Cranky-man Syndrome

Sometime last year, J gave up napping. It happens once kids turn two. They decide that napping is for the birds and stop doing it. The fools! As any parent knows, this often leads to late-afternoon crankiness. Unfortunately for me, J’s late-afternoon crankiness typically manifests in the middle of dinner and lasts until he falls asleep.

He has a fantastic ability to flip the switch on this crankiness too. Of the many things my boys can do, this one might be the most impressive. It starts with refusing to finish or even eat his dinner. We struggle to get a few bites in, then comes tubby time. He’s ok until it’s time to get cleaned up and out. That’s when the tears and the screaming starts. He becomes damn near inconsolable during clean-up, drying off, and getting dressed. If he’s feeling particularly cranky, it goes through teeth brushing as we settle down to sleep. There may be a few pockets of calm here or there, but it’s mostly loud and grating on the nerves.

As he gets older, the cranky-man tantrums are fewer and farther between — THANK GOD — but when they flair up, all I can do is take a deep breath and hang on for the bumpy ride until he falls asleep.

At the end of a long day, because it’s always a long day when this happens, I find myself praying for the patience of Job or a tequila IV, whichever is easiest. It’s days like this when I want to say, “Yea, f*ing right!” to anyone who tells me I will miss these days. Sure, I’ll miss the cuddles and the funny little things he comes up with, but I will be happy when tantrums aren’t the go-to method for communicating. I also know the day will come when waking him up before noon will bring its own frustrations. But for now, I’ll breathe my way through tantrums until I have to hold my nose to wake him up.

TSM Book Club Book #22: The Direction of the Wind by Mansi Shah

Started: May 22nd
Finished: June 2nd
TSM Rating: 4/5

It is only by pure coincidence that the last two books I picked up to the end of May featured protagonists struggling with mental health issues with varying degrees of severity. Both deal with heavy topics of suicide, depression, loss, drug abuse, and parental abandonment.

Direction of the Wind tells the story of Nita and Sophie Shah, a mother and daughter told twenty years apart. They both grew up in similar circumstances but with drastically different experiences.

The story opens with Sophie mourning the death of her beloved father. Losing him brings her back to her mother’s death as a child. When she overhears her aunts speaking of her mother leaving, not dying, it sets Sophie on a journey that is equal parts heartbreaking and hopeful.

Twenty years before Sophie’s journey, Nita takes one of her own. Overwhelmed by her community’s expectations of her as a wife and mother and driven by a growing desire to be an artist, she packs up as much as she can and leaves her marital home, and boards a plane to France.

While Mansi Shah doesn’t label what precisely is wrong with Nita, she is clearly suffering from depression and has been for most of her life. It seems that being forced into marriage and motherhood only exacerbates her condition, weighing her down in a way that feels inescapable.

After a while, though, she begins to feel the same trapped feeling in France as in India. Trapped by circumstance. Trapped by things beyond her control, and she can’t figure a way out.

She had felt trapped in her life in India, but now she was learning a new form of being trapped and wondered if people were always trapped by something, no matter what they did or where they were.

Direction of the Wind, page 88

As with Recipe for Persuasion, another woman struggles with motherhood, what it means to be a mother, and how to do what is best for her child. For Nita, it was leaving because she felt herself beginning to resent Sophie. She left to save her daughter from her “darkness,” as she put it.

They were the most serious thing that could happen in one’s life. Children highlighted every trait you lacked. And if you were not meant to be a parent, they stole your spirit in a way you could never get back.

Direction of the Wind, page 136

While it’s a story of family, it’s also a story about friends who become family to both Nita and Sophie. They both have strangers come into their lives when they need them the most. For Nita, it’s Dao. For Sophie, it’s Manoj and Naresh.

The words “I’m here for you” had a power in them that was greater than any other, even the phrase “I love you.” “I’m here for you” showed solidarity and acceptance and conveyed in the best way possible that one was not alone.

Direction of the Wind, page 222

Family is complicated. Expectations are complicated. Secrets are complicated. Mansi Shah weaves Sophie and Nita’s sorties together so well; each chapter picks up where the other left off, as Sophie follows right behind her mother, missing her by just a few steps rather than two decades. While the story has dark moments, there is always hope just around the corner.

Tiiiiiiiiiimmmmeee ISN’T On My Side, No It Isn’t

What is free time? I have no idea anymore. At any point during the day when I’m not working, cooking, or cleaning, my time is occupied by the boys. I don’t know why I thought about this the other day, but I don’t think I ever really appreciated all the free time I had when I was single.

I’ve always been a homebody, no question, but there were times when I would get the itch to grab my camera and explore the world around me. When I lived in New York, I’d hop on the train and get off at a random stop and walk around. Take in the sights, smells, and sounds.

When I moved back Boston, I’d hop on my bike and ride down all the streets I grew up just passing by and really saw the city where I lived.

When I was single, I read all the time too. I finished the first book in the Game of Thrones series in ONE DAY. Now it takes me five days to complete books that are a third of the length. I miss being able to move about the world on my own without having to make sure the diaper bag is stocked and negotiating behavior before going into a store. I miss being able to spend all day reading if I want to.

I haven’t explored the world with my camera in a long time, but I do take pictures of my boys almost every day. I get to see our little bubble world through their eyes, and it’s just as cool. Some days, a little bit cooler than people-watching in Central Park.

As for reading — and writing these blog posts — I do them in what I call the “in-between times.” In between arriving at an OT appointment and leaving or swim lessons. While I watch them in the bathtub, while I’m waiting for a pan to warm up. Those are the little moments I take for myself. It’s not a lot, but time isn’t on my side.

Not a lot of time for myself. Not a lot of time to run errands. Not a lot of time to kiss their chubby little feet before they become massive sweaty feet.

I think we could all use a little bit more time.

Clean and Clean, then Clean Some More

I used to like cleaning. My bedroom was always neat and tidy as a kid. I folded and put my clothes away immediately. I dusted my dresser, my CDs, and my stereo. I ran the vacuum cleaner. I liked my space in order.

On Sundays, I would do my chores, dust the living room, and take turns with my older brother to clean the bathroom we shared. Even as I went through college, and moved into my own apartment, I reserved Sundays for major cleaning.

Now cleaning is the bane of my existence. It’s become an every day necessity that never brings the same satisfaction that it used to. Before I could clean a room, walk out of it and come back an hour later and every thing would be exactly as I left it. Now, though, I know that as soon as I turn my back the beautiful little creatures that I carried and squeezed out of my body will have dumped over a bucket of recently collected toys to create a new mess.

Sometimes, they truly suck.

I love my kids, but my house hasn’t been spotless in five years. I know it’s a little cold-hearted to blame a newborn for making a mess. They can’t control whether or not they pee as soon as the diaper comes down. Both my boys were “happy spitters” so that meant a lot of spit up covers burp clothes, bibs, onesies, and shirts.

As they get older, the toys — and their corresponding parts — get smaller and the mess gets bigger.

There are days when I’m so over picking things up, I don’t. Some days, I’ll walk by the playroom or our living room and I avert my eyes and keep it moving. Because sometimes I get to the point where if I pick up the same dinosaur or Paw Patrol pup again, I will throw it away. And if I start throwing things away, they won’t have any toys left.

Instead, I let the mess go until I can’t anymore (i.e. when people are coming over in the case of this weekend). Then I scrub, reorganize and do my best to keep the place tidy until the company arrives. After that, I give up on any pretense that my house is always neat and orderly. I sigh and mentally prepare myself for the major clean up that will happen after everyone leaves.

I write this on the cusp of having fifty people in my house for a birthday party on Saturday. Thankfully, my mother will be hosting Easter this year. Who said small miracles don’t exist?

The Big, Bad, Scary School Nurse

On Monday, while at gymnastics with J, my phone rang. I pulled it out of my sweatshirt pocket, ready to reject the telemarketing call when I saw it was the nurse from C’s school.

FUUUUUUUUUUUCCCCCCCKKKKKKKKK!!!!

He had a stuffy nose the previous night. I checked him for fever before I put him on the bus, and the way he was running around with J, I knew he was fine. The temps have dropped again here, so a little nasal congestion isn’t out of the ordinary.

I answer the call, and the first thing she says is, “Nothing’s wrong…”

WHY CALL IF NOTHING IS WRONG?!?

He had a coughing fit while eating Pirates Booty, so his teacher sent him to her office. She checked, and he had no fever. She even admitted that the air is dryer in the building, so the kids tend to cough more while there than at home. She called me to tell me that they might send him home. It was a heads-up that I might have to come get him.

This isn’t the first time I’ve been given a “heads up” call. The heads-up call makes me sweat bullets. They mean well, but it’s the last thing I want.

Nervous K&P GIF by myLAB Box - Find & Share on GIPHY

Then I hung up the phone, annoyed that my mind had already started pouring on the extra guilt that I sent him to school and didn’t notice he was sick even though some days it feels like all I do is stare at them like I can catch the instant they go from healthy to unhealthy.

As I packed J up and put him in the car at the end of class, I reviewed my to-do list for the day. I recently started as a remote EA for a marketing company, so I had tasks to complete for them. During the course of the day, for every task I started, I kept myself ready to stop in the middle, grab J — and hopefully not have to fight with him — and head to the school.

All day I worked and waited, and the call never came. The next time I saw C was when his bus driver pulled into the driveway to drop him off.

I wonder if the school nurses know the emotional turmoil moms go through every time they call. It’s not fun, and it’s not funny. I understand that in a post-COVID world — and I say post-COVID because we know what it is now and how to treat it — they have to be extra vigilant when it comes to sick kids in school. I also understand that not every part can stay home when their kid has the sniffles. I’m grateful that I’m in the position to be able to drop what I’m doing and pick C up if I need to. I just don’t want to be called unless I have to go get him because I swear every call from the school nurse adds ten grey hairs and ages me another six months!

The End of the Baby Era

Last week A went under the knife, and we officially closed the baby shop. The permanent closure of the factory — yes, I just referred to my reproduction system as a factory. It’s been shuttered for a while (birth control for the win), but this was the death knell.

Having babies came easy to us. With both boys, I became pregnant the first month we started trying. C was a honeymoon baby, for Pete’s sake! Both my pregnancies were relatively easy as well. Only mild bouts of nausea, a few weeks of sciatica early on with C, mild hip discomfort at the end with J — he was a big baby. Delivering C was smoother than J, only because my water broke on its own. With J, they broke my water with something that looked like a crochet hook — A’s description — then I had to wait to become fully effaced. I almost kicked my doctor in the face when the full power of a contraction hit, and I wasn’t allowed to push.

The only hiccup was my placenta tearing on the way out — both times — and the doctor had to go in and get it. The first time, she forgot that I hadn’t gotten an epidural and went right in. Unpleasant isn’t a strong enough word to describe what that felt like. With J, she remembered — a different doc than the first time — gave me morphine, waited for it to kick in, then went in. It only made a slight difference.

Each time they put my boys on my chest, I was filled with pure joy and relief that they were perfectly healthy, with all ten fingers and toes, strong lungs, and nearly perfect Apagar scores.

One night while I was pregnant with C, I was on my way home from work, and it suddenly hit: I would never be alone again. I wasn’t unhappy about that. Little did I realize that that meant even in my sleep, I would have a human furnace trying to crawl back into my body every night.

So now that A has undergone surgery — with no pressure from me — the window is officially closed. At five years older than me, he knew he didn’t want to have kids past 40. He wanted to still be young enough to run around and play with them. We snuck J in one year and a month under the wire.

I’ve hemmed and hawed about wanting another baby. In my mind, pre-marriage and babies, I always thought I’d have three. Then I had two babies and didn’t get enough sleep, with no good childcare options, not enough time in between, and the prospect of having an eleven-pound baby. I changed my mind…kind of. It was never enough to really push the issue, though.

I’m happy with my family of four the way it is. I wouldn’t trade my boys for any other kid in the world. A few of my friends trying for their second, just had their third, or are accidentally on their fourth. I’ll enjoy the new baby smell from their little ones, but it will never be my own again.

No more umbilical cords to clean around or redundant foreskins post-circumcision to keep an eye on. No more monitoring poop colors. No more first smiles and laughs. No more sore nipples. No more tiny clothes and socks. No more coos, no more seeing the world for the first time again through their eyes.

So, am I sad that having another baby is TOTALLY off the table? Lamenting a little bit about what could have been? Of course, but I think we’re good the way we are — the four of us.

As we approach C’s fifth birthday, I look forward to taking our first steps out of toddlerhood and becoming a “big boy” mom. He’s already so amazingly independent, confident, and intelligent. He spins these wonderful yarns with his overactive imagination — totally my kid! He knows right from wrong and tries his best to keep his little brother on the straight and narrow (definitely a story for another day).

There is so much good yet to come with these two. So goodbye, baby era. It has been amazing and transformative.

Sometimes I Just Want to be a Lazy Mama

A lot of being a toddler mama is constantly on the move. Just when you think you can take a break and sit, you have to get up and keep going. It isn’t always directly related to the kids. It’s all the little things like switching the laundry, loading the dishwasher, or running errands. Sometimes it’s kid related, like all the kid-related activities we sign them up for to keep them busy.

Every extracurricular I’ve signed the boys up for has required my participation as well. From a little ninja warriors class to swimming to gymnastics, I’ve been required to participate in all the activities. I had a thought the other day: Why am I paying someone else to watch me play with my kid?

Some days when I take J to his weekly gymnastics class, I wish his teacher would just take over and chase after him for 45 minutes. Any mom will tell you that as soon as you open your eyes, the stopwatch starts on your day, and you are racing against the clock to get everything done and make it to bedtime. Bedtime is the finish line. It is the pot of gold at the end of the get-through-the-day rainbow.

Until bedtime, we do our best to keep the kids busy and learning, so they don’t fall behind developmentally AND burn any pent-up energy they may have. Lord, it is tiring. There are some days when I barely make it to bedtime myself. I’m on my feet so much that lying in C’s twin-sized bed under his weighted blanket is the most comfortable place in the world.

In my twenties, I worked as a restaurant hostess in New York. During the month of March, I also freelanced at CBS Sports. There were some days when I’d be at the CBS studios on 57th Street until almost 2 AM, just to turn around and head to the restaurant for my 6:30 AM opening shift at the restaurant. Even then, I’ve never felt as tired as I do now that I’m a mom. I don’t know if it’s because I’m older now or because parenting is a constant, daily grind where I don’t get enough sleep most nights.

That’s why, now more than ever, I wish there was just one of these programs where I didn’t have to chase after my kid. I look around at some of the moms — and grandmothers — at J’s gym class, and I see the exhaustion on their faces. There is one mom who, God love her, chases after her three-year-old daughter while her six-month-old sleeps in a car seat in the corner.

Everyone talks about “the hustle” and “the grind” when it comes to work and success. There is no greater hustle and grind than motherhood — dads get some credit too, but it’s a little bit different. So, yea, sometimes I want to be lazy. Sometimes I want to pay someone else to play with my kid while I read a book, zone out on my phone, or — God forbid — nap! Since that won’t be happening, you can find me chasing after J as he bounces down a trampoline or crawls under a tunnel. Maybe you’ll see me walking across a balance beam with C on my back because he uses me as his own personal litter since I have to participate. No rest for the extremely weary!

Is Acceptance the Same as Defeat?

C is a terrible sleeper. He wakes up in the middle of the night and STRUGGLES to get back to sleep. The struggle is really mine. He’s just hanging out, reenacting episodes of his favorite TV shows and movies…loudly. At the end of last week, though, we seemed to turn a corner to where he slept as much through the night as he ever does. Meaning we’d put him to sleep in his bed, then at some point, he’d wake up, come running into our room, and go right back to sleep.

Then he spent the weekend at my mom’s house.

Hubby and I were happy for the break, so we could sleep through the night and do some much-needed basement reorganizing. We did a lot of heavy lifting, which made the nights sleeping in the bed, just the two of us without kicking, fussy toddlers, a delight. Readers, we even got to cuddle, just the two of us. No squirmy, cute little furnaces in between us.

We picked the boys up on Monday afternoon. They had a good time, as always, at my mom’s. And to her credit, she followed their bedtime routine every night they were there. For some reason, however, C came back, and his sleep pattern was all out of whack. It wasn’t so much out of whack as it was back to what it was before. He woke up at 1 AM both nights and wouldn’t go back to sleep for hours, if at all.

Before we picked them up, I felt rested. Even just shy of reinvigorated — the only thing that would reinvigorate me at this point would be two weeks by myself on a beach and a stack of books from my TBR pile. Since that isn’t happening anytime soon, this girl will take a few days’ reprieve and a comfy reading chair for an hour or two.

But I digress. The kid wouldn’t go to sleep. He kept singing “Be Prepared” from The Lion King. While he was singing, I was googling pressure points to try and help him. Just so you know, that didn’t work either. 😭

I think I’ve finally reached the acceptance point in my grieving over lack of sleep process. I’ll never sleep again, and I’m begrudgingly ok with it — no, I’m not — but that is what motherhood is all about, right? Sacrificing all for the sake of our kids.

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.

Game Of Thrones You Know Nothing GIF - Find & Share on GIPHY

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.***

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.🤬