Wins Will Come, and They Will Definitely Go

Some days, I feel like I have this mom thing down. Everyone sleeps through the night — not in their own bed — but through the night nonetheless. Then there are other days when everything I thought I knew goes flying out the window and I realize I’m Jon Snow beyond the Wall.

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Thursday was unseasonably warm for mid-February, so I took J to the park. As we were walking up to it, I overheard two money talking about how they just wished their kids would listen sometimes. “Mom just needs a win.”

And isn’t it something how little it takes for we moms — and dads — to feel like we’re ok. That we’re on the right track and everything really is going to be ok. Right now, as parents to tiny humans, it’s hard for everything we do wrong to feel like an epic Bay of Pigs level failure.

It occurred to me the other day that the reason we think our failures are so epic is because when our kids feel, they feel BIG. That morning, for example, a different van picked C up for school. The seatbelt on his usual seat was broken — the strap that allows me to loosen and tighten the straps was broken — and this was unacceptable to young C. He had a total meltdown. Was damn near inconsolable. It took about fifteen minutes to get him into buckled into another seat.

After the bus was gone, I talked myself down for calling the bus company and yelling at the dispatcher about the broken seatbelt. I also talked myself down from posting a rant on my town’s mom’s page. Instead l, I took a deep breath, messaged C’s teacher in the app to let her know he’d be coming in hot so that they would be prepared to console him. Then I took J to the park.

What I’ve learned in the almost five years that I’ve been mom-ing is — can’t believe C will be five soon😬🥰 — if my reactions are as big as his, then we’ll never grow. Him as a boy who needs to learn how to manage emotions and me as his mother who needs to teach him how.

So yea, some days you’ve got it all together. Some days you don’t. And some days, it starts well only to fall apart and come back together again…and then maybe fall apart again by bath time. It’s the cycle we live in now as parents that won’t end until…we’ll I don’t think it ever ends.

***inhales deeply, long exhale, followed by a looooooong sip of wine.***

TSM Book Club Book #7: Fake It Til You Bake It by Jamie Wesley

Started: February 6th
Finished: February 9th
TSM Rating: 5/5

This book was so much fun. I loved the banter between the main characters — Jada and Donovan — and I also loved that they were honest with each other from the very beginning. I know that it’s a popular romance trope, but I hate it when characters hide things from each other that will inevitably blow up in their face when the truth is revealed. And this is coming from an AVID watcher of Hallmark Christmas movies! So much chaos that can be avoided with a single conversation!

Jada and Donovan are polar opposites, but their personalities complement each. In my last review, I mentioned that I didn’t like doubting whether a couple would last — a Happy-For-Now vs. a Happy-Ever-After — this one, like Seven Days in June, felt like a HEA.

I also love the setup for her next book!

Sticky Stickers Everywhere!

It occurred to me this week that I hate stickers. It wasn’t a random thought. I almost wish it was. J decided to decorate the window in our dining room with stickers from the piano mat my youngest brother gave them for Christmas. I tried taking them off with my nails, but no such luck. I have to use a razor. I just haven’t gotten around to it yet…

We have stickers floating around the house in any and every room on any given day. Honestly, it’s a pretty close race between dinosaurs and stickers for what we have more of in the house.

They come from everywhere. The doctor’s office. Birthday parties. School. Coloring books. And the boys put them on everything. Windows. Furniture. Notebooks. My laptop.

I don’t really have anything big or sweeping to say on this topic. Only that I hate them and I’ve come to the realization a week before Valentine’s Day, on which C will inevitably come home with for effing stickers.🤬

TSM Book Club Book #6: Seven Days in June by Tia Williams

Started: February 1st
Finished: February 6th
TSM Rating: 4/5

Dark. Melancholy. Isolated. Bright. Funny. Hopeful.

Those are all the things I felt while reading this book. Tia Williams really gets to the heart of what life can truly feel like when you have no one to rely on but yourself. She also shone a big shiny light on what it feels like to find the one person that truly gets you. How whole that can make you feel when you have and how hollow you can be when you lose it.

Shane and Eva are two very flawed characters. They aren’t shiny and bright like most romance/women’s fiction novel characters can be. And their dark is depths of hell kind of dark, but they are endearing because of their ability to endure. Their unbridled love and passion for each other are the kinds of things that teenage love affairs are made of. The seven days they spend together are all angsty, gritty, horny stuff that makes up the best teen romances.

The levelheaded maturity they show in the end really gets me. Sometimes I read these books that are all about the HEA, but I finish them thinking, These relationships would NEVER actually work in real life. At least not without A LOT of couples therapy. This one, though, I think could go the distance. And I liked that. I liked the feeling I got finishing this book at 3:30 in the morning — when both my toddlers wake up and fall back to sleep, but I’m now WIDE awake, I read. It felt like, These crazy kids might actually go the distance.

I liked that feeling. I want more of that feeling in my books. I’ll pick up a few more Tia Williams books, chasing this high.

TSM Book Club Book #5: Love in the Time of Serial Killers

Started: January 26th
Finished: February 1st
TSM Rating: 3.5/5

I meant to finish this yesterday, but caught up with kid stuff.

Either way, I liked this one. Beyond the love story between Phoebe and Sam, it was about the scars our parents leave us with.

Our protagonist, Phoebe is a few months removed from the death of her estranged father when she moves back to her childhood home to prepare it for sale. As Meredith Grey would say, she’s dark and twisty. Which is juxtaposed with her little-hearted, ray-of-sunshine brother, Conner.

Sam, her dad’s next door neighbor, is the opposite of her in every way, which is part of his appeal. Unfortunately, Phoebe is so lost in the negative impact of her relationship — or lack thereof — with her dad, that she risks losing something great with this genuinely good dude.

This book made me think of the complicated relationship I had with my own father before he passed away. Thompson even has a line about grieving the potential of a relationship that captured a lot of how I felt in the months and even years after my dad was gone: “I hadn’t realized what a different kind of grief that was —the loss of all the potential moments that would never be, not the past moments that already were.”

Every day with my boys, I try to give them good moments and memories so they aren’t carrying these massive scars from the past into their future. At least not from me, because we all go through our own shit that helps shape us into the people we are as adults.

This book was, to me, just as much about wading through the shit as it was about falling in love in spite of the shit.

Also, her obsession with true crime is weird but so on point!

The Love & Hate of Motherhood

Last Sunday, I hit the ceiling of my patience. Between a lack of sleep and feeling overall run down, I couldn’t deal with the screaming-jumping-running-around of it all. I locked myself in my office for a few hours to snack and decompress. And it got me thinking. There is so much to love about being a mom. There is also so much to hate about it. And it really is ok to hate some of it. Motherhood asks that we give a lot more than we get most days. Sometimes it’s a little bit too much. The dichotomy of motherhood is the strangest mix of joy and sorrow, love and frustration there is.

Here’s my love/hate of motherhood list.

Love: All the cuddles, squeezes, and kisses. There are moments in the day where a surprise squeeze from my boys is exactly what the doctor ordered and it makes everything feel better.

Hate: All the cuddles, squeezes, and kisses. Then there are days when they are hanging off me like a necklace. Clinging to me like the barnacle on the bottom of a boat. It all feels like too much and I just don’t want to be touched anymore. To the point where, when A comes home from work, I don’t have enough affection left to show him love.

Love: Watching them learn new things and explore the world around them. One of the amazing things about having kids is learning about the world through their eyes. Their enthusiasm and pride after they accomplish something new. Like, when J says, “It worked!” every time he owes in the potty. EVERY. TIME. Or whenever C figures out how to do something — like opening the child lock we put on the fridge because he kept leaving the door open — and he says, “I did it!” Even when it’s something I don’t want him to do, I love the enthusiasm. It’s infectious.

Hate: How hard it is to keep them teach them about the world and protect them from it at the same time. In a world of police brutality and ALICE drills for pre-schoolers, what are parents supposed to teach their kids about trust? One day you can have lunch and laugh with a friend, the next day you’re running from them in an attempt to save your own life…as a child. How do we teach them how to trust the police when it feels like every other day there’s another story about officer-involved violence against civilians?

Love: The extra purpose in life that having children gives you. I’m not the kind of person who thinks having children makes me superior to anyone who doesn’t. But raising kids is an important job, probably the most important job, we can have. We’re literally molding the future. When every thing else goes away. When you get laid off or divorced or lose people, your little ones are always there. So even when we feel like we have no purpose, they are our purpose.

Hate: Motherhood takes away so much of our autonomy, and sometimes it all feels like too much. Taking care of yourself can sometimes feel like a daunting task. Of course, caring for another person will feel overwhelming at times. Knowing that they are solely depending on you to keep them alive and mold them into good people…sometimes it’s an utter mindfuck. The person you were before you have kids and who you are after are two very different people. In some ways that’s a good thing. In others, we have to give up some of the things that make us feel the most like ourselves.

Motherhood asks a lot of us, and sometimes it feels like it takes without giving. Other times it asks nothing and gives so very much. See, perfect dichotomy.

Just Call Me Stuck-in-a-Rut Mama!

Originally, this post started as me venting about how stuck in a loop I’ve been feeling. How much some days I want to let the kids take control. Nothing will shake you out of a routine like a winter in New England.

C came into our room around 1 AM — not really that abnormal — and couldn’t/wouldn’t go back to sleep — also not that abnormal — until I gave him some melatonin. While he got back to sleep, I was fully awake, playing Solitaire on my phone when A’s alarm went off at 4:30.

As I lay there lamenting my lack of sleep, A came rushing back to our bedroom, letting me know it had snowed overnight — it was raining when we went to bed — and he wasn’t going to have time to shovel our “only annoying that it’s big when it snows” driveway, so I’d have to do it to clear it for the school bus! Yay.😑

Somewhere in the middle of clearing the left entrance — we have a U-shaped driveway — the call came in that school was cancelled for the day. Why? I’m not really sure. They’d already cleared the street, and there was only about two inches in the driveway.

So my loop was interrupted by the weather and school cancellations. While the one day interruption was “pleasant,” it won’t fix the stuck way I’ve been feeling as of late.

My loop currently looks something like this: wake up. Work out. Get C dressed. Make C breakfast. Make and pack lunch and snack for C. Find something for J to eat because he doesn’t like eggs. Shower. Brush C’s teeth. Get him on the school bus. Spend the day entertaining J/cleaning/attempting to work on side projects. Rinse, lather, repeat.

I also find myself having the same conversation with the boys every day — “Stop fighting!”, “Pick up your toys!”, “Go to the potty!” It’s a miracle I still know other words in the English language.

There are some days when I’m so sick of the routine that I want to just let the boys go wild(er than usual) and let the chips fall where they may.

Of course, I can’t do that. I’ve been working on potty training J this week and have to make sure he doesn’t pee behind the couch…again. The boys also have a tendency to get into wrestling matches, usually at C’s instigation, and I have to make sure they don’t kill each other. So what’s a burnt out, stuck-in-a-rut mama to do?

Keep calm, take a breath, and soldier on. Also, hide in the pantry and eat snack pack Pringles…and pour a glass of wine while making dinner.

But seriously, I think I need to find something to balance out the everyday mundanity. Committing to my #65in365 goal is helping to keep me a little bit sane. I get most of my reading done when J insists that I can’t work, and I must watch Cocomelon/Little Angels/Blippi/Spidey and his Amazing Friends with him. Outside of that, though, what’s a stuck-in-a-rut mama to do?

I know that these things I’m complaining about are all part of motherhood, but isn’t that all the more reason to find a way to achieve the “just treading water” feeling of only communicating with toddlers all day? What’s your thing to help combat stay-at-home mom burnout?

TSM Book Club Book #4: Artemis by Andy Weir

Started: January 19th
Finished: January 26th
TSM Rating: 3/5

I read The Martian a few years ago and loved it. I picked up Artemis shortly afterwards and added it to my ever waxing and waning TBR pile. Finally, it made it to the top. I wanted to love this the way I loved The Martian, but I didn’t.

Here’s what I did like:

1. The old west type world Weir created on the moon.

2. The Apollo space program rabbit hole it sent me down. I did not know that we landed on the moon successfully SIX times. All we ever talk about is Apollo 11 (the first successful landing) and Apollo 13 (the epic failure; still haven’t seen that movie). It would be nice to know more about the other missions (Apollo 12, 14, 15, 16, and 17).

3. Science. I’m not a true STEMist, but I find science-y things very fascinating.

Here’s what I didn’t like:

None of the characters were likable or even redeemable. Even Rudy, the morally sound police officer, bends the rules. They all do bad things for good reasons, but even those good reasons get muddled by their own selfish desires. Jazz, the main character, in the end when she has the opportunity to become honest, continues to find ways to skirt the system.

I understand that morality and good deeds aren’t always black and white. The world (and space, apparently) is very grey. This was too much grey for me.

TSM Book Club Book #3: Loathe to Love You by Ali Hazelwood

Started: January 15th
Finished: January 18th
TSM Rating: 5/5

I fell in love with Ali Hazelwood’s writing when I read her debut novel, The Love Hypothesis, last year — twice! I became obsessed when I read Love on the Brain in less than 24 hours, then read it again. And this book of interconnected novellas didn’t disappoint. They were sweet, funny — there were moments when I laughed so hard that my husband gave me some serious side eye — and sexy. When these couples get together, you can feel the heat emanating off the page.

Hazelwood understands how to tease her readers — giving just enough throughout the story to build the anticipation so that the pay off is that much sweeter.

I also love how I learn something from all of her books because they all revolve around ladies in STEM and that is 100% NOT my world. I feel a little smarter after reading her books.

Definitely pick this one up to get your Hazelwood fix while you wait for her next novel, Love, Theoretically, coming in June!

TSM Book Club Book #2: Highly Suspicious and Unfairly Cute By Talia Hibbert

Started: January 7th | Finished: January 14th
TSM Rating: 4/5

Remember high school? Remember crushing on someone so hard your stomach felt like it was going to drop out? This book has all of those sweet, tingly, first love feels and more. I first fell in love with Talia Hibbert when I read Get a Life, Chloe Brown (totally out of order for that book series😳). She writes such strong, complex female characters, and you can’t help but love them, flaws and all. She handles each of her characters’ issues with such grace and humor it makes any of her readers who see themselves — or perhaps their children — in the characters feel seen and understood.

Celine and Bradley’s love story is so genuine and so mature for two kids who are trying to navigate one of the most pivotal years in a young person’s life. I loved how Hibbert infused the story with so much raw teenage angst that you couldn’t help but relate and hope they found their way to each other the way most of us often don’t.