ad hoc MOM

Sep8Do Pre-Schools Have Truant Officers?
Paula

My daughter is about to start pre-school tomorrow.  I’ve been excited/dreading this change all summer.  I’m so glad that my daughter is going to have this opportunity.  She’ll get to do yoga, take art and music classes, and well, learn stuff. Some of her friends are going to the same school which makes it even better (how cute is that?).  And since I basically didn’t meet another child until I set foot in my kindergarten class, and I had never ever heard of a downward facing dog until I was in my mid-twenties, I feel pretty confident that my husband and I are giving our daughter a pretty good start in life.  But here’s the thing, I’ve basically accepted that our chances of getting her there on time are 0%.  Her school requires a bit of travel.  A fifteen-minute walk followed by a bus ride.  I know, I realize there are some people who walk six days on their hands to vote, this isn’t a big deal in the scheme of things, but this is my family we’re talking about.  We couldn’t seem to manage getting her to our local daycare on time just a few blocks away.  Add mass transit into the mix and our mornings are likely to consist of mismatched shoes, forgotten lunches and strings of curse words.  I really don’t want my daughter to be the kid who shoes up at the tail end of the “hello song” every single day.  Nor do I want her to start saying “dammit” – which is bound to happen if I’m running for the bus every morning realizing her lunch is sitting on the kitchen counter.  What do you do in that situation?  Give her ten bucks and tell her to order Chinese?  Change is good.  Change is good with kids, it means milestones – stretching limits, enjoying more together as a family.  But right now, I’m just not convinced that change involving a bus is going to be so good.  We’ll see how it goes.  Please wish us luck.

What do you do if you forget your kids lunch? Give them ten bucks and tell them to order Chinese?

 
Sep6This Fall I’m Taking Things Bird By Bird
Paula

Before I was a mother, I used to welcome the arrival of fall with wide-open arms.  I wasn’t a big fan of summer.  I much preferred chilly days, sweaters & raincoats and indoor activities to 90-degree days, air conditioning and sweat.  But now that I am responsible for a small person who needs to burn off energy on a regular basis – and ideally in a wide-open space, I seriously fear the end of summer.  Life with a 2.5 year old is much easier when you can spend your days doing any number of things outside, and you are free from the hell of tiny mittens, boots, and that pesky rain cover.  The weather is perfect right now, but I know my days are numbered and I’m already dreading the long winter ahead.

I’m depending on these birds to get me through the winter with my mind intact.  Are they up to the task?

I’ve been reading lots of books on writing lately, looking for new inspiration, tips, etc., and I reread Anne Lamott’s fantastic Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life, if you haven’t read it, it’s a really helpful book.  Anyway, when her brother was ten, he did that classic thing where he put off writing a massive report on birds.  He had three months to do it, but naturally waited until the night before.  Surrounded by books on birds at the kitchen table, in tears, and totally overwhelmed by the massiveness of the task, his dad said to him “Bird by bird, buddy.  Just take it bird by bird.”  I remember loving this story when I first read Bird by Bird years ago, but confess the significance was somewhat lost on me.  Yeah, work was hard sometimes, but I could deal.  Sure, life could be tricky – but there were cocktails.  But now fall is approaching with it’s long dark days that will need to be filled creatively. . . EVERY SINGLE DAY.  Instead of freaking out about the long months ahead, I might just take the “toy by toy” approach, maybe try things “play date by play date.”  I’m also thinking this method might be helpful in other ways too.  We want to paint our living room, but seriously, how do you do that with a two year old running around.  Maybe wall by wall?  Who says a living room has to be painted in a day?  And that stupid storage space that’s sucking the cash right out of my checking account?  Maybe I just empty it box by box?  This idea somehow gives me comfort, that I’ll survive the winter, and my walls will no longer be yellow.  And who knows, maybe I’ll actually get to write a post about how I finally got rid of my stupid storage space?  If I do, Anne Lamott is SO getting a fan letter.

 
Sep3Vacation?
Tonya

Ok, so we are all going to try and go on “vacation” but since the kids are with us it will basically just be fun for them and, possibly, the dads…unless we’re yelling at them, which is totally possible because when we think vacation we think poolside with a pina colada under an umbrella with really awful book (except me and my fair skin: I’d have a huge hat on and sweats and sun screen). Instead though we’ll still be doing all our usual stuff just the scenery has changed. Wish us luck! We wish you luck too!

 
Sep1What to Wear When the Girls Aren’t Invited?
Carrie

I recently found myself in dire fashion straits–I’m nursing and I had to find something to wear to my cousin’s wedding.  With visions of having to hike a dress up around my ears when it came time to feed the baby, I went on a frantic search to find a dress that would make breast feeding as discreet as possible.

I took my search online and what did I find? Dresses that were so ugly, there’s no way anybody was even going to LOOK at me, let alone notice that I was feeding my child. Oh look–here’s an option–a nurse’s uniform dyed pea green with an oversized collar! And another: a v-neck, no a boatneck, YES–a v-neck/boatneck all in one! Or how about a pajama-cum-sweatdress with a hood (in case anyone recognizes you!)? You’d like a print? How about this extremely small scale, all-over print that will emphasize your shapeless post-partum volume?

Maybe all of this eye poison is intentional? After all, we’ve heard more than enough about people who think breast feeding in public is disgusting (see Babies in Bars)! I can hear the designers’ fashion mantras in my head now: “The worst dressed, hides her breasts the best.” Or “This frumpy color and cut will make you look less like a slut.”  Or perhaps, more to the point: “Lady, you’re dead to us now. You are not on our fashion demographic radar.  I could care less what you wear to your cousin’s wedding. There’s nothing to see here.  Move along, move along.”

 
Aug3025 to Life: Inside the Baby Jail System
Carrie

Sometimes, when I stare into the eyes of my newborn son, I see….the man. No, not the man he will someday become. THE man. In my life, THE man is not figurative. He is not a metaphor. He is real and he wears diapers. THE man and his big brother conspire to cut my personal freedoms to such a degree that I often feel like I’m in jail—Baby Jail.

Here is the timeline, starting with the birth of my first,  of my journey through “the system”  (all quoted definitions are courtesy of wikipedia—hey, I’m a mom, I don’t have time for better research resources, ok?)

First Year: Jail
Jail is defined as  “a place in which people are physically confined and, usually, deprived of a range of personal freedoms.” In the first year of baby jail, you can’t take a shower, you can’t go to the bathroom in private and your fellow inmates make sure that you don’t get any uninterrupted sleep. No shopping, dining or movie viewing allowed.

Second Year: Work Release
Work release “allows a prisoner who is sufficiently trusted or can be sufficiently monitored to leave confinement to continue working at his or her current place of employment, returning to prison when his/her shift is complete.” Your baby loosens his grip a bit during the second year. Think of your breast pump as an ankle monitoring device. Step lively, but not for too long and not too far way from the baby.

Third Year: Parole
Parole is “the release of prisoners based on prisoners giving their word of honor to abide by certain restrictions.” In the third year, now that you’ve shown the proper respect of authority, your baby will allow you to resume some basic activities. You can shower more frequently, your work can take up more of your time, you can start wearing clothes that make you look like a regular citizen. But don’t get too comfortable. Your baby is still the boss. A boss who has given you enough rope to hang yourself with.

Birth of Second Child: Guantanamo
Guantanamo: “detainment facility where the civilities of  human rights and due process do not apply. Imprisonment is indefinite.” Enough said.  Just as you’ve learned to be grateful for the triumph of the human spirit under adverse conditions, your second baby swoops in and unleashes a flame thrower on what little is left of your personal liberties. All hope is lost. No showering. No talking on the phone. No walking, eating, drinking, breathing, sleeping by yourself.  No writing, philosophizing, cooking, cleaning, reading, exercising, driving, flossing, listening, recollecting.

You will look at your first child and realize how good you had it. At least under his stewardship, Baby Jail had an end in sight. This new child’s favorite style of punishment? Cruel and unusual. You are that baby’s bitch. And there’s no one here to hear you scream.

 
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