Motherhood: The Job

Mar28The Five S’s of Surviving Saturday and Sunday
Carrie

Is it just me, or do the weekends sometimes seem harder with the kids than the average weekday? For me, the trouble starts on Friday afternoon. Typically, my husband calls me and asks me what we should do tonight. That’s kind of like asking an inmate at Sing Sing whether they are summering in the Hamptons or on the Vineyard. And so it begins, the persistent lowering of the bar of what we can and can’t do on Saturday and Sunday.

First off, as a parent to small children, Friday night no longer exists. It should be called Sameaseveryothernightday night. You finish your day, relieved. But why do you feel relieved you stupid idiot? There’s no break coming! There’s no babysitter booked! There’s no time machine waiting! There’s just the regular number of hours between when your children fall asleep and when they wake up. For our house, it’s seven measly hours.  How on earth are you going to spend the time? Eating what’s left of your kids’ macaroni and cheese, not doing the dishes and falling asleep in front of Supernanny? That sounds about right.

The weekend is broken down into four wickedly short/long shifts: Saturday Morning, Saturday Afternoon, Sunday Morning, Sunday Afternoon. In these non-napping time slots, we usually try to fit in everything that our life requires outside of the work week. Trips to the hardware store, esoteric, yet nagging house chores, conversations with each other as husband as wife, any activity at all as a family. The problem is, our dumb brains wake up on Saturday and still think it’s Saturday (like it was in 1993), instead of realizing it’s the kick off of a “move it or lose it” race against time to keep the children happy, fed, occupied, entertained, rested and subdued. Or as my husband likes to say “let’s keep the kids from getting captured.”

And with disappointment, comes conflict. Invariably, we butt heads, once, twice, maybe one thousand times over trivial things because we’re both desperately clamoring for our weekend time. Or at least, we pine for “the time formerly known as the weekend.”  But seeing as how our weekends are the only time we have as a family, it can’t be good for our kids to see us so locked in battle for down time that doesn’t exist. It. just. doesn’t. exist.

So, in the wake of the weekend wreckage, here I type on Sunday night trying to formulate a strategy to survive Saturday and Sunday in tact.

1. Schedule. Just because it’s the weekend, doesn’t mean we should just throw away the idea of a schedule and play everything by ear. Our family always falls into this trap. On the days when we don’t plan anything, the kids are in their pajamas until 11 and we spend the whole morning passively aggressively trying to get the other one to watch the kids while the other one tries to go back to bed. We’re both exhausted and irritated by the time 1:00pm rolls around. A schedule is an objective third-party arbitrator in this case. Activities don’t have to be set in stone, but I think it’s a good idea to lay down some general guidelines about how the hours of the weekend will be spent.

2. Split up. You take one of the four shifts, your partner takes another. Simple as that. Maybe it doesn’t seem fair (especially if you have the kids all week), but it will keep the peace and good will flowing. Everyone needs some alone time to look forward to.

3. Surrender. In the other two shifts, do stuff as a family together. Don’t wish you had a break.  Don’t try to multitask. Don’t rush. Surrender to the floor to play with trains. Make the trek to the playground. Get out the arts and crafts supplies. This is your life and there will be a time when you will be nostalgic for it. You won’t remember how tired you were or how unshowered. It seems impossible, but these are the days that memories are made. Make lots of coffee.

4. Short Siesta. Today, after a “family” time slot spent at the Bronx Zoo, I was exhausted. I wanted a break. The kids voices sounded like nails on a chalkboard and I felt like I had taken 100 sleeping pills. Initially, I just announced to my husband that “I was going upstairs.” He looked at me, mouth agape, with frantic and outraged eyes that communicated one simple thought: “Are you fucking kidding me??” He’s a nice husband, so he just said “Go.” I went upstairs, lay on the bed and spaced out for 15 minutes. I realized, that’s all I needed. I came back downstairs, ready to tackle the rest of the afternoon. I realized that this could be a great tool: the 15-minute tap out. It worked for me today and will not require major negotiation in the future, because he can take them too.

5. Sunshine. Vitamin D. Fresh air. Outside play (if possible) leads to longer naps and earlier bedtimes. Enough said.

So, I realize that this may come off as simplistic, idealistic crap, but I find myself in desperate need of coping strategies and plans to survive this wilderness. What about you guys–do you feel the same way about weekends or am I alone in this debacle? What does  your family do to keep the peace on Saturday and Sundays?

[Disclaimer: If these Five S’s aren’t helpful, try my other S’s on for size: Smirnoff, Sephora, Since You’ve Been Gone (played loudly on headphones in the privacy of your own home), Sauvignon Blanc and Psychotherapy (phonically, anyway…)

 
Mar23Whatever it Takes, Which May Include My Sanity
Paula

We are moving.  Any day now.  Really.  However, we’re at that horrible point in the selling/buying process where terrible glitches pop up and I’m now pretty much convinced my family will soon be living in a tent in Prospect Park.  I’ve spent a good portion of the day either on the phone or scanning documents.  I hate my scanner.  It’s old and overly complicated.  I can also use it to produce fake IDs make toast and pop popcorn.  Every time I started to use it June would become fascinated by the device and demand to get involved.  Since I don’t know how to build a wig-wam, and I really like to shower, I decided I would do whatever it takes to get this situation resolved. . .  which means June was going to have her way.  This is how I kept the peace today.

BREAKFAST: Chocolate cupcakes.  My friend Jess pointed out that this really isn’t all that different than a muffin.  I figure, why start the day off with an argument?

FIRST-AID: No less that twenty spider-man themed band-aids are applied lovingly to a non-existent “boo-boo” on child’s foot.  For some inexplicable reason (namely child insists on removing them) the band-aids will not stick.  Constant attention to fake injury seems to placate child.

ENTERTAINMENT:  Toy Story 3.  I rewind crucial “barrel of monkeys” scene about 17 times.  Toddler rolls on floor in hysterics first few times. . . then stands directly in front of tv as if dissecting every second of scene.  Is she future Sofia Coppolla? Or future Judd Apatow?  Or is she just ruining her eyes?

DINNER: Pizza is ordered at her majesty’s request.  The first slice has “too much sauce.”  WTF?  Second slice is “funny.”  Huh?  Third slice is actually second piece simply walked back into kitchen and returned. . .  Third piece is eaten with enthusiasm allowing me to spend an inordinate amount of time fighting with ancient scanner.

BATHTIME: Since I admittedly spent a good portion of the day ignoring my child, I decide not to get mad when she pours a large measuring cup of water on top of my head during bath time.  There’s nothing that says “this is pay back bitch” like a giant cup of luke-warm sudsy water running directly down your back and into your jeans.

I’m sure that if paired with a bushel of organic apples, a box of bran cereal and a pile of tofu this delicious chocolate cupcake is part of a nutritious breakfast!

This is when I realize I’ve really let myself be taken for a ride.  Why do I feel so guilty about having to take care of some stuff?  Yeah, obviously it’s easier to deal with mortgage brokers and real estate people without your child screaming in the back ground, but it’s probably time I teach her that when mom is on the phone it’s time to play quietly with Mrs. Potato Head.  Tomorrow is another day and there will be more drama.  Instead of cupcakes for breakfast – I think I’ll go back to cereal.  Unless I feel like oatmeal.  But whatever we have, it’s going to be my decision, and I’m not going to be afraid of a little arguing.

 
Mar14No Family Leave? NO Problem! Just Think Inside the Hamster Ball.
Carrie

Last month, as reported by Lisa Belkin of the Motherlode, Human Rights Watch issued a report on how shockingly awful the US is at providing maternity and family leave benefits. The report, titled “Failing its Families: Lack of Paid Leave and Work-Family Supports in the USA”, interviews 64 parents in the US and uncovers a range of financial, physical and professional hardships experienced by American workers before and immediately following childbirth or adoption.

So, the question is–what are we going to do about this shameful situation?

Well, I’ve worked up a sweat racking my brain for a possible solution, and I think I’ve finally come up with a plan. Instead of wasting a whole bunch of time on letter campaigns, protests, and good old fashioned grass roots activism, let’s solve the core issue: that adorable bottomless pit of need–your BABY!

It’s time the babies finally faced the music, folks. They need to learn to take care of THEMSELVES. Our five-point plan–“The Happiest Baby on the Block Who is Alone in the House While Both Parents Are at the Office Because They Will Be Fired If They Don’t Go Back to Work”-- is simple, yet effective* (*please note that no part of the below plan has actually been tested) and best of all–CHEAP**(**please note that actual cost has not been determined at this time)!


1. X-Large Hamster Ball:
Do you remember how amazed you were the first time you saw your pet hamster running around your house in his little ball, as free as a rodent encased in a plastic  orb could possibly be (given the circumstances)? Well, I’m 96% sure your baby would feel really awesome in a plastic ball, too. And you’ll feel awesome at your desk knowing that your baby can’t bump into walls, access electric sockets, answer the doorbell, etc., when that plastic ball with air holes is keeping him safe and sound, rolling, rolling, rolling all around the house.

2. Fur Suit:
It’s advisable to dress your baby in a fur suit before you leave the house. We’re not sure how this is going to help, but it seems to work for animals in the wild, so this is our best, educated guess on how to handle wardrobe issues. I don’t think you need to worry about diapers because I’ve never seen a wild animal, like a chimp or something, in a diaper–have you!?  Wait. Sorry.  OK, yes I have seen a chimp in a diaper,  but that’s only when that chimp is working for a salary. And we both know that your baby isn’t going to be making a dime while you are at work.

3. Astronaut Food:
Everyone knows that astronauts don’t eat normal “people” food when they go up in space. So why should your baby when she’s at home during the work week?  Freeze-dried ice cream and spaghetti carbonara reduced down to a crumbly, dry, yet mysteriously moist, saliva-activated meal sounds convenient and…uh, caloric. Just toss a handful of astronaut food kibble into the hamster ball and cross your fingers that your baby’s sense of smell leads him to the “food.” Think of how your baby will laugh when he discovers his “cheerios” taste like beef stew!

4. Bath Time–Meow!
This is a very important part of the plan, because nobody likes a stinky baby, even if that baby is super cute. A week before you go back to work, introduce your baby to a cat and be sure your baby notices how the cat can lick away his own filth without the help of his mom, dad, or caregiver. The baby will appreciate the confidence you are showing in his ability to take care of himself just like a BIIIIIIIG kitty-cat!

5. Security:
Now before you think I’m an all “head-in-the-clouds-hippie”/”unrealistic idealist”/”sociopath”, rest assured–I have considered the possibility that there are dangers facing a baby left alone in the house all day in a fur suit rolling around in a hamster ball. That’s why, after introducing the baby to the bathing cat, I would suggest sitting the baby in front of a television that plays Home Alone on repeat. You’ll sleep better at night, knowing that your baby has seen, first hand via the television, how to booby trap a slew of silly and sloppy burglars.

So let’s stop crying over pumped breast milk and get back to work! After all, what’s more life affirming than the rush of adrenaline you feel living life without a safety net for your family?

[cue: Dolly Parton singing "9 to 5"].

 
Mar9Every Time I Open My Mouth I Annoy Myself
Paula

We were on our way home from an especially exciting birthday party this weekend that involved multiple bouncy castles when June said “that was a really good birthday party.”  It was totally true, it was an excellent birthday party.  But there was something a little bit Paris Hilton about her tone that suggested “I’ve been to a lot of parties in these parts and I’ve seen a lot of things and yet, I’d have to give that one an A.”  June has been lucky enough to attend some great parties at the tender age of three.  Living in New York City means living in small spaces with annoying things like neighbors who might not appreciate ten screaming toddlers ruining their afternoon plans to read the New York Times Style Section while recovering from a massive hangover.  Birthday parties are therefore held at “party spaces” which are insanely fun if you’re three, and sometimes even if you’re 39.  After the Paris Hiltonesque comment I turned around and looked at June and said “When I was your age I was lucky to play musical chairs at a birthday party. What a jerk!  Seriously, shut up!  What’s next?  Did you walk ten miles to school in the rain wearing an outfit made out of dirty paper towels?  I’ve increasingly found myself making ridiculous comments such as:

At my husbands favorite sushi restaurant where my daughter actually ate soba noodles and green tea ice cream (they don’t have chicken nuggets, or I assure you that’s what she’d be eating instead):

“I didn’t even know what sushi was until I was about 27!  I had never even heard of green tea ice cream!  And she’s having it for dessert at 2 like it’s a god damn oreo!  THIS IS CRAZY!”

After my daughter showed me her triangle pose which she learned from her yoga teacher at her pre-school:

“OMG!  Peter!  Did you see this??  It’s an actual yoga pose. . . YOGA.  Like for real. . like actual yoga. . . . not some made up kind for babies!  OMG OMG OMG.  I didn’t even set foot in a yoga studio until I was 27.  Seriously. . . . and now babies do yoga.  Unbelievable.

At my friend Billy’s 30th birthday party in the West Village which featured an elaborate four hour multi-course Italian lunch for twenty where my ten month old daughter ate exactly one bite of prosciutto.

Cured meats!  Peter!  She’s eating cured meats!  Prosciutto!  Did you see that?  Did you?  And she liked it. . . she really liked it!  (I now admit it’s possible the prosciutto was swallowed completely by accident).  She is totally going to be into food (flash forward two years she hates food).  Seriously, I didn’t even taste prosciutto until I was about 27!  And she’s having it at ten months!  Martha Stewart has eaten here!

We are eating vegetable lo mein at Mr. Wonton our local Chinese.  June is given a pair of “practice children’s chopsticks” by the waitress.  She manages to eat her noodles with them and is insanely pleased with herself.  Naturally I have to open my big fat mouth.

“Peter.  Is our child actually using chopsticks?  Those are CHOPSTICKS IN HER HAND.  Do you have your phone?  TAKE A PICTURE NOW.  That is soooo New York.  Maybe we should go to dim sum sometime???  Not kidding, I could not even use chopsticks at all until I was like 27.  Seriously.  Until I was 27 I totally needed a fork.”

This child is happily using chopsticks to enjoy some veggie lo mein.  Little does she know she’ll soon want to use them to stab her mother in the eye.

As you can see, 27 was obviously a pivotal year for me.  However, it’s also clear that I need to GET OVER IT.  Otherwise my child is going to hate me – as I can barely stand myself right now.  I’m basically just excited for her – she gets to do so much!  But I don’t need to ruin it by constantly reminding her of, well, how incredibly dull her mother’s life was until she was 27?  I’ll just picture us when she’s 27. . . happily eating dim sum together with chopsticks, and maybe that thought will teach me to keep a lid on it.

And since there’s a theme of NOT shutting up here. . . hey – VOTE FOR adhocMOM over at circle of moms!  You can do it every day!  Please?  I’m asking nicely. . . .

 
Mar7Office Romance: Don’t Look Too Hard Before You Leap
Carrie

I dedicate the following song to the new love of my life:

Did you ever know that you’re my hero?
You’re everything I want to be.
I can fly higher than an eagle,
Because you are the wind beneath my wings.

WHOA–WHAT THE HELL JUST HAPPENED?

I apologize. These days, I’m feeling mushier than an over-microwaved bowl of oatmeal. Who is the apple of my eye? It is…a desk. At an office space. Not located in my home. Not anywhere near a changing table. There’s a filing cabinet and even a reception desk. There is not a television playing Nick Jr. on Demand or a DVR list tempting me with last night’s Jersey Shore episode.  It does not have a doorbell that I have to answer. There’s a restroom–with a lock on the door. You don’t even have to tell anyone when you’re going to the bathroom. You definitely don’t have to leave the door open–in fact, it’s preferred that you close it behind you! There’s a lunch space and coffee made by someone else. You are even encouraged NOT to do your dishes. My children do not know where my new desk is.

A couple of weeks ago, Tonya and I plopped down a deposit on a desk at an amazing workspace called the Brooklyn Creative League. BCL caters to freelance professionals, entrepreneurs, and other independent workers searching for a flexible, distraction-free space.

What inspired this rash move? The interruptions at home have been getting worse and worse. On the days when my babysitter comes, I find myself jumping up and down from my desk–answering the phone, getting the door, nursing the baby when he comes home for his nap, squeezing in doctor’s appointments for myself, and pediatrician appointments for the kids. It’s impossible to ignore my three year old yelling downstairs “Is momma home? Is momma home? Where is she? MOMMMMMMAAAAAAA????”, as I cower in the bedroom with my laptop.

But it’s not just their fault–I’m my own worst enemy. At home, my eyes rove around the house looking for things to fix, taking on new home improvement projects, running errands, or just plain old wasting time. If I were my boss, I probably would have fired me by now. Sometimes the abundance of choice of how to schedule my day overwhelms me and I end up accomplishing nothing at all.

I had been thinking a long time about getting an office space, but as many  ad hoc MOMs know, it’s hard to feel “legitimate” enough to warrant the expense. I kept on telling myself that I needed to wait until I had fully launched my own company and was billing more.  That’s when I got an email from the nice folks at BCL about the desk opening. After splitting the desk with Tonya, the cost would only be a little more than a monthly gym membership, plus a couple of nights out at a restaurant. I realized I couldn’t wait any longer because if I wasn’t proactive about carving out the time and space, my business wasn’t going to happen.

That’s not to say I’ve put it to good use EXACTLY yet. The first day, I was so freaked out by the quiet hum of productivity, that I couldn’t settle down to work. The second day, Tonya and I spent the majority of the time excitedly whispering and laughing about how unbelievably awesome it felt to have a space outside our homes. We took coffee breaks in the kitchen and tried to look super important. I kept on thinking that someone was going to tell me to stop loitering and leave. The death of my laptop last week also threw a wrench in the works, but I’ll be spending the day at the office today with a positive frame of mind in an environment conducive to getting stuff done.

Ad hoc MOMS always feel the push and pull between family and work. It’s a tug of war on your energy that might leave you feeling like you’re stuck in one place.  As small as an act as it was, renting the desk at BCL felt like an important moment for me: it’s reminded me that sometimes you have to make the leap before you feel absolutely ready.

Is there something you’ve been waiting to do, but talking yourself out of it because you don’t feel like it’s the right time?  The momentum of the leap itself might be just the thing to get you where you need to go: outside of your comfort zone, outside of your routine and most importantly…outside of your home!

Now who has a good Dilbert cartoon that I can email around my new office so I can make some friends, huh, huh?

 
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