I am a mother of four adventurous boys, wife of a dashing and amazing husband (he likes the dashing part), and mean maker of a darn good hot toddy. Most importantly, I am a daughter of God who desires to become what I was created to be in God. This, is my place to unleash my humor, share stories of parenthood and spousehood in my own uncouth way. So pull up a potty-seat or a couch, and come along!
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
Hump Day
Ah Wednesday, you little stump of a hump day...I'm a grump. To be really fair, the first half of my day ROCKED; finally got to have a fairly "relaxing" hang out time with one of my best gals (and by "relaxing" I mean the kids were strapped down in Lucille, the Minivan Wonder of Transportation, while we ate fries and vented), and had a decent trip to the store with all four kids. But THEN--there was picking up our 4 passenger car from the mechanic's when we are 5 passengers...and figuring that out...and the extra cost because our battery was kaput...dealing with the kids' snobby secretary regarding what else--money--for his school lunches, and explaining exactly why even though I live down the STREET, waking up a 9 month old and a tantruming 2 year old (especially when they just fell asleep) makes it nearly impossible to arrive ANYwhere on time...So, I made it, I'm still going off of not really having a break away from kids for 2 weeks, another round of antibiotics for still lingering STUPID mastitis (do you think the person who named it 'mastitis' realized that the word 'tit' is smack in the middle of that stupid word??? NOT funny Mr. I Named This Booby Hell Disease!), and weak attempts at cleaning the pit that once was a pristine home...So, here goes:
Five things I definitely NEVER thought I'd hear all in one day:
1. "Sorry--it's actually WEDNESDAY, not Friday *snobby secretary frown followed by snorts of laughter* (joke's on HER for snorting...).
2. "Mama--I MUST be naked--I don't believe you that I'll get sunburned...I'll just make you buy my penis sunglasses and an umbrella!!!!" --Matty, Phallic Extraordinnaire, age 4
3. "Well, it was going to be $28, but since you didn't tell us not to put the battery in, it's $175--sorry!"
4. "...And who wouldn't understand why you're late to pick up Mike? You have FOUR kids, and you're pregnant!" Yeah...in case you don't know I'm NOT pregnant...I just...got too frickin' fat to exercise during the last you know...THREE months of my last pregnancy that was...almost a year ago and...then sort of...broke and ankle and grabbed tendonitis...which made being fat worse it turns out... Does anyone remember that sound in the Muppets when something went wrong, and Kermit wore that expression like, "weh-weh-wooowwww"? Here's what my face looks like about this:
5. Finally, I hate to say this but, thing #5 is, I dropped the F bomb. I went into my room and screamed it as loudly as I could into my pillow...(Nobody get all worked up--kids didn't hear it and I'm not like, addicted or anything now). I don't plan on doing that again but I have really, no regrets about it today. I still hate that word, hate it but, saying it that many times made me laugh...a lot...I'm pretty sure there's something unwell about that but it sure beat the alternative of having a psychotic break, lighting my hair on fire, and running up and down Littleton streets yelling,
"You can't catch me, THIS. GIRL IS ON FIIIIEEEE-YA!!!"
Hope your hump days were better than the last third of mine...
Monday, October 15, 2012
The Toilet Epiphany: It Gets Easier As You Go? NO! But It Gets Better
This is actually from this past Friday...I decided I get weekends "off"...Mostly to pretend that I actually function like most of the rest of the world, and actually have days "off." Since this post I'm stoked to announce that after two solid months of living here, we finally: mounted our flat screen (the 2 year old only scratched it five times!), hung up twenty-one pictures! (okay, not really; all of our frames were broken in the move and I mean all of them, and I found a slammin' good deal of a collage picture frame at Michael's), and finally got a nice frame for our wedding picture (that one only took eight years!). (I think that when you add more exclamation points to things, it makes people excited.) And speaking of exciting, I have some thoughts...I would really really love to make this a blog that is open to more people but...I don't know more people *insert "awww!"* and so this is where you all come in. Please tell at least one person, to read this little humble silly blog, and to "like" it, comment on it, or re-post it. I'm tryin' to move up in the world, see and the only way to really get there is all of you. I don't need to feel cool or funny (I get laughed at all day by mismatching midgets aka my kids) or to make lots of money--hey that rhymes--but I do love to write, and I am feeling pulled to pursue this passion. I promise--NO more favors! That's all! I"ll just keep writing! (Are you feeling...excited...by all of these exclamation points?? I hope so...!) Anyway anyway--mooooving on. Let's talk, Toilet Epiphany.
So after a really crummy and tough day like today, like this past weekend, and week like last week, I've had a thoughtful thought: the saying "it gets easier as you go", I think we tend to misinterpret. (Well actually the first thought I had about that saying, I shouldn't repeat but it rhymed with schmull-schmit). I myself, have always interpreted this to mean, "It's hard now but eventually, life mellows out a little and it's not so tough." I suppose this could be true...but how for anyone, anywhere in life (except for really rich people??*) is this evidently true? I really do have a positive point to this, so bear with me; I realize I am coming from feeling like a hunched over troll, mumbling angrily to herself, and needing very badly to get out and turn back into a Normal Niki, instead of Momster.
So after a really crummy and tough day like today, like this past weekend, and week like last week, I've had a thoughtful thought: the saying "it gets easier as you go", I think we tend to misinterpret. (Well actually the first thought I had about that saying, I shouldn't repeat but it rhymed with schmull-schmit). I myself, have always interpreted this to mean, "It's hard now but eventually, life mellows out a little and it's not so tough." I suppose this could be true...but how for anyone, anywhere in life (except for really rich people??*) is this evidently true? I really do have a positive point to this, so bear with me; I realize I am coming from feeling like a hunched over troll, mumbling angrily to herself, and needing very badly to get out and turn back into a Normal Niki, instead of Momster.
So in this one single day, I have had an anxiety attack of sorts (if you saw Jimmy's schedule for the week, our dumpy kitchen from my being sick last week, and the state of my brain, you would have too), forgot a car appointment, lost keys and had to run all children to school (like, literally--threw a coupla' kids in a double, and like, dog-ran the 4 year old down the street--it was NOT pretty...if you would have seen my ass jiggling to get there you'd be like, "some people should NEVER wear tights and run...) to pick up Michael only to come back locked out (because I forgot that we didn't have the keys, and when I'm overwhelmed my brain goes, "bye bye!" *crossed eyes*), and had to pry open the back window with a plastic knife stub, and boost 'n' shoot Michael through the window to open the house (not sure if I should have been proud that I got in using only a knife, or terrified that I got in using only a knife). Next, Joseph spat at me for putting him in time-out (because I caught him JUMPING on my computer..can't believe I'm typing on it) and right in between that, the toilet overflowed--majorly. As I was running to get the plunger, Mike tells me Matthew threw a broken plastic knife in there yesterday...And I'm seeing the dollar signs flash before me to have it fixed and can actually feel the blood pressure shooting up...So when I was literally, hands-deep in crap and other fun stuff, it hit me: it doesn't get easier but...it does get better.
That doesn't really make any sense I know, that it was that moment...but I'm thinking God and my brain knew that if that little epiphany didn't happen, I'd have tried to drown myself in that toilet because it's been that kind of a week and a half.
'What could have been so bad that happened?' you ask. Well, it's not that anything big happened; in fact life has just been extra life-y lately but it is precisely that in which I am writing about. I mean literally, last week, Jim worked so many hours I didn't see him until the weekend. I had Mastitis, the Death Boob disease on Wednesday and didn't start feeling like myself until yesterday then was put back on antibiotics; Gabriele had Roseola last week and finally broke out in the rash on Thurs night, and let's not even GO THERE about us taking the pacifier from Matthew...There is no "weaning" to be weenied...Yes I said "weenied"...I have to be as inappropriate as possible to make myself laugh instead of have another anxiety attack. Anyway, you take it away like a band aid (the paci) and it's awful and you keep telling yourself, "This is the right thing, this is the right thing...I feel like sticking this curling iron in my eyeball to keep me awake, or calling a priest to exorcise my son, but this is the right parental thing." Not to mention one of the cars is dead-ish for now...and the heater decided to stop on the van...and that Matthew has hit the phallic stage (ugh) and has harnessed his Mean Chi officially (like I actually caught him hiding his toys in pillock bags, and storing them so that Joseph could neither find, nor access them). Also, not to mention (and by "not mention" I obviously mean I'm singin' like a canary), Joe has reached the hitting, spitting, and drawing all over everything, and otherwise completely destructive and defiant phase.
So apparently when Wifey is sick, the whole enchilada turns into a giant crap dump of mush, and molds, and then flies swarm it because, that's about how the house has looked until today, and about how the kids have been functioning until today and by "until", I mean that today is the first day I have my Wifey Tough Mama hat back on, not that it's *easier...but it does get better.* See how I did that? Did ya? Well, I've just been doing a lot of reflecting in my prayer time about this (nobody get all "how does she have time for prayer?!", this is like, the last FIVE minutes of my day when I'm actually vulnerable and passing out...my prayer life could use some revamping...But yes, I have prayer time) lately and desiring to gain the positive spin on the negative realization that it does not get easier.
Jim and I have known each other for about twelve years; we've been married for eight, and with children for five...Never ever in the course of our relationship has it been fairy-tale-esque or "easy going" or even really, consistent. The only consistent we've had is chaos. Now, I'm not saying that's good or normal or that it's someone else's fault that our lives have been this way; we made choices that obviously affected our lives that made it chaotic. (Um, like moving to Denver so one of us could attend full-time graduate school in one of the most competitive programs while the other worked a full-time insane job, enter in that later, school-attendee would be carrying three jobs with field placements, and we would have a baby in the second year. Just for example. Yet...we wouldn't regret those choices for a moment.
What I am speaking to here, is that thing that we humans do sometimes when we say, "Well, once he gets a little older, then we'll be able to ___ and it'll be easier." Feel free to plug that in with any of the following: get a new job, have more family time, move to a new home, lose weight, etc. Now to be clear, I'm not saying that it's bad to have goals and dreams; we often do need things to change before we can really soar. I can personally say, that up until August of this past year, I feel like all I ever said were those lines because the little home we were living in was chaotic, overstuffed, and under-loved. And, there were times when we were so (arbitrarily I'm sure) poor, we could not afford to eat much (though I will brag and say that there was this one series of weeks that our lunch every day was 8 oz of cheese divided up for a whole week, and we'd put it on saltine crackers...I was quite pleased with myself that I made that stretch) and could certainly not afford to go anywhere or even drive. There were times I physically couldn't drive because I was either pregnant (too fat), we couldn't afford the gas, I had a broken ankle, or we didn't have a car that fit everybody in it. I know what it feels like to be going to work full-time and wondering what you're really working toward, living for, fighting for etc., when you know that all you hold dear is just waiting at home or with someone else that you feel should be you. I know what it feels like to feel that immense guilt that you're a "part-time" mom but then to have that pale in comparison to the guilt you might feel if you're finally at home with your kids, and all you want is out. All along, I reflect on feeling like, "It'll get easier...it has to...We can't live like this forever." That was not that long ago, really. And it was true--it was not good to be living with constant hardship. We could've made some things easier for ourselves...I think especially if our mentalities wouldn't have placed such an emphasis on A Land Hoping For A Future Where Things Are "Easier", kids are older, and jobs give more money which are great things. Who doesn't want that? But then you miss...living. I can attest that, if you're not careful with this kind of hoping, you might miss opportunities to love and to be grateful for even the purgatory you might be in. I'm not saying, "SUFFA, SUCKAS! It's the HOLY thing to do!!" C'mon--give me more credit than that! I'm saying that, I myself, am a Whiner. I can always, and I mean always, find something to complain about. So imagine me, The Whiner, in these said situations, which are just a snippet of our humble walk thus far. I was NOT grateful much of the time. I was NOT grateful at the time to have experienced depression and suicidal-ideation; I was NOT grateful for the relationships I burned when I was in that place, nor was I grateful at the isolation my husband and I often felt when I was constantly pregnant and alone, and he was constantly working and dealing with me being so needy and exhausted.
For some reason, God has granted that we get to have those little scenic rests however, and on this particular one (this day of the Toilet Epiphany), I saw a vast past of toil stretching behind us, and couldn't believe all that we've encountered. People get divorced for less these days, dude! But mostly that, my hope should not be in hoping for "easier" ...I mean, I'm just a normal schmuck, and I'm always gonna wish that things would stop being so hard, so exhausting, and so freakin' insane--who doesn't in these times?! And I'm definitely not saying, "Be like ME--care-free and enlightened...!" Because...I'm actually a basket-case with low-lying anxiety, and a tendency towards depression**...But, I now recognize that my hope can be peacefully and comfortingly placed on the green slopes of, "It gets better."
Why do I think that? I guess I forgot to say why--bad writer! Bad! *wrist slap*. Well, that's the best part: after my depression that was seemingly short but very...devastating, I felt like I'd been flipped inside-out and what was to show, was not beautiful, not a palace of humility, joy, or anything worth offering. I really thought, I was not really worthy of anyone's friendship, of being my kids' mom, or my husband's spouse, and certainly not someone who had insight. (Yeah, yeah, yeah--I know--it's actually ANNOYING to write it out loud: the self-loathing that comes with depression sometimes--I annoyed myself! Bear with me though...) I share this because, while anyone can see that these things were mental because they were not true, when you're in it, there is nothing in the world to convince you otherwise. What's worse is that when you're depressed, you have what I've heard referred to a "sad but true" type of insight; you honestly call things as you see them, and you're usually right but the way you internalize them is all wrong. Bleh to you, depression! I kicked yo ASS! So the point is, I had myself totally convinced it didn't get better; that this is who I was going to be. Forever. But then, I had this really wonderful best friend*** explain that they needed me and that our kids needed me, and that I needed to get my head out of my self-loathing butt, and move forward...I'm not sure how or when I decided to listen to him, but I remember that it all swirled around me and hit me hard and fast; I had the realization that I was doing horribly, and that this was the part where I did anything it took to get better because we all deserved that. And that's what I did. I took the medicine I so reluctantly had encouraged hundreds of previous clients to take to get better; I went to therapy (reluctantly), and I sought spiritual direction (this one not so reluctantly). It did not necessarily get easier...I fought tooth and nail and blood and sweat to stay present those days when I was so depressed I couldn't even afford the motivation or the anxiety it caused me, to move dirty dishes from the stove onto the counter (like six inches away). I fought back more depression when I finally looked the devastation in the eyes after the wake The USS NICOLE had left; broken friendships, damaged relationships, and confused kids, and given my previous role of "the one that never breaks", I'd scared the living scheiss out of a lot of people.
Little by little, I gained enough confidence to say, "it's getting better...I am feeling better...I see things differently." I'll never ever, as long as I live, forget two things I discovered in spiritual direction (the one I was the least reluctant about): 1. What is feels like, to be embraced by Jesus, and 2. What it feels like to know you have worth, even in your own littleness. One of the absolutely fantastical things that I received from my truly horrible job, was bed-bugs. It was the norm that Case Managers worked with clients of all types of ailments (tuberculosis, scabies, lice, bed-bugs etc) and we never thought much of it. I had been working with this family of five; I could see the bugs crawling around and it never occurred to me, that they sitting in my office, could leave one or two...or a bunch. Anyway, unbeknownst to me, I brought the Demon Bugs to our home at the time and thought that I was having a weird allergic reaction because I was really really pregnant with my third baby, and I was always having weird side effects. The color red used to make me puke. I was the only one in the house to ever be bitten (and drained *insert cheesy laughter*) and for a full year, we never saw the little life-sucking turds. I'm not kidding. It was so oddly contained that every exterminator that came to kill them was shocked and always had to comment on how crazy it was that I was the only one to be attacked. I didn't think it was crazy; I was covered in bites almost up to my neck and felt like a leper. To make matters worse, even our support systems that we told this to, were a little uneasy to be around us, which was understandable but still sucked. A lot. We were basically asked not to come visit and if we did, I felt really badly about it the whole time. I got a taste of what my severely mentally ill clients felt like all the time, everywhere they went. Needless to say, this was not news I was shouting out to the world, so imagine my terror when I needed to share this with my spiritual director, to give her a fair warning. It had kind of become a way to push someone away I think, before I was rejected. I shared this with her and do you know what she did? Without saying a word, she stood up, walked over to me and hugged me shockingly tight, I just burst into uncontrollable sobs. That was Jesus in a skirt, I tell you. I've never been in any other emotional state at any other time to have felt so rejected and then...so full of worth and love.
I'll also never forget the other part to that feeling of worth: often in my days, I try to stop and "listen" in prayer for like, a minute (don't judge...a minute's a lot in Crazy Mom Land). On one particular day, I was really really struggling to stay present; I was tempted to give into my anxious fog and put my head in my hands. I threw my hands up in the air and said, "What should I do?!" I sat well, with my head in my hands for a long time. I started to stand up and heard, "Fight. Fight for this. Fight." Over and over again. "What the HELL does that mean?" I asked. "That's great; the first time in years I feel like God is actually on speaking terms with me, and I don't know what the heck that means." Then, like so many other times in my life when the cartoon-like bricks hit me in the head, it hit me: FIGHT for these little loves. FIGHT for your dignity; FIGHT for the worth I, your Father, created you with. Don't give in." Once again, I was brought to my knees on our dirty floor but with more strength than I'd had in years. I realized, this was a feeling I'd never actually experienced--this desire to discover and invest in my worth and dignity in God's eyes...I mean I thought I had but you know, you don't know yourself until you're really pushed to the edge, far beyond the safety of where you've functioned.
(Note: please DON"T pushing yourself to ANY edge...
Second Note: If you know my husband, please don't ever approach him and be all, "Hey dude--heard that three years ago your wife brought home the bugs--SUCKED to be you, huh?" It's um...very humbling to admit that and I'm sure sure sure, Husband will not be pleased, not at all, that I've shared this...But it's MY blog dang it. And it was MY blood they took, the little Devil Leaches...*insert Kermit Face*...So please--don't make me sorry I shared it.)
I just remember being in college and being so happy, so ready to die for Christ at a moment's notice, ready to be turned into some fantastic martyr. I'd thought, "I'm a virgin, I'm not bad lookin', and have no lucrative job--I'm a PERFECT fit for martyrdom!" But never in my wildest silly little holy dreams, did I imagine what real vocation, real patience, or real sacrifice actually meant. Vocation: as in--it's a commitment you sometimes have to make, every few minutes or so because, if you don't, you'll dig yourself a pool to get a pool-boy, and run away never to return. (This is not really a fantasy of mine; I hate swimming and I think the term "pool boy" sounds either so pre-pubescent it smells like high school B.O., or so cougar-like I wanna vomit...But you get the picture.)
Patience: the actual definition actually has to do with suffering with another while they go through their debacle, hurt, or pain. It's not simply a matter of "waiting-happily-bouncing-smiling". It's more like, a commitment to endure, even thought it will cost you a lot.
Sacrifice: There are many religious pictures that conjure up an image for this word but I tell you what, it really should feel like carrying a cross sometimes. And no, I don't mean it in that fatalistic-annoying-it's the only way-kind of way. I mean, I used to hate that saying and I get really annoyed when I hear people saying it to this day, "You just need to carry your cross", like it's a toilet hall pass or something...something that can be easily placed on a shoulder, and easily lied down. When I stopped trying to make "sacrifice" something so glorious, or pious, or whatever, it made sense in my own life: it really is just doing that which you never choose to do yourself, or desire to do, and doing it with love and forgetting about yourself. Sacrifice is NOT: thinking how cool you'll look carrying that cross...Though I'm sure Simon thought an awful lot about how uncool it looked to be carrying a giant bloody piece of tree next to a supposed criminal...And then I'm sure he thought about not wanting to look like a pansy not carrying the cross...not being able to hack it. I love Simon. I get him. I hate suffering; I hate when there's not enough tissue in the stupid bathroom and I'm thinking of how I can use a used Oil of Olay facial wipe before I realize I'm being the epitome of lazy. But more than anything, I love Simon because he is the epitome of this question we as Christians ask ourselves: "Am I Simon, who is carrying this cross because that is the right thing to do, or am I Simon, carrying the cross because I love this Man and I'll fail to carry this a whole heck of a lot but, I'll be damned if I don't carry this for Him, and try to get to that place of deliverance and learn to truly love by the the time I get there"?
Well this got a whole heck of a lot deeper than I intended for a Monday night--sorry! Where's the jokies, where are the ridiculous stories?! Sorry folks--sometimes I gots to write from the deep..but to bring this around, let me say this:
So when I say these things, I am not coming from a place where I have just expected life to be easy; I am coming from a place that I have understanding within the little trials we've been given to see that, it does get better. See? I'm saying that through all of these things, there is always and will always BE difficulties for we are not of this world. Yet, I fully believe it can and does get better. Though I am not where I want to be in a lot of areas (like the abdominal area, for example), I am a woman I am so grateful to be. I see that I strive for genuineness and authenticity, and am not (as) afraid to be humbled anymore (unless it's at Sam's...I hate being humbled at Sam's...*insert* Kermit Face from previous post). I love the woman I see me to be, and am. I wish she had more tact...a little more class, and better timeliness...But in general, I feel great hair, a flair for humor, and the ability to drink a lot of margs kind of makes up for that...? If you've made it to the end of this post, be assured, there is humor to come. And, you should win a prize...some sort of prize, yes. Leave a suggestion of what kind of prize you'd like. I'm fresh outta ideas.
*Please, if you are a really rich person, don't be offended; I'd love to hear how things stopped being tough and got easier and then, would appreciate it if you sent me money. Preferably in twenty-dollar bills. And I'll say it like, monies, as in the way I would demand it of you in my Mexi-Can accent.
**Nobody freak out, or feel the need to constantly assess me. That was nearly two years ago--LOTS of therapy and drugs. (The legal-not-brown-hut-legal-kind). I'm in GOOD hands. Psychologist-Husband, remember? Plus, I have a decent amount of insight...And the drugs really helped. I loved those little anti-depressants like they was my own son.
***Best Friend: aka, my wonderful husband. He is the one who had the courage love me with his whole heart, and to say what he did, and to be patient with me in the truest sense (remember, "to suffer with"?). He rocks my socks. He's either a) a serious sucker or b) a def good judge of character...I'll go with b.
Jim and I have known each other for about twelve years; we've been married for eight, and with children for five...Never ever in the course of our relationship has it been fairy-tale-esque or "easy going" or even really, consistent. The only consistent we've had is chaos. Now, I'm not saying that's good or normal or that it's someone else's fault that our lives have been this way; we made choices that obviously affected our lives that made it chaotic. (Um, like moving to Denver so one of us could attend full-time graduate school in one of the most competitive programs while the other worked a full-time insane job, enter in that later, school-attendee would be carrying three jobs with field placements, and we would have a baby in the second year. Just for example. Yet...we wouldn't regret those choices for a moment.
What I am speaking to here, is that thing that we humans do sometimes when we say, "Well, once he gets a little older, then we'll be able to ___ and it'll be easier." Feel free to plug that in with any of the following: get a new job, have more family time, move to a new home, lose weight, etc. Now to be clear, I'm not saying that it's bad to have goals and dreams; we often do need things to change before we can really soar. I can personally say, that up until August of this past year, I feel like all I ever said were those lines because the little home we were living in was chaotic, overstuffed, and under-loved. And, there were times when we were so (arbitrarily I'm sure) poor, we could not afford to eat much (though I will brag and say that there was this one series of weeks that our lunch every day was 8 oz of cheese divided up for a whole week, and we'd put it on saltine crackers...I was quite pleased with myself that I made that stretch) and could certainly not afford to go anywhere or even drive. There were times I physically couldn't drive because I was either pregnant (too fat), we couldn't afford the gas, I had a broken ankle, or we didn't have a car that fit everybody in it. I know what it feels like to be going to work full-time and wondering what you're really working toward, living for, fighting for etc., when you know that all you hold dear is just waiting at home or with someone else that you feel should be you. I know what it feels like to feel that immense guilt that you're a "part-time" mom but then to have that pale in comparison to the guilt you might feel if you're finally at home with your kids, and all you want is out. All along, I reflect on feeling like, "It'll get easier...it has to...We can't live like this forever." That was not that long ago, really. And it was true--it was not good to be living with constant hardship. We could've made some things easier for ourselves...I think especially if our mentalities wouldn't have placed such an emphasis on A Land Hoping For A Future Where Things Are "Easier", kids are older, and jobs give more money which are great things. Who doesn't want that? But then you miss...living. I can attest that, if you're not careful with this kind of hoping, you might miss opportunities to love and to be grateful for even the purgatory you might be in. I'm not saying, "SUFFA, SUCKAS! It's the HOLY thing to do!!" C'mon--give me more credit than that! I'm saying that, I myself, am a Whiner. I can always, and I mean always, find something to complain about. So imagine me, The Whiner, in these said situations, which are just a snippet of our humble walk thus far. I was NOT grateful much of the time. I was NOT grateful at the time to have experienced depression and suicidal-ideation; I was NOT grateful for the relationships I burned when I was in that place, nor was I grateful at the isolation my husband and I often felt when I was constantly pregnant and alone, and he was constantly working and dealing with me being so needy and exhausted.
For some reason, God has granted that we get to have those little scenic rests however, and on this particular one (this day of the Toilet Epiphany), I saw a vast past of toil stretching behind us, and couldn't believe all that we've encountered. People get divorced for less these days, dude! But mostly that, my hope should not be in hoping for "easier" ...I mean, I'm just a normal schmuck, and I'm always gonna wish that things would stop being so hard, so exhausting, and so freakin' insane--who doesn't in these times?! And I'm definitely not saying, "Be like ME--care-free and enlightened...!" Because...I'm actually a basket-case with low-lying anxiety, and a tendency towards depression**...But, I now recognize that my hope can be peacefully and comfortingly placed on the green slopes of, "It gets better."
Why do I think that? I guess I forgot to say why--bad writer! Bad! *wrist slap*. Well, that's the best part: after my depression that was seemingly short but very...devastating, I felt like I'd been flipped inside-out and what was to show, was not beautiful, not a palace of humility, joy, or anything worth offering. I really thought, I was not really worthy of anyone's friendship, of being my kids' mom, or my husband's spouse, and certainly not someone who had insight. (Yeah, yeah, yeah--I know--it's actually ANNOYING to write it out loud: the self-loathing that comes with depression sometimes--I annoyed myself! Bear with me though...) I share this because, while anyone can see that these things were mental because they were not true, when you're in it, there is nothing in the world to convince you otherwise. What's worse is that when you're depressed, you have what I've heard referred to a "sad but true" type of insight; you honestly call things as you see them, and you're usually right but the way you internalize them is all wrong. Bleh to you, depression! I kicked yo ASS! So the point is, I had myself totally convinced it didn't get better; that this is who I was going to be. Forever. But then, I had this really wonderful best friend*** explain that they needed me and that our kids needed me, and that I needed to get my head out of my self-loathing butt, and move forward...I'm not sure how or when I decided to listen to him, but I remember that it all swirled around me and hit me hard and fast; I had the realization that I was doing horribly, and that this was the part where I did anything it took to get better because we all deserved that. And that's what I did. I took the medicine I so reluctantly had encouraged hundreds of previous clients to take to get better; I went to therapy (reluctantly), and I sought spiritual direction (this one not so reluctantly). It did not necessarily get easier...I fought tooth and nail and blood and sweat to stay present those days when I was so depressed I couldn't even afford the motivation or the anxiety it caused me, to move dirty dishes from the stove onto the counter (like six inches away). I fought back more depression when I finally looked the devastation in the eyes after the wake The USS NICOLE had left; broken friendships, damaged relationships, and confused kids, and given my previous role of "the one that never breaks", I'd scared the living scheiss out of a lot of people.
Little by little, I gained enough confidence to say, "it's getting better...I am feeling better...I see things differently." I'll never ever, as long as I live, forget two things I discovered in spiritual direction (the one I was the least reluctant about): 1. What is feels like, to be embraced by Jesus, and 2. What it feels like to know you have worth, even in your own littleness. One of the absolutely fantastical things that I received from my truly horrible job, was bed-bugs. It was the norm that Case Managers worked with clients of all types of ailments (tuberculosis, scabies, lice, bed-bugs etc) and we never thought much of it. I had been working with this family of five; I could see the bugs crawling around and it never occurred to me, that they sitting in my office, could leave one or two...or a bunch. Anyway, unbeknownst to me, I brought the Demon Bugs to our home at the time and thought that I was having a weird allergic reaction because I was really really pregnant with my third baby, and I was always having weird side effects. The color red used to make me puke. I was the only one in the house to ever be bitten (and drained *insert cheesy laughter*) and for a full year, we never saw the little life-sucking turds. I'm not kidding. It was so oddly contained that every exterminator that came to kill them was shocked and always had to comment on how crazy it was that I was the only one to be attacked. I didn't think it was crazy; I was covered in bites almost up to my neck and felt like a leper. To make matters worse, even our support systems that we told this to, were a little uneasy to be around us, which was understandable but still sucked. A lot. We were basically asked not to come visit and if we did, I felt really badly about it the whole time. I got a taste of what my severely mentally ill clients felt like all the time, everywhere they went. Needless to say, this was not news I was shouting out to the world, so imagine my terror when I needed to share this with my spiritual director, to give her a fair warning. It had kind of become a way to push someone away I think, before I was rejected. I shared this with her and do you know what she did? Without saying a word, she stood up, walked over to me and hugged me shockingly tight, I just burst into uncontrollable sobs. That was Jesus in a skirt, I tell you. I've never been in any other emotional state at any other time to have felt so rejected and then...so full of worth and love.
I'll also never forget the other part to that feeling of worth: often in my days, I try to stop and "listen" in prayer for like, a minute (don't judge...a minute's a lot in Crazy Mom Land). On one particular day, I was really really struggling to stay present; I was tempted to give into my anxious fog and put my head in my hands. I threw my hands up in the air and said, "What should I do?!" I sat well, with my head in my hands for a long time. I started to stand up and heard, "Fight. Fight for this. Fight." Over and over again. "What the HELL does that mean?" I asked. "That's great; the first time in years I feel like God is actually on speaking terms with me, and I don't know what the heck that means." Then, like so many other times in my life when the cartoon-like bricks hit me in the head, it hit me: FIGHT for these little loves. FIGHT for your dignity; FIGHT for the worth I, your Father, created you with. Don't give in." Once again, I was brought to my knees on our dirty floor but with more strength than I'd had in years. I realized, this was a feeling I'd never actually experienced--this desire to discover and invest in my worth and dignity in God's eyes...I mean I thought I had but you know, you don't know yourself until you're really pushed to the edge, far beyond the safety of where you've functioned.
(Note: please DON"T pushing yourself to ANY edge...
Second Note: If you know my husband, please don't ever approach him and be all, "Hey dude--heard that three years ago your wife brought home the bugs--SUCKED to be you, huh?" It's um...very humbling to admit that and I'm sure sure sure, Husband will not be pleased, not at all, that I've shared this...But it's MY blog dang it. And it was MY blood they took, the little Devil Leaches...*insert Kermit Face*...So please--don't make me sorry I shared it.)
I just remember being in college and being so happy, so ready to die for Christ at a moment's notice, ready to be turned into some fantastic martyr. I'd thought, "I'm a virgin, I'm not bad lookin', and have no lucrative job--I'm a PERFECT fit for martyrdom!" But never in my wildest silly little holy dreams, did I imagine what real vocation, real patience, or real sacrifice actually meant. Vocation: as in--it's a commitment you sometimes have to make, every few minutes or so because, if you don't, you'll dig yourself a pool to get a pool-boy, and run away never to return. (This is not really a fantasy of mine; I hate swimming and I think the term "pool boy" sounds either so pre-pubescent it smells like high school B.O., or so cougar-like I wanna vomit...But you get the picture.)
Patience: the actual definition actually has to do with suffering with another while they go through their debacle, hurt, or pain. It's not simply a matter of "waiting-happily-bouncing-smiling". It's more like, a commitment to endure, even thought it will cost you a lot.
Sacrifice: There are many religious pictures that conjure up an image for this word but I tell you what, it really should feel like carrying a cross sometimes. And no, I don't mean it in that fatalistic-annoying-it's the only way-kind of way. I mean, I used to hate that saying and I get really annoyed when I hear people saying it to this day, "You just need to carry your cross", like it's a toilet hall pass or something...something that can be easily placed on a shoulder, and easily lied down. When I stopped trying to make "sacrifice" something so glorious, or pious, or whatever, it made sense in my own life: it really is just doing that which you never choose to do yourself, or desire to do, and doing it with love and forgetting about yourself. Sacrifice is NOT: thinking how cool you'll look carrying that cross...Though I'm sure Simon thought an awful lot about how uncool it looked to be carrying a giant bloody piece of tree next to a supposed criminal...And then I'm sure he thought about not wanting to look like a pansy not carrying the cross...not being able to hack it. I love Simon. I get him. I hate suffering; I hate when there's not enough tissue in the stupid bathroom and I'm thinking of how I can use a used Oil of Olay facial wipe before I realize I'm being the epitome of lazy. But more than anything, I love Simon because he is the epitome of this question we as Christians ask ourselves: "Am I Simon, who is carrying this cross because that is the right thing to do, or am I Simon, carrying the cross because I love this Man and I'll fail to carry this a whole heck of a lot but, I'll be damned if I don't carry this for Him, and try to get to that place of deliverance and learn to truly love by the the time I get there"?
Well this got a whole heck of a lot deeper than I intended for a Monday night--sorry! Where's the jokies, where are the ridiculous stories?! Sorry folks--sometimes I gots to write from the deep..but to bring this around, let me say this:
So when I say these things, I am not coming from a place where I have just expected life to be easy; I am coming from a place that I have understanding within the little trials we've been given to see that, it does get better. See? I'm saying that through all of these things, there is always and will always BE difficulties for we are not of this world. Yet, I fully believe it can and does get better. Though I am not where I want to be in a lot of areas (like the abdominal area, for example), I am a woman I am so grateful to be. I see that I strive for genuineness and authenticity, and am not (as) afraid to be humbled anymore (unless it's at Sam's...I hate being humbled at Sam's...*insert* Kermit Face from previous post). I love the woman I see me to be, and am. I wish she had more tact...a little more class, and better timeliness...But in general, I feel great hair, a flair for humor, and the ability to drink a lot of margs kind of makes up for that...? If you've made it to the end of this post, be assured, there is humor to come. And, you should win a prize...some sort of prize, yes. Leave a suggestion of what kind of prize you'd like. I'm fresh outta ideas.
*Please, if you are a really rich person, don't be offended; I'd love to hear how things stopped being tough and got easier and then, would appreciate it if you sent me money. Preferably in twenty-dollar bills. And I'll say it like, monies, as in the way I would demand it of you in my Mexi-Can accent.
**Nobody freak out, or feel the need to constantly assess me. That was nearly two years ago--LOTS of therapy and drugs. (The legal-not-brown-hut-legal-kind). I'm in GOOD hands. Psychologist-Husband, remember? Plus, I have a decent amount of insight...And the drugs really helped. I loved those little anti-depressants like they was my own son.
***Best Friend: aka, my wonderful husband. He is the one who had the courage love me with his whole heart, and to say what he did, and to be patient with me in the truest sense (remember, "to suffer with"?). He rocks my socks. He's either a) a serious sucker or b) a def good judge of character...I'll go with b.
Monday, September 24, 2012
Creepo, the Demon Spider
Alright. Let's just have it out--you all razz me about it. I'll give one, just ONE blog post about it and then we're done, got it? Okay, let's talk...SPIDERS. Yes, I'm deathly afraid of them. They are the spawn of satan as far as I'm concerned. I'm told I let my fear of them ruin a lot of fun opportunities, you know like--I'll never go cave diving in the rainforest, make love in a barn, or roll around naked in fern grass. So--clearly--I'm really missing out. They have been known to keep me awake at night, because I worry if I've seen one, that it's waiting until the lights go out, to crawl into my brain and murder me...That's normal...right? And why shouldn't I think that?? A creature that has eight legs, SIX eyes, and can swim underwater, camuflauge itself, and breed isn't TERRIFYING to you people?! Who's really the lunatic here? I've had spider trauma, but don't any of you psychology minded types think you're going to heal me with that flooding mumbo jumbo. I swear on my chihuahua's grave, if you ever scare me with a spider, you WILL suffer.
Some History. Once in college when Handsome Husband was a mere age of nineteen, he thought it would be hilarious to put his pet tarantula (yes; that's a story for another blog) on his chest and chase me around his house, yelling, "Has anyone seen my spider?!" I ran for cover and growled psychotically, "If you come ANY closer to me--I'm breaking up with you. I mean it, freak!" Needless to say, he put the giant devil pet back, and was angry I called him a freak. (Well, do YOU know anyone who wears a tarantula?! Don't answer that--I don't wanna know.)
Spectacular Spider. Yeah, yeah, yeah--they're amazing, serve well our ecosystem, and kill bugs blah blah blah but they also stalk me. That's right. I swear--with Hubby as a witness, spiders seriously try to jump on my head or hang out in my pillowcase. It's like...they KNOW. And, I have a spidey-sense--as in, I know when they're around me. The worst part is, they're like, always around. I firmly believe, that they play tricks on me. Since we've moved to a new city, I can't tell you how many times I've been the butt of a spider trick. For example, once at 2 am, I had to pee but something made me turn on the light and there, sitting on the toilet, was a spider. I swear it looked up at me, shook four of it's fists and said, "Don't you people have any respect?! If you even dare think about squishing me, I'll call for reinforcements!" So, I did what any logical person would do, and trekked down the hall to use the other toilet. Similarly, I threw out this pirate spider that was in the curtain (yes, there are spiders called pirate spiders that are jumpy and aggressive but little) and I dumped it on the doorstep. I tell you--it turned around and looked at me, then turned back around and jumped down the threshold and heaved, "GEEZE!" sadly. No joke.
Creepo, the Spider. I just know there are many stories many of you can think of, as to how I freaked out about a little tiny (but deadly) arachnid. I decided to write about it because uh...I know I have a problem but, I'd rather laugh at it than fix it. Here goes: last week I was lying on the ground enjoying play time with kids when suddenly, a giant 6-eyed, furry, nasty spider beast steps out from under the toy bin. (I am pretty sure a cotton ball blew by to suffice for a tumbleweed. Anyway, how creepy is that--hiding behind children's toys?! SHADY. Real shady. So I tried to remain calm and talk sensibly. "Get OUT of here, Spidey, or you'll meet your maker right quick!" (and yes, I did my best Texas accent, hoping to deter the creep). For a moment, Creepo hesitated but decided to hold it's ground. "Ohh, a TOUGH guy huh? Let's see how you like...THIS!" (I decided Texas wasn't working, so I switched to Jersey. The kids laughed hysterically and watched fearfully--for my mental health--wondering why their mother was engaging in a conversation with a dime-sized creature.) BAM! THWAP! I swatted It like Batman with a Jersey edge...with my Croc. "MWAMWAMWAHAHAA!! Unphased, GIANT!" it bellowed from behind the Riddler's car. Stupid worthless rubber shoes. What good are you? You're like wearing wiffle balls made out of rubber.
"Alright you--now it's time for REALS--I'm getting the broom!" It trembled, "NOOOO!!! NOT the BROOM!!"
But just before I could slaughter it, HH (Handsome Husband) walked in and looked at me quizzically. "Hon...?" The kids informed her that "Mama was arguing with Creepo, the Spider." He shook his head and said, "I'll get it." Yeeeah--I have a rule: DON'T let HH get the damn spider. Why, you ask? Because by "get it" he means trap it in a cup, and humanely throw it outside but what actually happens, is he doesn't really try and he drops the blood sucker, it blends in with the carpet, and lies in wait again for my demise. "NO! I'm killing it and that's that!"
HH jumps in. "I won't drop it," he says. "You will drop it," I say. He drops it and it runs into the vent by MY computer. "GAA!!! I KNEW IT!" Since then, I've been hearing this little evil voice cackling to itself from the vent. It probably lives in the basement now, where it's breeding thousands of Hellion spider soliders, and developing its own Third Spider Reich, and it's only a matter of time before they ambush me.
And because I'm loopy and writing this going off three hours' sleep, I've created an easier way to understand my feelings on the matter, courtesy of Thundercats. (I play Liono--obviously, and this tragic woman. She's scarier than the spider.)
How I look when I see a spider:
This is how all spiders look to me (like giant hairy death beasts):
How all spiders look, to Handsome Husband:
Some History. Once in college when Handsome Husband was a mere age of nineteen, he thought it would be hilarious to put his pet tarantula (yes; that's a story for another blog) on his chest and chase me around his house, yelling, "Has anyone seen my spider?!" I ran for cover and growled psychotically, "If you come ANY closer to me--I'm breaking up with you. I mean it, freak!" Needless to say, he put the giant devil pet back, and was angry I called him a freak. (Well, do YOU know anyone who wears a tarantula?! Don't answer that--I don't wanna know.)
Spectacular Spider. Yeah, yeah, yeah--they're amazing, serve well our ecosystem, and kill bugs blah blah blah but they also stalk me. That's right. I swear--with Hubby as a witness, spiders seriously try to jump on my head or hang out in my pillowcase. It's like...they KNOW. And, I have a spidey-sense--as in, I know when they're around me. The worst part is, they're like, always around. I firmly believe, that they play tricks on me. Since we've moved to a new city, I can't tell you how many times I've been the butt of a spider trick. For example, once at 2 am, I had to pee but something made me turn on the light and there, sitting on the toilet, was a spider. I swear it looked up at me, shook four of it's fists and said, "Don't you people have any respect?! If you even dare think about squishing me, I'll call for reinforcements!" So, I did what any logical person would do, and trekked down the hall to use the other toilet. Similarly, I threw out this pirate spider that was in the curtain (yes, there are spiders called pirate spiders that are jumpy and aggressive but little) and I dumped it on the doorstep. I tell you--it turned around and looked at me, then turned back around and jumped down the threshold and heaved, "GEEZE!" sadly. No joke.
Creepo, the Spider. I just know there are many stories many of you can think of, as to how I freaked out about a little tiny (but deadly) arachnid. I decided to write about it because uh...I know I have a problem but, I'd rather laugh at it than fix it. Here goes: last week I was lying on the ground enjoying play time with kids when suddenly, a giant 6-eyed, furry, nasty spider beast steps out from under the toy bin. (I am pretty sure a cotton ball blew by to suffice for a tumbleweed. Anyway, how creepy is that--hiding behind children's toys?! SHADY. Real shady. So I tried to remain calm and talk sensibly. "Get OUT of here, Spidey, or you'll meet your maker right quick!" (and yes, I did my best Texas accent, hoping to deter the creep). For a moment, Creepo hesitated but decided to hold it's ground. "Ohh, a TOUGH guy huh? Let's see how you like...THIS!" (I decided Texas wasn't working, so I switched to Jersey. The kids laughed hysterically and watched fearfully--for my mental health--wondering why their mother was engaging in a conversation with a dime-sized creature.) BAM! THWAP! I swatted It like Batman with a Jersey edge...with my Croc. "MWAMWAMWAHAHAA!! Unphased, GIANT!" it bellowed from behind the Riddler's car. Stupid worthless rubber shoes. What good are you? You're like wearing wiffle balls made out of rubber.
"Alright you--now it's time for REALS--I'm getting the broom!" It trembled, "NOOOO!!! NOT the BROOM!!"
But just before I could slaughter it, HH (Handsome Husband) walked in and looked at me quizzically. "Hon...?" The kids informed her that "Mama was arguing with Creepo, the Spider." He shook his head and said, "I'll get it." Yeeeah--I have a rule: DON'T let HH get the damn spider. Why, you ask? Because by "get it" he means trap it in a cup, and humanely throw it outside but what actually happens, is he doesn't really try and he drops the blood sucker, it blends in with the carpet, and lies in wait again for my demise. "NO! I'm killing it and that's that!"
HH jumps in. "I won't drop it," he says. "You will drop it," I say. He drops it and it runs into the vent by MY computer. "GAA!!! I KNEW IT!" Since then, I've been hearing this little evil voice cackling to itself from the vent. It probably lives in the basement now, where it's breeding thousands of Hellion spider soliders, and developing its own Third Spider Reich, and it's only a matter of time before they ambush me.
And because I'm loopy and writing this going off three hours' sleep, I've created an easier way to understand my feelings on the matter, courtesy of Thundercats. (I play Liono--obviously, and this tragic woman. She's scarier than the spider.)
How I look when I see a spider:
This is how all spiders look to me (like giant hairy death beasts):
How all spiders look, to Handsome Husband:
How I look when I am trying to figure out how to kill it like a genius, without crunching it:
It doesn't always work. "No! I can't...crunch it--it's minions will DESTROY me--it's little legs will... creep me ouuuut! I...just...caaaan't!"
The look on all of your faces because you don't understand why I'm using Thundercats cartoons:
(Stop trying so hard; I already told you--THREE hours' sleep. This crap is hilarious to me right now...except this woman's face bothers me. Like I should know her but I don't so I feel kinda...bad?)
How I feel when I wield my broom to destroy the Demons of Doom:
It's true; I'm kinda nuts. But in any case, hopefully it made you feel less crazy (don't pretend you're all "normal" and "safe" and whatnot though; just wait until you have kids, stay at home, and suddenly find yourself saying words like, "hobbies", "bottom", and "potty." Then soon enough, you'll be writing about your own crazy life...I look forward to reading it.
Moral of The Story: Spiders are evil. Thundercats still kick ass even though Liono definitely had some...rather Freudian (not to mention hair) issues. But most of all: DON'T write when you're under the influence of no sleep. It gets dangerous...
Until next time!!
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Those Versatile Ta-Tas: An Ode To Breastfeeding Moms
First of all, let's make sure I'm clear: it's not that non-breastfeeding moms don't get a shout-out. Moms and women for that matter, get my shout-out, any-day-any-place-any-time. I am spotlighting this matter, only to throw humor on my own issues (which are usually what makes anything I say funny because my "issues" are about as numerous as half-naked chicks on the Hispanic Telemundo). Let's also be clear about my view on breastfeeding, which will either surprise you, or lull you into boredom because you already know: in general, it's the healthiest and breast thing you can do [*chuckle chuckle*] but if you can't do it or you choose not to because it ain't your thang, then the important thing is that your baby eats. Or rather, that you do your best to give your baby what he/she needs to be able to eat well. After that, you can't sit around blaming yourself or you'll go nutso. The End.
Anyway, I just find humor in how as women, we (and by we, I mean me) are so hell-bent on comparing ourselves to everything from what we aren't enough of, and what we're too much like and I think it quadruples when we become moms. It seems that as soon as we develop some insecurities about how we're "not as good at ___ as Susie McHomemaker" we forget that we're all just people. In fact, this Baby #4 is the first child to: smile at normal things, let others hold him, sleep, eat, and play with toys instead of cry at them. I say this because, there were three and half other years of people seeing Jim and I walking around grumpily like zombies, sleep deprived and constantly exasperated that our kids didn't "do things like other kids" did. Ya know, like SLEEP. Toddler #3 still doesn't really sleep normally. My point is, as soon as people saw what "a good baby" #4 has been (because when kids have sleep abnormalities, they're 'bad'??), I've gotten the, "yeah well, you're breastfeeding because you've always done well with that" or "well, your baby sleeps" etc. Basically, I'm like "WTF?!" (what the flippin' dipping heck?! Okay, I made that up...) because, suddenly when something goes a little right, you're no longer on Team Difficult so therefore, you might not have anything to offer. Then I started having insecurities about not being able to relate to Team Difficult...Laaaame.
Doing anything for your kids can be difficult, and I have found that even the most rewarding of these are sometimes the most difficult. I personally found breastfeeding the first three times to be...awful. Yup, I have no guilt in saying that. It was awful: Baby #1 had severe acid reflux and I spent most of my time as a new already-freaked-out parent, sobbing that all he did was scream and cry and puke. Baby #2 had severe allergies to dairy, nuts, eggs, and soy so breastfeeding felt nearly impossible. By the time Baby #3 had bad colic, I was done by 3 months, packed my little breastfeeding-fantasy bags, and called it a day. Then...there was Baby #4. I decided I'd try it but if it was too much, I'd have no guilt in saying, "Peace out, suckas!" to my milk boobs and lettin' 'em dry out back to reality. It actually went...well. This was scary. What do you do when something you try really hard for, works? And, you can't really piss and moan about it and...it's kind of...great? Then it hit me: maybe breastfeeding wasn't so bad; maybe my experiences of trying to do something--that to many moms, makes you feel like a failure if you are not successful at--were what sucked versus breastfeeding. Huh. I rolled with it, I still roll with it. I have taken one day at a time and have actually made it way farther than I had planned; some super-women might chortle at my six-month mark but for me, it's like completing the Iron Man and I'm pretty flippin' proud.
Mostly I think, I realized that once I let go of nursing (which that term I actually despise...makes me picture myself in a milk-maid outfit) as a means to prove something versus doing what was best for myself and the baby, things got a lot less stressful. With my first babies, there was this feeling and giant constant burden of, "It's time to feed the baby again--if I don't do this, it's failing/If I don't do this right, the baby won't be healthy enough/I'll let others down/I'll let baby down". This time instead, I felt, "This is my first choice and it seems to be working. If it doesn't work, I'll know I tried and we'll offer formula. If that doesn't work, we'll take him to the doctor and test for allergies. This is about feeding my baby, not how awesome I do it. There is no hall of fame for breastfeeding just to say I did it." To coin a super-cheese but good phrase, "Do your best and forget the rest."
Enough about the serious stuff. What I really want to write about, is the funny stuff. For example, that actually, I DO think there should be a Hall of Boob Fame. Or maybe it could be called, "The Hall of Great Knockers." So for those of you Pro Booby-Feeding Beauties that will accuse me of nay-saying nursing (milk maid milk maid milk maid), I'm not. But, I am going to talk about my perspective. Here goes...,
Moving on to..."personal space for the Ladies." You've just worked all day cleaning, taking care of kids, breastfeeding, cooking...breastfeeding and breastfeeding...And your exhausted but hopeful husband gets home. You beg like a gypsy in Florence to get a shower if he'll just watch the kids for fifteen minutes (but really it's thirty mwamwaawaaha! Poor sap!). Maybe it's a loose, comfy cotton shirt; maybe it's a secure stretchy bra but all in all, you finally place your milky burdens in comfort and hunker down for the night. You close your eyes and feel like you're being watched. Somehow, the Ladies have made a break for it (they're so flippin' huge with all that milk in there) and are flopped out there, and they've cast a spell on your husband. "Well Ladies--it's YOUR fault for prostituting yourselves out there! I tried to keep you safe!" you whisper angrily. Then you have to explain to your husband why you talk to and have named your breasts and why you're angry. Any case here, can't help but ending interestingly.
Let's call this next topic: "I Wanna Wear A Normal Shirt/Dress/Tank Top To ___ Instead Of A Nursing One" or we could just cut to the chase and call it: "Project Normal: Fail." At least for me, I put on a normal shirt and say, "This is normal, right? This looks modest and normal." Then, in an hour when I'm still in King Soopers (which is a whole other post to write about) and haven't nursed (milk maid milk maid milk maid), suddenly I'm knocking down displays, smooshing my children in my bosom trying to get them out of the shopping cart, catching the unwarranted attention of seventeen year old bagging boys and I swear the Ladies have somehow ingested some steroids because they're like Hulk Ladies. Similarly, I have tried so many times for weddings, Mass, parties etc., to be stubborn and get away with wearing that "sort of like" a nursing dress/shirt outfit, only to be that woman who has to just whip out her milkies because her baby is screaming so loudly and kicking away any possible cover that comes near his little head. He seems to be screaming, "Don't you DARE put anything between me and my milkies! I'll kick everyone's ass in this room!" (Yes, sometimes I imagine my six-month-old sounds like Mike Dexter from Can't Hardly Wait in this scenario, okay? What's your problem?) Sometimes, I'll almost get away with breastfeeding in public during these functions discreetly, only for my 3 year old to say things like, "Mom, is that your BWEAST? Why does the milk come out of it? The baby LOVES bweast because they're so BIG!" Why haven't I learned to just wear a tarp of gortex for a top? Then, it wicks away moisture, hides bulk, and no one gets hurt...
Lastly, let's talk about the feeling of being attached to watermelon all day that can suck out your life-giving-energy. Even though you love this lil' melon with all you've got, it's just that--you give all you've got and you feel...empty. (Pun intended.) It is a daily battle, even at six months, for my kids and I to get a schedule sometimes. The oldest will be asking every five seconds for me to read, come see his latest creation, his latest turd, or make him food, and the other little gremlins follow suit and I say, "when the baby is done eating" so many times I feel insane. There's no simple answer here, and if you've breastfed, you'll know what I mean. You can't just "unlatch" the baby because this causes stress and maybe you've been trying to get baby to latch well, but if you yell at your other kids, that's also no good. So, you sit there like a veal named Lil' Bessie, helplessly watching your children take down the empire like the Fall of Rome. It gets better, it really does, but that's not to say that it's all easy-peezy.
Sometimes, I laugh out loud when I think back to pre-kid days and I had this friend--she was a skinny little energetic mom, who smooshed her baby in a wrappie thing around her body, and taught baby to nurse whilst she did various jobs around the house. No joke. I remember being like, 'Yup; that's gonna be me.' (This is the part where some sort of pre-recorded audience of laughter ensues.) I tried that: baby couldn't breathe or latch and it turned out, my baby lacked the ability to breastfeed like a monkey in the jungle. Turned out also, that my nipples weren't all perfect and shaped like a baby-bottle either, like those pictures they send you home with at the hospital. I still see those pictures and am like, "Where do you COME FROM, Perfect Nippled Woman? What class or surgery, or gymnastics course did I miss signing up for to nurse sideways with one hand behind my head, all smiley? Seriously--I missed out. My sister-in-law (she's one of those "Smiley Hand-Behind-The-Head- Pros"--I love you, sista--don't hate me!) always talked about how happy she felt after nursing. Like all was right with the world. Actually, the really funny thing is, with Baby #4, I do feel that way, but then it's off set by the murder I have on the brain when I see my other three gremlins having eaten after midnight--because I was busy nursing, of course--and swinging from the light fixtures (true story). So I kind of feel like a perfectly insane person--like The Riddler at the end of Batman Forever. "I'M Batman! WHAWHAHWA!"
I could go on and on about late nights, falling asleep in funny positions while nursing (milk maid milk maid milk maid), to sleep, the fact that I never lose weight while nursing and instead, get hungrier; pumping and the fact that it's called pumping, because that either sounds really dirty, or like you should be connected to a machine with cows mooing in the background--but it all comes down to this: I have no regrets. I will be very excited when I have my Ladies back as guests on the show rather than the hostesses with the mostess but, I can also tell in those (often too short) moments of stillness and perfection of looking so closely into my baby's eyes, giving him what was made just for him, that I'll miss it exactly as I should. On the other hand, I mean, if it were up to me, I'd lactate rum instead of milk on certain nights and we could both sleep well for once...
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
The Picture Of Mental Health
Happy summer! Many of you have been worried about me since I've landed myself in a cast, lost my phone to a watery abyss, and had no car for human contact. Just to show you how well and sane I am staying, I am proving it by sharing some of the daily questions I get asked--because I am such an *ambitious, organized, and put-together mother! I've finally decided to put together a FAQ'S post from me to you--toodles!
Love,
Me
FAQs
"I have a hard time with bath time--trying to bathe all four of my kids feels nearly impossible!"
Then don't, you idiot. It's summer--just hose them down in the yard before-hand. If you live in an apartment, use the driveway. If you're rich, have a drain installed in your garage. I personally, pass them all off to my husband for bath time as soon as he walks in the door, and pretend I am a tenant living in the other half of the house next to a dysfunctional family. Sometimes, I even hit the wall with my fist and yell, "Can ya keep your vermits QUIET in there?! Some people wanna watch Bravo!, geeze!"
"It is so difficult to teach my young children not to run away when we're anywhere away from home (the zoo, store, parking lots etc.)! Any tips?"
Yeah--three words for you, my friend: RETRACTABLE-DOG-LEASH. Sometimes when I feel a little guilty about having my kids on a leash, I pretend they're puppies instead. "HEEL!" I shout and it's kinda like having a dog-sled team.
"Help! My significant other won't share in the cleaning duty--I thought it was 50/50!"
Word. Clinical teaching has taught me this: you can't make anyone do anything; you can only try to show them the truth of the situation and be patient while they figure some things out for themselves. Solution: make a giant bonfire and torch his half of the possessions in a fiery flame. This way, he'll feel like you listened to him--it was just too much for him to do his share. Well now, it doesn't exist! And, you win because the only chores left for him to do are yours. Solved!
I really need some encouragement: I am desperately trying to get my body in shape after having kids, I start seeing results, then things keep stopping me--nasty flu, tendonitis, and a fractured ankle! What should I do?"
First of all--what are you--some kind of freak? God doesn't do that to ONE person all at once, psh! I suppose if you're not lying, my best advice is: accept it's going to take time and that you just need to heal for now. Then, become one of those people that actually watches every P90X, Insanity, and Asylum infommercial available, just to torture yourself. Do this preferably while drinking from a box of wine and eating a fried-chicken salad. This is healthy, right? Look at it this way--maybe by the time you get around to being healthy enough to exercise, you can just have saved up money and can BUY yourself a new ass! That's what I call optimism!
[*Disclaimer: Okay, okay--so maybe that isn't a picture of me, and it's actually Donna Reed...And maybe no one's actually asked me to answer anything...What's that? No--absolutely NOT--these questions are not uncannily like my own ponderings and these QUACKY answers certainly are nothing I've made up in my own head, just to laugh out loud... What kind of schmuck would publish anything but fiction with something like this?! Not me...nope. Not me.]
Friday, July 6, 2012
Well, as it turns out, my stupid appendix decided that while I am sixteen and a half weeks pregnant, this was a good time to come out and nearly rupture. The positive: we're not dead and I suppose as is the usual in writing, these life experiences always make for the best stories. Sadly, this particular post highlights my jerk-non-Christianly-streak. But don't fret new friends; there will be posts a'plenty with all of my life's little humilities. So, I'd like to start our relationship out with honesty because that's how I roll. Ergo, I am admittedly on a lot of narcotics/pain meds and will not risk trying to make more sense than this: I need to laugh (though I don't recommend trying it with two holes in your gut and one giant staple). I'm guessing you need to laugh. So, I write, you read, you laugh. BAM! Just like Emeril Lagasse. Here goes...
Ten Of The Funniest Things I Think About To Brighten My Day
The time when I was five and my mom was determined not to be found while playing hide-and-seek and instead, got stuck under the coffee table. Instead of helping her, I went to her chocolate stash, sat in front of her and ate (all) the chocolate and laughed while she tried to get out. (Don't worry, Divine Providence has deemed that I've gotten mine back MUCH worse than this injustice I caused her. For example, I have four boys under the ages of 6...The bathroom stories I can tell you alone make for a lot of suffering.)
Once when I was ten, I was riding my bike in our ghetto-fabulous trailer court. With the wind in my tangley hair, and the sun on my chubby face, I was beginning to think, maybe this is what models feel like in all the pictures with well, wind in their hair and sun on their faces. When, I flew past a group of other 5th graders, I thought maybe, just maybe, they were smiling because they were having this model-me realization too and--that was the last thought I had for a while because I drove right into our neighbor's ghetto-shed. For the second time in my young life, I saw stars. I believe, that if I saw a chubby little kid swinging her hair whilst riding a bike in a trailer court, and crash into a shed, I'd laugh my ass off.
I picture myself in my favorite outfit in 6th grade: a mustard yellow, brown, and cobalt blue body-suit (if you don't know what a body-suit was, refer to picture), with Luigi-colored green, baggy pants. And, I laugh my ass off.
I think of the time when I first met husband in college and I told him that his name, "Jimmy" sounded like a funny name. And, for no reason at all, I would say, "Jiiiiimmy...Jimmyyyyy" in a Pee-Wee Herman growly voice, with a Pee-Wee Herman laugh, every time he was turned around. I did this for a solid month. The guy was a statue and never showed annoyance until, I yelled it in his ear in a Pee-Wee Herman voice. Then he was angry. Really angry. That still makes me laugh out loud. Especially because, I don't know who'd have the patience to marry someone who talked to them in a Pee-Wee Herman voice.
I think of the time when our oldest, Michael, was only one year old, and we had this toy-remote control that made this slipped-on-a-banana-peel-like-in-Looney-Tunes noise. One night, my husband was angrily picking up the living room because Mike wouldn't go to bed and I'd "fallen asleep". (Wow, the more I read these, the more I wonder how I got married.)Anyway, I saw Jim step on the toy remote, activate the "slip-on-banana-peel" noise and watched his legs nearly go over his head. My cover was blown when laughed out loud in hysteria and, we both laughed so hard we cried. Then, he was maaaad I had actually been awake.
Once again, feigning sleep: When I was in college, my mom was married to a crazy man that in my head to this day, I diagnose him with Douche Bag NOS (Not Otherwise Specified). He didn't want to let my sister and I hang out because we "laughed too loudly." We heard his heavy body pounding down all three levels to the basement and even though our bodies were shaking with suppressed laughter, we shut our eyes pretending to be asleep. It was dark and he shone a flashlight on our faces and said, "SWELL. You're asleep. I better not hear another PEEP!" and with that first heavy step on the stairway, he farted. Like, MAJOR big man fart. My sister and I laughed ourselves off the couch, and didn't even hear what he was yelling about all the way back up the stairs.
When my aunt was in the hospital for the birth of one her children, my sister and dad and I waited impatiently in the family waiting room. There was a playhouse that looked like a tree-house, complete with a faux-fox hole for kids to squeeze themselves into. My sister was misbehaving and my dad glared at her with daggers and said, "If you don't get back here RIGHT NOW, I'm going in there to get you MYSELF!" All I could barely see were two pig-tails furthering themselves to the back of the fox hole and heard a muffled, "You can't, you're too FAT, Daddy!" I watched in horror and awe as my dad dove toward the fox hole, lifted the entire tree house (complete with all other kids running back to their parents, like an ogre had attacked NeverLand), and pulled her out by her pig-tails. Maybe this isn't funny to you if you lived in a healthy, non-psycho-traumatic home, but think not so violent, and more just, laughing at a bad parenting moment, and a sassy-pants kid.
I'm sure he's gonna be pissed about this (though he'll say he's unashamed) but I convinced my brother when he was 10, that for his boy-scouts trip to Water World the next day, that my mother had failed to find trunks, so he'd be wearing a Boy Suit. I told him a Boy Suit (which is of COURSE, made up) was the new thing for boys, and that it was a swimsuit with boyish colors. I said, "Zachary AARON--you'd better wear it because mom spent A LOT of money on it!" I gave him my best big-sister glare. He stammered trying not to cry, "W-well, is it at least...b-blue??" I shook my head sadly, "Nope. The bow is red. The suit's black-ish-purplish." He threw his hands up. "BOW?!" He stormed up the stairs yelling, "Maaaaaam!!!!" My mom of course, was confused and handed him his trunks and he chased me all over the house yelling, "I HATE YOU!!" throwing shoes at me.
I think of this one day in college when my two best friends and I drove all through Greeley in my white Geo Storm yelling to people on the street, "THUMBS UP! ATTENTION EVERYONE: IT'S THUMBS UP DAY!!! That's right! Get 'em up get em' up! YOU SIR--THUMBS UP!! YOU MA'AM--GET THOSE THUMBS UP!!!" It seriously made people really happy.
I think of just yesterday, when I tried talking to our Parish secretary and she came in on the part of my conversation with kids, and only heard me yelling, "MATTY! Nuts are dangerous--NEVER put them in your mouth--even if someone else gives them to you, that doesn't know that they make you sick!" Yeah; I'm special.
Moral of the Story: laugh recklessly and, there are always more things to make you laugh. Just ask.
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Dear OB/Prenatal Establishment Where-From I Am Reluctantly Receiving "Care":
I don't like you. I don't know why anyone does but I definitely don't like you. I have some requests that have been gathering up for quite some time and here they are, in writing.
Requests
To the Medical Assistants: Please don't talk over and around me whilst taking my vitals, thinking I am not there. Furthermore, please refrain from having idiotic and asinine discussions, wherein you are wrong about everything you're talking about, and when I politely give you the correct information, you stop for a moment as if, "Did you hear something?" and then continue in your ridiculous conversation. (Like, discussing that there are wolf spiders in Colorado the size of dinner plates, that are lethally poisonous...that live in large webs.)
(*In case anyone reads this and dares to challenge such a nerd as myself who is married to Spider-Bug-Man expert: the largest found wolf spider in Colorado was 2.5"--yuck--and they don't weave cobwebs, they live on the ground and burrow webs; and are only mildly poisonous.)
Anyway, it leaves me no choice but to be annoying and turn into the 10 year old trapped inside my brain and start just making non-sensical statements because I know you're not listening ("His underwearrrr were hardly therrrre...is your degree from way out therrrre?...I guess yer movin' me to another prego chair!" etc.).
Request #2: During ultrasounds, please don't set me up with some nurse that chomps on bubble gum the whole time, while digging around, giving me an exam, and then during the very first picture of my baby says, "Wellll...it looks like all is well except for...this schmutz right here behind the baby." SCHMUTZ?! "No need to panic--could be mass; could be another baby *shrug*." Or, upon the second-sixth ultrasounds, set me up with a beautiful, snooty young woman who hates kids, and has no patience for pregnant woman, with kids. She might say things while becoming exasperated , like, "AH! Your baby is caddy-wampus--" CADDYWAMPUS?! Is this a medical term for a golf-laden-platypus?! "--and simply refuses to move where I can see him." She might also say other memorable one-liners like, "*sigh of anger* This baby is out to GET me today! I was going to have an extra hour to pay my bills, look online etc., but now I guess I'll be here with you..." She then may proceed to become so upset that my unborn baby won't move because he is "caddywampus", that she will begin to use her sonogram tool to jab at various places on my stomach, thinking that this will jar him. I just might have felt like a piece of meat getting tenderized. I might have said, "Um, I know it seems like fluff to you but it's MY fat and stomach...and it hurts..." She may also try to assure me when measurements come back slightly abnormal by saying, "Now, I'm not a doctor--" SHOCKING! "--but my Spidey-Sense is telling me that everything is a-okay!" [insert thumbs up and bouncing ponytail with fake enthusiastic head-nod]. Perfect! I'm assured by a woman who's confidence is embedded in her inner Spider-Man, that my baby hasn't already suffered Shaken Baby Syndrome by her stomach-abusive shenanigans.
So, my dear highly-rated,ridiculously expensive establishment: would it be too much, to request that she receive some sort of socialization classes? Anger Management? Or perhaps, have her superiors administer some sort of questionnaire that asks questions like: "I am annoyed by unborn babies that don't cooperate with the rest of my schedule" or, "situations that are not in my control really make me feel psychotic" etc. If she checks "yes" on say, ANY of them, maybe she can be redirected to something like...another job? Just a request.
Request #3: Please educate your staff on important things like, not making diagnosis that sound definitive, when come to find out, they were not qualified to do so. For example, Gum Chomper Nurse, after giving me a five second exam, declaring that my cervix is "too short" and rushing me into a panic that the baby will drop out into existence, at any time. Throwin' around terms like "bed rest" and "pre-term labor;" it's...unsettling and just might nearly throw me into cardiac arrest...which probably would bring about pre-term labor...
Request #4: Finally, I know this may be harsh but--please hire a secretary who can actually see...and hear...and use a computer? It would be so helpful when I'm having cramps and trying to explain my medical symptoms several times because "stomach cramps" sounded the same as "wallup clamps" (??) and my saying I thought it might be due to "severe dehydration" somehow translates into "severe deridation" (which isn't even a word). Yes; it could be helpful because then the doctor won't call me, thinking I'm a lunatic, clearly suffering from some cortisol-amped episode of psychosis.
Actually...if you really want my request...Can you just shut the place down and turn it into a day spa?
Sincerely And In-Debted To You,
Me
So, my dear highly-rated,ridiculously expensive establishment: would it be too much, to request that she receive some sort of socialization classes? Anger Management? Or perhaps, have her superiors administer some sort of questionnaire that asks questions like: "I am annoyed by unborn babies that don't cooperate with the rest of my schedule" or, "situations that are not in my control really make me feel psychotic" etc. If she checks "yes" on say, ANY of them, maybe she can be redirected to something like...another job? Just a request.
Request #3: Please educate your staff on important things like, not making diagnosis that sound definitive, when come to find out, they were not qualified to do so. For example, Gum Chomper Nurse, after giving me a five second exam, declaring that my cervix is "too short" and rushing me into a panic that the baby will drop out into existence, at any time. Throwin' around terms like "bed rest" and "pre-term labor;" it's...unsettling and just might nearly throw me into cardiac arrest...which probably would bring about pre-term labor...
Request #4: Finally, I know this may be harsh but--please hire a secretary who can actually see...and hear...and use a computer? It would be so helpful when I'm having cramps and trying to explain my medical symptoms several times because "stomach cramps" sounded the same as "wallup clamps" (??) and my saying I thought it might be due to "severe dehydration" somehow translates into "severe deridation" (which isn't even a word). Yes; it could be helpful because then the doctor won't call me, thinking I'm a lunatic, clearly suffering from some cortisol-amped episode of psychosis.
Actually...if you really want my request...Can you just shut the place down and turn it into a day spa?
Sincerely And In-Debted To You,
Me
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