Categories
Fulfillment

Vacation from guilt?

One thing that I look forward to every time I know I’ll be visiting with family is the opportunity to get a break. Not from work, usually, because I still usually end up working. I look forward to having more help with Hayden. A lot of the time, I think I would feel better about being a mother if I had more support around me—more people I could turn to during the day for help, more people that I could ask to watch Hayden so I could go to the dentist, get a project done or just take a shower.

So when I’m visiting with my family, I’m very excited to have that support (even if I won’t be going to the dentist or the doctor while I’m on vacation). But at the same time, I feel bad for “dumping” Hayden on my family all the time—and then I feel like they think I’m a bad mother who always wants to foist my child off on the first available person. Plus, I don’t want to ditch my family, either.

For those of you far from your families, what do you do to balance your time with your kids and your opportunity for a virtually endless supply of trusted babysitters?

Categories
Fulfillment Faith

Your turn: I was jealous

Wow, ladies. I’m very impressed! I threw out what I thought was a very “angsty” post—which I thought could be (and would be) easily dismissed. But many of you took the time to write thoughtful, heartfelt and most of all helpful answers. Would I be presumptuous to say that they were written with concern, compassion and sympathy?

I’m just so impressed that I wanted to highlight many of the responses here. Now, I know that not everyone has struggled with feeling dissatisfied, burdened, inconvenienced or whatever you want to call it, but I was very relieved to have my suspicions confirmed—I’m not alone.

I acknowledged in my post that adjusting my expectations was one way of trying to deal with this. (Although I’m not very good at that all the time.) Robin had further advice: go specifically to kid-friendly places. As silly as this may sound, I actually usually do try to struggle through dinner in a sit-down restaurant with Hayden (on the infrequent occasions that we actually go out). I have learned through sad experience that this is a recipe for disaster. Robin points out the importance of lots of entertaining toys for tots in public. Let me add that you can never have enough toys. And nothing you offer a child who has developed a taste for soda will satisfy his desire until you share with him.

Madame M points out that realizing the importance of spending time with your children is another way to appreciate it more. She’s absolutely right. In ten years, are you going to remember snuggling with your children or that episode of CSI:? And what will they remember? Perspective doesn’t always make things easier, but it can make the right choice more obvious.

Lindsey, my friend of whom I was jealous, says that it’s important to remember—and even okay to acknowledge—that we, as moms, have needs and desires, too. That’s a problem that I deal with in this area, too. I get so tired of subjugating my needs to his—sometimes I just want to take a shower or read or knit or eat in peace. Eating, sleeping: pretty basic needs, I think. I’ve been known to think, “Okay, Hayden, you win. You win. You win—again. I am nothing; my physical needs mean nothing; you win. I am broken. Again.” (That was especially common when he was a year old and still not sleeping through the night.) It sounds pretty psycho in the light of day, but I still remember very keenly that feeling. I’m a mother now, but I still have wants and I still have needs—and thank you, Lindsey, for reminding me that it’s okay to recognize that!

Julie felt like she was going out on a limb to say that she just found it easier to parent older children. Lucy agreed with her. Even with my limited experience, I believe that there are certainly easier ages to parent (and those ages are due to personality and personal preferences for the parents and the children alike). I know some men who feel like they’re all thumbs around newborns (and go so far as to tell their friends that they don’t really like babies!). As much as I loved Hayden, I found the newborn/zero feedback/blob stage very challenging. He is so entertaining these days (he was a total ham for my extended family at dinner last night!)—and by the same token, so exhausting. He really is a good kid, though.

Bellevelma—yes, it does help to hear that time will help. I’ve got nothing but time. In fact, I think that was a prevailing theme throughout most of the comments: Robin and Bellevelma both said it outright, and I think that time is also a factor in being able to better parent older children, like Julie and Lucy said. There are two things that change with time: us and our children. Our children grow and mature and suddenly become more manageable (we all hope!) and presentable in public. We also grow and mature and earn more hard-won patience and parenting skills. Kinda cool how that works.

Offline, my mother also suggested reading scriptures about charity to help build my patience. (I tried reading scriptures about patience; it made me impatient :\ .) I really believe that being a mother is God’s will for me (and for most women), and that I’m doing the right thing by dedicating my life to my children, as hard as it is. In fact, I’ve come to believe that a major reason why we’re supposed to have children is because this life is the time for us to learn to be humble, to cease to be selfish, to soften our hearts, to give up our will for that of God—and I really feel that having children can teach me that, if I let it.

Thank you for all your responses. Really, you helped to lift my spirits.

Categories
Fulfillment

I’m jealous

The bottom line: I’m jealous. I tend to avoid going out most of the time (this week has been an exception with my family support system!) mostly because Hayden always seems to melt down the fastest out of the house. My friend Lindsey blogged a while ago about what she called her “motherhood discovery.” She realized that she didn’t mind playing with her daughter in a movie theater lobby or the play ground at a baseball game instead of watching the ‘real show.’

I think what’s happened is that I am really starting to enjoy being a Mom. Don’t get me wrong, I have always liked being a Mom. I mean, I am doing what I have always wanted to do. But I feel like I appreciate the time I have with Sadie more. I no longer look at all the time I spend taking care of her as work or boring or even monotonous. I’m not sure how or when things changed for me but I’m sure glad they have. Sure, I still look forward to when she naps so that I can get a few things done but I don’t dread hearing the sounds of her waking up like I use to.

Hayden is four months younger than Lindsey’s daughter, but I’ve really begun to doubt that I’ll be in the same place at that point. I’m trying to adjust my expectations, but I’m still more selfish than I’d like to admit.

How do you get there?

Categories
Kids/Parenting

Sleep poke

We’ve been traveling a bit lately. As I mentioned earlier this week, last week was my brother-in-law’s wedding, which was wonderful. Other than, y’know, spending over eight hours in airports and airplanes with an almost-eighteen-month-old who just wants to walk around, for goodness’ sake! Actually, Hayden was quite good at traveling, despite not having a nap all day that day. (He dozed off in the car on the way to the hotel, and Hayden is not a car-sleeping kid.)

Now, we’ve also made a nine hour car trip out to visit my parents for a while (sans Daddy, who headed back home. Stupid day job.). Naturally, Hayden has had to deal with all manner of sleep disruptions lately, not the least of which is adjusting to sleeping in two completely different cribs in two completely different environments. Some nights have been better than others. Tuesday night, Hayden went to sleep just fine, but awoke crying two or three times. The second time, only minutes after I thought I’d settled him down, I went back to snuggle and rock him for a little while longer.

In the dim light, I couldn’t tell if his eyes were open or shut as he lay peacefully in my arms. I stroked his hair to help comfort him and whispered “sweet mommy nothings” to him to let him know I was there and I cared.

I guess he was more awake than he let on. As I held him, marveling over how small and cuddly he could still sometimes be, his hands and feet moved continually. His feet pushed at the pillows next to us. His hands ran over my back and my face, as if he were checking to see if it was really Mom.

He finally gave it a rest and dropped his hand to his side for a moment. I watched his little hand continue to move, though, as he curled three fingers under to form a fist, leaving his index finger extended. He slowly moved his hand to play his favorite waking game.

Poke!

He went right back to sleep when I put him down that time.

Categories
MetaBlogging

MamaBlogga’s Top 10

Whether you’re just visiting MamaBlogga for the first time or are an old friend, you may have missed some of the fun things that have been going on here. Here are the top ten most popular posts on MamaBlogga from July. After all, the summer time is vacation time and maybe you need some help catching up!

The most visited posts in July include posts on blogging, mom blogging, the monthly GWP and parenting—basically, everything I write about!

In Other News…
In other blogging news, yesterday er, today I reached my one thousandth actual comment! (The “actual” discounts the nearly 2000 spam comments I’ve received.)

Unfortunately, it had to be one by . . . me. How anticlimactic.