Well…Those Resolutions Were Short-Lived

So…two of my resolutions are already out the window. I know it’s still January 1st, but I’ve already given up. Don’t judge me! Here’s what happened…

Resolution #1: Make healthier dietary choices.

After an early morning of cuddles and being climbed all over, because let’s be real, there is no sleeping in with toddlers. J declared that he was hungry and wanted pancakes. We all made our way to the kitchen. While hubby made eggs for C, I pulled out the pancake mix and a bowl. J wanted to help, so I scooped out a cup of mix, brought the bowl to his level, and handed him the measuring cup. He neatly dropped it in the bowl. We repeated the step with the water and mixing. Then I asked if he wanted chocolate chips in them, and of course, he said yes. He’s a toddler; there was no chance the answer was going to be no.

With the batter mixed, we heat and butter the pan. He adds the batter — when I can, I let the boys cook; I’m raising them to be self-sufficient — and we wait for the pancakes to reach the appropriate flipping doneness. Once they were ready, he had two yummy chocolate chip pancakes. There was enough better for two more pancakes…and there went my first resolution.

I know what you might be thinking, “Two chocolate chip pancakes to celebrate the start of the new year isn’t so bad” or “You still had better left, you were trying no to be wasteful.” Reader, you would be right on both accounts. And it would have been fine had I stopped there. After breakfast, hubby ran to Home Depot to grab hooks we need for a basement organization project. I put The Grinch on for the kids, because they are still feeling the Christmas spirit — C asked to see Santa today — and went to my bedroom to fold laundry and watch The Woman King. Clearly, I’m done with Christmas. I got about two minutes in before the kids came running in for help with turning on the giant piano mat my youngest brother got them for Christmas. Fun fact, FAO Schwarz makes toys; I thought it was a dead brand. The more you know.🤷🏽‍♀️

The interruptions kept coming, and I kept pausing the movie. Then J pooped, and we got into a fight while I tried to clean his bum because he REFUSED to stay still. By the time we finished, I needed chocolate. He chased me down the hall crying as I went to toss the diaper and go down to the basement to pull chicken from the freezer. I closed the door behind me so he couldn’t follow. It may sound like I was overreacting to my kid wanting me, but this is also the kid that woke me up and tried to drag me out of bed at 6 AM to turn on Spidey and his Amazing Friends in the playroom.

Hubby came back as I went downstairs, so he picked up a crying J and gave him a hug. On my way back to my bedroom to restart my movie — which I found out hubby turned off in favor of the Patriots game — I grabbed two Lindt milk chocolate balls only for C to catch me in the act of eating the first one and subsequently start cry when I pop the second one in my mouth. I know, I’m an asshole.

J soon realized that I had chocolate, slid out of his father’s lap and declare that he wanted chocolate too. I told the boys if they gave each other a hug — since I’d managed to upset them both AND I’m trying to teach them to lean on each other during the tough time — they’d each get a chocolate. They did. They both got a chocolate ball, I gave one to hubby and ate two more myself. SEE resolution is all shot to hell!

Resolution #2: Yell less; give “gentle parenting” a fighting chance.

My boys are not built for gentle parenting. I’m not built for gentle parenting. That’s not true. I’m not built for sustained gentle parenting.

J — today really wasn’t a good day for he and I — declared he wanted a cookie while we were watching the Pats game — I wasn’t super upset that my movie had been turned off; I love the Pats, they’ve just broken my heart a lot this season. I said, we don’t have any cookies. A few minutes later my very capable 2.5 year old came back with a Tupperware container of leftover cookies from holiday baking we’d done that I’d completely forgotten about. I had a cookie, C grabbed a cookie, J took two cookies.

Halftime hits and hubby heads to the basement to organization project started. I’m lying in the middle of our bed and J is behind me. I get up to head to the bathroom only to turn around and see that J has DECIMATED a gingerbread cookie on our bed. He ground it into a FINE dust of gingerbready goodness. I let out a frustrated scream, kicked him off the bed, and grabbed the dustbuster. I also had to tell him to take off his pants because they were covered with gingerbread dust.

This was not a gentle parenting moment. There were no calm words. There was only “why did you just do that?”, “get off the bed and take of your pants!”, “don’t come back up here!” yelling moments. I commend parents who are fully committed to gentle parenting and make it work for them. I have toddlers who talk back and give me evil laughs when they do something wrong.

I’m starting to think that they find my emotional outbursts funny, though. This morning C kept playing with the Santa salt and pepper shakers that I haven’t decommissioned yet. I told him sternly but calmly — before I gave up on gentle parenting — to put them back and leave them alone. He said, “Are you mad?” I replied, “No, but I would like you to listen when I tell you to do something.” He asked me if I was mad twice more, then I gave in and made an angry face, which got an uproarious chuckle from him.

I give up. I’m just going to sit in a corner and eat chocolate for the rest of the year. Catch y’all in 2024 when I start from scratch again if diabetes doesn’t set in and remove me from this mortal coil!

Happy New Year!!🎊 May you have better luck with your resolutions than I did.😳

Chocolate and Wine Make Me Happy…and Might Lead to My Demise…

Often in my life as a mom, I’ve found myself taking a few minutes after the dishes are done and before I dive into tubby time to take a deep breath. I also either inhale a chocolate bar or chug half a glass of wine. Whichever I choose depends on the kind of day I’ve had. Sometimes it’s both. It’s my slow descent toward either diabetes or alcoholism. Not really with alcoholism, but diabetes might be a real possibility…

Before mommyhood, I wasn’t a stress eater. I think that’s because the things that stressed me out were tasks. Tangible action items I could go about completing as long as I buckled down and did them. Attend a planning committee meeting? Check. Finish an article or research paper? Done. As long as I planned my time accordingly, I was good. Hell, I was kind of annoying. In college, I would finish papers a week before they were due; I was that good at time management.

Now, though? Time management is a foreign concept. You can’t “time manage” being a mom. No matter how hard you try. Get the kid to sleep by 8? Sure, if C doesn’t have to use the potty five times or if J will stop talking through the bedtime story. Get the house clean? Sure, J doesn’t insist that we watch the SAME EPISODE of Blippi for the 500th time.

There’s no more shutting the world out by blasting music and banging out a paper. There is no more on time or showing up early. If we do show up early, it’s 100% an accident. Heck, there are no more running quick errands. Now that I’m home with J, every time we have to leave the house, he wants to know where we’re going and what we’re going there for. The only place that doesn’t require a detailed explanation is the library.

As moms, we all have to find our coping mechanisms to help keep our sanity when all feels lost, and the kids won’t stop screaming for five minutes so we can have a complete, uninterrupted thought. Speaking of uninterrupted thoughts…it has taken me FOUR days just to write this short little post. In the time since I started writing this post, I’ve eaten three Snickers bars (two full-sized, one snack size), Gummy bears (chocolate is not my only sugar-based vice), and five Lindt milk chocolate balls. Two of those Lindt balls were consumed in the last twenty minutes while I multitasked signing up for a warranty on a device, checking for an update on my community post about my broken printer, starting Home on one tablet, and Pinkfong and Baby Shark’s Space Adventure on another, then turning off both tablets ad getting the boys in the tub.

If I weren’t already exhausted and didn’t have to finish tubby and get them to bed, I might go back to the kitchen for a glass of wine… Alas, the bottle will stay corked until Thursday, when our families descend for Thanksgiving. That doesn’t mean I can’t have one more Lindt ball, right? Sign me up for the insulin shots now, people!