away so as to not offend my poor eyes with your sandwich.

“Likewise, my daughter is hungry and in the province of Quebec, both she and I are legally protected and thus allowed to partake in breastfeeding. It is not against the law for me to feed my daughter while sitting on my own damn balcony. In fact, I could go sit on the sidewalk directly in front of you and feed her right there if I wished. I may also feed her in a park, a mall, a parked car, the front steps of a building, and a restaurant.

“Also, there is nothing obscene or immoral with this act. I am feeding my child in a way that is completely natural. I am neither required by law nor social etiquette to pump my breastmilk into a bottle in order to feed my daughter in public. I am not required to cover her with a blanket, hide inside my living room, or hide out in a bathroom when she is hungry.

“If you are so delicate that you are shocked and bothered by the thought that I am using a breast to feed my baby and the fact that although you can’t even see anything from way down there that you are nonetheless aware of what I am doing, all I can do is suggest that you look away.

“After all, I’m way up here, four stories higher than you are. It’s for your own good, really; if you keep looking up here, not only are you going to continue to be horrified, but keeping your stuck-up snooty nose so high in the air is certainly going to cause you to trip over something. I wouldn’t want you to fall on your ass because I might be so distracted by a need to laugh at you that I just might accidentally unlatch my daughter and I’ll end up spraying you with breastmilk.

“Have a fantabulous day! Bitch!”

And the best part is that since I didn’t have a lot of time to say what I wanted to say, I managed to convey all of that in one single gesture, courtesy of my middle finger.

Hello, nice weather!

How to have a perfect Spring day:

Get out one Mei Tei carrier and wrangle an octopus a baby into it. Get a pre-schooler’s coat and shoes on. Grab a ball, bottle of water, and camera. Go outside. Walk around for a long time in the sunshine, enjoying the hidden nature spots in the middle of suburbia, the surprisingly melodic harmonica-playing of the pre-schooler, and silly conversations.

For best results be sure that you are indeed bringing one Very Happy Baby:

And one Nature-Loving Tree Hugger:

Repeat as often as weather permits.

(More photos on Flickr.)

Snippets

Just a few snippets from recent days:

What’s making me giggle:

Hayley has a doctor appointment today, just a regular check-up. The receptionist always calls a day or two before any appointments to confirm.

*ring, ring*
George: Hello?
Woman: Can I speak to Hayley please?
George: … Uh… May I ask who’s calling please?!
Woman: I’m calling from Dr. M___’s office to confirm her Thursday appointment… Oh. Oh jeez, I just looked at her file; I didn’t realize she’s only three, sorry about that!

What has given me just a little bit of guilt

Hayley is a jumper. Approximately 5790643 times a day I ask her to stop repeatedly jumping because of the people downstairs (blast this top floor living!). It’s certainly worse when weather keeps us indoors but even if I let her out to run like a wild animal for six straight hours, she’d still jump within five minutes of walking inside.

Last night we were in the bathroom to brush her teeth before bed and she noticed the crack in our floor that goes from one end to the other. Our building dates back to the 70s I think and it’s the original (ugly) floor. We also live in the land of really cold winter and really hot summer, so everything expands and contracts a lot. Thus, the floor crack is not a surprise.

Hayley: Mommy, look! Look at this big crack in the floor!
Sherry: I know!
Hayley: Why is the floor cracked like that?
Sherry: Well, it’s because…
Hayley: Oh! I know why! It’s because I always jump and I broke the floor!
Sherry: Um, well actually…
Hayley: I won’t jump anymore. I don’t want the floor to break all the way to downstairs.
Sherry: But you didn’t… Um. Okay, that’s a really great idea!

Yeah, yeah I’m a terrible mother for letting her believe she cracked the floor. But she hasn’t jumped since last night so I’m just going to enjoy it for as long as it lasts.

What’s irritating the hell out of me:

The upcoming made-for-tv movie on ABC, “Fatal Contact: Bird Flu In America”, where millions of people are dropping dead from a nightmarish pandemic. Great. Just what we need, a movie to create fear-mongering in a general public that already works itself into a tizzy over things that haven’t happened. The promo calls it “one step ahead of the headlines”. I call it “utter crap useful for scaring the shit out of people”. Perhaps by mid-summer we can see a movie where half of North America dies from the mumps! Yay!

Something else that’s making me giggle:

Mildly related to that mini-rant, every time I serve chicken for supper, I refer to it as Avian Bird Flu Surprise. Delicious and nutritious, tastes just like, uh, chicken!

Hmmm, maybe I should get dressed unless I want to go to the doctor’s office in my pajamas.

Just a brief interlude

Breanna’s gone through a sleep strike over the past few days (developmental milestone? Teething? Growth spurt? Total anarchy? That’s the fun part – you just never know!) and Hayley hasn’t been sleeping well either, going down easily but waking up in the middle of the night or getting up as early as the sun. As a result, since Sunday I’ve been totally tired. Today I’ve felt mildly like a zombie. I had two coffees this morning and seriously considered a third but three cups will usually make me feel queasy so I backed off and switched to water.

Anyway, all this fog in my brain means that aside from getting confused about my glasses (see below), I don’t have anything to say right now. Actually, I do have a few things worth writing but not if I try to make them the slightest bit coherent now. Maybe if I get some sleep tonight I can string a few paragraphs together; as it is, I’ve had to hit the backspace key more times that I can count to fix typo on top of typo.

Have some imagery instead.

My new favorite picture of the two of them:

sisters

But these two come in at a close second with the two of them lying in Hayley’s bed for storytime:

sisters

sisters

See what I mean about tired? I could barely even keep my eyes open to take this.

trio

And since Amanda requested more video, here are two for you. I only wish my camera recorded sound too; I have a real video camera but no functional video capture card so I can only share sound-free video from my digital camera for now. Just imagine lots of giggling in both.

First, Breanna is trying to teach herself to crawl. She has the right idea, sort of, but lacks the co-ordination and strength (but oh, if desire was all that mattered, she’d be crawling everywhere!). Also, she needs to learn that you aren’t supposed to use your FACE to drag yourself along the ground. But hey, at least she’s happy about it.

And Hayley wanted me to take a video of her. I asked what she wanted to do and she immediately climbed on the bed and got ready for one of her favorite indoor activities – jumping on the bed!

Okay, that took all my energy reserves (though these pictures and several more that I didn’t link here are over on Flickr too. I think it’s time to watch the news in bed. Good night.

Duh, zzzzzzz

How you know you’re sleep deprived:

At 1:30 am, gently place your full, sleeping baby in her bassinet. Attempt to place eyeglasses on arm of couch. Knock glasses OFF couch. Feel around on blurry floor. Reach up on to end table and then couch, cursing because you can’t remember where you put your damn glasses. Realize you’re looking for your glasses so that you can find… your damn glasses. Finally locate them under table and sigh heavily. Put them on and search for another 30 seconds before remembering (again) that you already found what you were looking for. Give up all hope of ever locating missing brain cells as easily.

If I could just sleep for three straight days I’m sure it would get better.