CHAPTER 1: It’s hard.
CHAPTER 2: It’s fun!
CHAPTER 3: It’s pretty
hard.
CHAPTER 4: It smells
weird.
I’m telling you, you’re going to want to buy multiple
copies. One thing I learned when I got
pregnant for the first time is that people enjoyed making jokes about how I
wouldn’t sleep for 18 years, as if that was going to be the hardest part. Newsflash:
It’s not. Don’t worry though, if
you’re a parent of young ones I’m not about to tell you how easy it is to have
small kids now that I no longer claim that phase of life. The only scenario under which I would return
to that period of time is if I could do so in 2 hour increments, and if I could
choose the increments to be after naps, before bedtime, and during a Disneyland ride followed by ice cream. And for the record, you will sleep again and
it won’t take 18 years. However, you
will still have sleepless nights.
Right now it’s 5:00 am and I’ve been up for 45 minutes
already. Not because my baby is awake
and screaming but because the world is awake and screaming at my babies and it
stresses me out. Here’s a little note I
would like to write to anxiety: In the
future I would appreciate it – and I mean “appreciate” in the way I appreciate
not bleeding to death – if you could wait
at least (at least!) until 7:00 am on a Saturday before you nudge me alert with
visions of doom and woe. ARE WE CLEAR?
As a parent of teenagers I’m learning that most of the things I have worried about
are not the things that are worrying me.
I guess I convinced myself that if I could keep my kids off drugs,
immorality and free from kidnappers the only thing left to do was bask in glittery
fairy dust. But so far I’ve done all
that and yet here I sit, at 5:00 am, already waiting for the day to be
over. Nobody told me that one of the
hardest parts about parenting would be watching your kid meet rejection and
disappointment; that one day you would see a host of kids heading off to a
party that yours wasn’t invited to. That
you would stand on sidelines watching other people's kids light up the "stage"
while yours sat on the outskirts waiting to be noticed.
That you would have to witness your kid leave the room after bad news to
assume a position face down on the couch with a pillow over their head so you
wouldn’t see them cry. Nobody told me
that seeing your kid hurting would be worse than a thousand needles in the
eye. Oh, and the needles are on fire. And coated in cayenne pepper.
Another hard part about the phase I’m in is figuring out
how to “be there” when you’re not the one they want to talk to. Oh, I almost forgot about CHAPTER 5: YOU’RE NOT THE ONE THEY WANT TO TALK TO. Except I’m sure your kids won’t be like
that. (They will probably be like
that.) I try to appeal to them by
getting out the scrapbooks and showing them pictures of when we used to cuddle
on the couch but it doesn’t seem to ignite warm feelings. So then I try buying them their favorite
chocolate milk and they love it! They
hug the gallon like it’s their best friend.
You might think this is the right time to go in for a hug yourself.
It’s not.
You’re supposed to leave the chocolate milk at the door and
get out.
I am fortunate, because our good times are good and we have
a lot of them. There’s a big difference
in conversation when you can talk using full sentences – we’ve come a long way
from Samantha telling me to “push it out, mama” back when she was small enough that
we still had to share a public bathroom stall.
But this part - the disappointment - was easier when they were little, when tears could be
wiped away with my hand, love could be showered with hugs and kisses, and peace
could be restored with Cheez-Its and The
Aristocats.
Oh, I know it’s only temporary. I just didn’t know it would be this
hard. And seriously, it ALWAYS smells
weird.