I Am A Mother of Three.

I am 5 days postpartum and have been trying to write this post ever since I got home: Pepper’s birth story. Currently I have one kid strapped to my chest, one kid plugged into the TV, and one kid corralled in a Pack N’ Play. Pretty much, if this post is going to happen, I am just going to have to make it happen.

We arrived at Woman’s Hospital at 5:00 a.m. on June 7, 2013 for my scheduled induction. I was a nervous wreck, but the hospital was quiet — peaceful, even — and that became the theme of the day. Tranquility. The birth of my third child was the most tranquil birth experience I could have hoped for.

My “birth experience” is kind of a blur, probably because I was so deep in my safe place. Like, deep. When I find myself in situations like childbirth, I check out. I couldn’t read, I couldn’t watch TV, I couldn’t hold a normal conversation. All I could do was sit and wait for the inevitable to happen and try not to freak the freak out. When I was in labor with Maverick in 2008, my nurse called me “stoic,” but actually, I’m just a check-outer. So on Friday, I literally spaced out for 7 hours and tried not to throw up.

The whole experience was just weird, but if you want details, I’ll give them to you: I was 3 centimeters dilated when we arrived that morning. By 6:30, I was hooked up to antibiotics for Group B Strep and the pitocin drip was on. By 9:30 I was ready for the epidural, because OMG … pitocin contractions are no joke. NO. JOKE.

By 10:30, the full round of antibiotics was complete and Dr. Boudreaux said it was fine to have the baby now, so they kicked the pitocin up again. At 1:00 I started to feel pressure, like a baby was literally about to fall out of my vagina and into the hospital bed, and at 1:35 p.m. after three pushes, my daughter was born.

May I introduce to you … Penelope Rose Hobbs. Our 7 pound, 6 ounce miracle.

Getting her first bath.

Her arrival into the world was peaceful, and she is just the sweetest baby. Penelope means “weaver of dreams,” and it fits her perfectly. She is so alert and calm, the nurses kept commenting on it. I hope she keeps it up, because I’m liking her disposition a lot.

Really looking at each other for the first time.
Mama and baby.
Daddy is over the MOON.

I spent my time at the hospital RESTING. I think I got more rest during my stay there than I have in months. My recovery has been a breeze — I only had to take one Percocet after she was born, and other than that, just Motrin and Tylenol. I kept thinking to myself, “this has been so easy.” Then we came home and the boys have been awesome. I feel like I’m waiting for the other shoe to drop, for real life to kick in, for my uterus to fall out … SOMETHING.

But so far, life has blessed us beyond what I can put into words. Right now, I have everything.
 

Back to the older brothers. People keep asking how they are adjusting, and so far, it’s kind of scary how well they’ve done. Asher points at her and says “Pepper!” and tries to bring me things when she is crying. Maverick is my big helper — he has deemed himself Protector of Pepper and is taking that role very seriously. 

I am so proud of my boys, and so proud of my daughter, and even though I know the next few months are going to be tough …

It’s worth it.

She has dimples!
First trip to the pediatrician was SUCH a snooze fest.
Beautiful gift from my mother-in-law on the day of Pepper’s birth.


First World Embarrassment.

My due date is a month from today. 

I woke up this morning and upon realizing the date, my heart started racing and I jumped out of bed and started doing things. As I have mentioned, if I don’t finish my to-do list before Pepper arrives, the Earth is going to open up and swallow us all. ALL OF US WILL GO INTO A BLACK HOLE. Why doesn’t anyone but me realize this?!?! That is the urgency that I feel when I think about things like organizing the laundry room cabinets.

Yesterday’s project was cleaning up the carseat, which has so far carried two of our children safely. I took it all apart and wiped it down, washed the covers, put it all back together and then put a new cover on top of the old one and some fluffy strap covers and — WHEW! — I am one step farther from being swallowed up whole. 

Ready to go!

People, nesting is a real force beyond my control. Want to know what else is? First World Problems combined with pregnancy brain, which according to my calculations equals First World Embarrassment.

This morning I decided to go to Starbucks before dropping the kids off at preschool. This is Asher’s last day of school (tomorrow is Maverick’s last day), and that means these next sweet hours of me alone in my house with the Avett Brothers playing on Pandora will be my last sweet hours alone for a very, VERY long time. Nothing could make me enjoy it more than a big cup of overpriced coffee. We may have a tight budget, but OH — I make room for overpriced coffee. 

So I put a Yo Gabba Gabba DVD in the player and off we went. I used to judge parents who allowed their children to watch too much TV and I especially judged the ones who had a TV in their car. I thought, “Can those people really not handle a 20 minute drive without TV?Well, the answer is no. No, we cannot. Because those 20 minutes of silent driving without having to answer questions like, “Mommy, do hogs eat bugs?” is just so, so SWEET. And if I am slightly damaging my children’s brains, it’s counterbalanced by the fact that my sanity is slightly improved during that drive.

I mean … look at this.

Watching Yo Gabba Gabba!

Anyway, I pulled up to the drive-thru window and handed the lady my money and this is when the First World Embarrassment occurred. She turned away to get my drink and I really don’t know what happened except that I literally am not thinking straight … I started singing (loudly) along with the Yo Gabba Gabba DVD, right there at the window, for all of Starbucks to enjoy.

“Don’t! Don’t! Don’t bite your friends!”
“Don’t! Don’t! Don’t bite your friends!”
Bite, bite, bite! No, no, no!”
“Chomp chomp chomp! Yes, yes, yes!”

Around the last stanza I realized what I was doing and immediately stopped, but the damage had already been done. So I overcompensated for my First World Embarrassment by shutting the DVD player off and making my children listen to Top 40 music instead, and therefore we returned to Maverick asking a stream of questions like “Mommy, the lady on the song said she doesn’t care. Why doesn’t she care?”

“Well … this is a band called Icona Pop. And she is just being silly, she didn’t really crash anyone’s car or throw their stuff down the stairs …” 

And, that’s a lie. 

Damnit. 

  

Mopping The Floor.

I haven’t written much this week because I have been gripped with fear over Penelope’s impending arrival. Like I’ll think to myself, “I have anxiety. I should blog.” And then I sit down at the computer and all I can think is “OH SHIT. OH SHIT. OH SHIT.” 

My current train of thought does not make for interesting reading material, I’m afraid.

My due date is 6 weeks from today and quite frankly, I’m worried about my capabilities. Can I handle a newborn along with everything else that goes on around here? Husband says yes. He is sometimes right, so … here’s hoping.

Baby’s room is still in progress.

Everyone but me is so excited about the baby coming. And don’t get me wrong — I love her already. My daughter. But thinking about her being out here in the world with the rest of us makes me feel panicky. What if Asher freaks out and hates her? What if Maverick hugs her too tight? What if I can’t keep it together and someone escapes down the driveway?

These are all very real possibilities and I just have to keep calm and trust that I can do it. But honestly, and this is real — not what I am “supposed” to be saying, but the honest-to-goodness truth — sometimes I go into her room and open the drawers to look at her tiny ridiculously cute clothes and I get so overwhelmed that I have to shut the drawer and leave. Immediately. I don’t know if it’s because she is our third child and I am freaking out about that, or if it’s because I feel so blessed, or so excited to be having a girl, or because I’m terrified. It’s probably all of those things, and it’s all too much.

In the meantime, Maverick continues to monitor my milk supply by mashing my boobs when I’m least expecting it and asking, “Do you have milk in your boobies yet, Mommy?” We have tried over and over again to explain to him that he can’t just grab or mash people without asking first, but he (so far) is undeterred, because he fancies himself to be a “body expert” and I swear to you he acts with the authority of someone who has already been through medical school.

Last night at dinner he announced, “Pepper is going to be here soon, Asher. She’s coming out of Mommy’s pagina. Or her privates. That’s how babies are born.” I cut him off and said let’s talk about something else, mostly because I don’t want to think about it, and Asher is one and has no idea what a “pagina” is and I would like to keep it that way for just a little while longer. 

Then this morning, I went to an event at his school called “Muffins With Mom” and he gave me this:


While I may see myself as a tired, yelling, frustrated, enormously pregnant person … he sees me as a very young, very tall lady who likes to cook stuff that is good for you, mop, and buy apples. I need to give myself more credit. That lady sounds a lot like our dear friend Cinderella. She was not fat or angry. She was beautiful. Birds flew into her room and dressed her because she was perfect and pleasant and continuously joyous.

(source)

I guess as long as my kid reports that my favorite household chore is to “mop the floor” and not to “drink clear liquid over and over from a tiny glass” or, “What? My mommy doesn’t do household chores” …

Then I am doing a good job.

Flowers and Unicorns. Not Really.

This is my attempt at a “pretty picture” blog post to show that we’re not all a bunch of jerks who never leave our house. I kind of giggle at some of the blogs I come across where it’s all flowers and unicorns and no admittance of insanity. You aren’t deceiving me with your perfectly-smocked children and fancy afternoon snacks. Although I am slightly jealous … I’m not fooled. 

I know that unicorny approach works for some people. Those are probably the same ones who think I hate my children because I have no problem admitting that caring for them drives me to drink. 

But look! Here’s proof that sometimes we do normal family activities like attend school programs together and everyone is charming, well-behaved, and dressed in Ralph Lauren. Yesterday we attended *Maverick’s preschool Spring Program. In addition to showing up on time looking put together with a Ralph-Laurened toddler in tow, I was also proud of myself for remembering to bring an actual camera instead of relying on my iPhone for once.

Asher patiently waiting for the program to start.

That boy … those dimples … that chipped tooth.

Maverick was dressed as a bull (see below, far right) and he sang louder than anyone else. Also — and I try to be objective about my children’s talents instead of blindly thinking they are The Most Gifted Children Ever — his use of exaggerated hand gestures and animated facial movements really made me think he has a future in entertainment. And then I said a silent prayer that it will be the kind of entertainment I don’t have to lie about to the rest of the family.

The Husband and The Bull.
Trying to wrangle The Bull for a picture …
Family picture, attempt #1. Kids won’t look at the camera.
Family picture attempt #2, still a fail, but we gave up at this point.

 So there‘s the oh, how nice! part of this story. But you know something else is coming, or I wouldn’t have bothered to sit down and tell it to you.

At the end of the program, all of the children gathered to sing two songs for the grand finale. That’s when this woman …

… STOOD HER ASS UP and remained standing with her camcorder, right there at her seat, while the rest of us tried to see through her. I was livid. Of course there were parents standing to take pictures, but they were off to the sides or in the back where they weren’t blocking someone’s view. I literally could not focus on anything other than my blood boiling. 

Husband seemed nervous when I stated loudly that I can’t see, because THAT LADY IS IN MY WAY, and then I said in a yellisper (yell + whisper, I just made that up) that “SOMEONE NEEDS TO TELL HER TO SIT DOWN” and he got a look on his face that told me this was not the time for me to unleash my hormonal rage on a total stranger, in a church, at my child’s preschool program.

And so, I walked to the back and watched from there, with the other respectful parents. I guess I find this kind of behavior shocking because I am just now entering the world of children’s programs and I naively thought adults should know how to act right. It just reminded me that we’re new to this stage of parenthood, and now I wish I had tapped that lady and asked her to please sit down or maybe just put my angry hands on her rude shoulders and pushed her back down into her seat.

I know there is a whole land of rudeness awaiting us, especially if we should ever put our kids in sports. But let me be clear — I have no problem taking a picture of people making jerks of themselves and posting them on the internet. I do it to myself all the time.

***

*I used to refer to my kids as “ONE” (Maverick, the 4-year-old) and “TWO” (Asher, the 1-year-old), but with a “THREE” coming in about 6 weeks I just can’t keep up this charade. It will be hard enough to call them by their right names in real life. Trying to tell a story with ONE, TWO and THREE is simply too much for me, and probably for you too.
 

HOUSEWIFE.

This morning, Husband and I were looking over some of our tax paperwork from H&R Block and I zeroed in on the space where our occupations were listed. Right there in big, capital letters it stated “SALES” under Husband’s name. 

And under mine? “HOUSEWIFE.”

This may seem odd, but it hits me at the strangest times that I don’t have an income and that I am, indeed, a HOUSEWIFE. In big ol’ black capital letters. This is what I wanted. And yet sometimes I feel a loss, like I used to be out there doing things. Important things. Earning money, making decisions, mattering. Sometimes the title of HOUSEWIFE makes me absolutely cringe, and I think to myself, “I’m not a housewife! I’m a mom. And a wife. Who happens to run the household … DAMNIT.”

I know deep down that I am doing the most important job I could be doing, and mattering more right now as I wipe snot from my son’s nose with his dirty sock than I ever could in my old office, but to the rest of the world I’m just a HOUSEWIFE. To his credit, Husband said he argued with the man and said to list me as a DOMESTIC ENGINEER, probably because the title weirds him out as well, but HOUSEWIFE it remained.

But let me tell you something, world. Last night I was minding my own business reading a book on the couch when Maverick said to me, “What would happen if I lost one of these balls?” And I looked over, and he had his TESTICLES IN HIS HANDS. 

Now, the book I happened to be reading was the one I told you about a few weeks ago on raising boys. I had just read the chapter about sexuality and how it’s much better to provide your son with matter-of-fact information when he asks for it, rather than hoping he can figure it out on his own. Right on cue, this happened. So I put my book down, and talked to my 4-year-old son about his testicles. 

Me: What do you mean, “lose” one?

ONE: You know, like if it went up inside me somewhere? What if I lost one?! What would happen then?

Me: You can’t “lose” them, they’re safe there in that bag. Not to worry.

ONE: So they’ll stay in this bag forever? Why do I have them? What do they do?

Me:  Umm … well, they’re a very important part of you. You need to take care of them … put them away now, okay? That’s private.

ONE: But what do they DO?

Me: When you grow up, and you’re an adult, they make the ingredients for a baby. 

ONE: Oh!

Me: (silent relief)
 
And that was the end of that. For now. 

So while on paper I may be labeled a HOUSEWIFE, I am actually much more than that. I don’t know what to label myself exactly, but I can assure you I don’t get paid enough.

ONE: Hey mommy, can I see your uvula?

Me: My WHAT?

ONE: Your uvula. The little punching bag in the back of your throat.

Me: OH   

Mocktails.

So … here is where I realize that moms really are kind of boring, because the things that excite us are not really that exciting at all. But it’s kind of like if you took a person and put them in a tent with no running water or electricity and all they had to eat were crackers, and then you went back to visit and took them to the corner store in your motor vehicle. They would be overjoyed about going somewhere. It doesn’t matter that it’s no place fancy. Their perceptions have changed.

That’s kind of what mothering small children is like.

Today all I can talk about to anyone who will listen is how we finally packed up the Pack N’ Play because TWO slept in his big bed last night. No more of that! No more pink fuzzy bag! This boy got it. Can I get an AMEN!?
 

Napping in his real bed.

Unless you have lived through the trying experience of transitioning a 19-month-old out of a crib and into a twin-sized bed, while at the same time transitioning your 4-year-old into the idea of sharing his room with his brother, all whilst pregnant … you may not understand my excitement. And that’s okay. I wouldn’t have understood it either. I probably would have thought to myself, That girl needs to get a life.” All the judgy judgerton thoughts I’ve had over the years have now come back to haunt me, manifesting themselves in the small people who are taking over my house.

There are all these major milestones throughout my mothering journey that seem so overwhelming if I allow myself to think ahead. I am absolutely wigging out over having a third child. WIGGING. OUT. If I allow myself to actually think too much about it, I start feeling like I can’t breathe and I just want to go hide in a very large, very dark, very squishy corner full of snacks and never come out.

But as with every other Big Thing looming on the horizon, the time comes, and we all deal with it just fine. Which makes me think … maybe we’re doing a decent job and our children really are well-adjusted. Thankfully, little things happen periodically that remind me that this is a time of excitement, and not a time of OH SHIT. I am grateful to be reminded.

We got this in the mail today! The most fabulous bow holder I have ever seen! I cannot wait to hang it in my daughter’s room.

A fun $5 dress from Target, size 12M, just because.

This is ONE and the girl he’s in love with.

The picture directly above was taken last week during the preschool’s field trip to the zoo. I was definitely not prepared for anything that took place during those 4 hours. I’ll spare you the agony of the details, but suffice it to say that my son wanted nothing to do with his mommy. It was very much like chaperoning a date. He and “K” held hands the whole time while they ran ahead of us, and it was ridiculous and adorable and I really didn’t know what to make of it.  

K’s mom was there too, and I was relieved to discover she was totally cool and normal and has three children herself, so she didn’t seem to judge me when I completely lost it in the zoo playground when both of my kids had simultaneous meltdowns and we left without saying bye to any freaking one

My meltdowns are becoming more frequent and my main goal at this juncture is to just try to keep them at a manageable level. I need a kiddie pool and some kind of fruity juice, and from now on I plan to throw the kids in the water every afternoon while I sit as quietly as possible, sipping my mocktail. 

Boring moms, in addition to getting excited about their children’s sleep habits, also drink mocktails. This is simply where I am. I’m embracing it.

 
 

Bite Marks & Widening Girths.

Today ONE got a yellow slip at school, which means he had a warning. Green slips mean he had a good day and red slips mean he was sent to the office. When he gets green slips all week, we go for ice cream on Friday afternoons. And I have to say, I probably enjoy that more than the kids do. 

When I arrived to pick him up today, he looked downcast and said in a low, whispery voice, “Mommy, I got a yellow today.” We gathered his things and I guided him down a crowded hallway. 

” … Mommy? Are you mad at me?”

“No! I’m a little disappointed, but I’m not MAD at you! Now tell me about your day.”

One of the teachers was listening to our conversation and whispered to me as we passed, “Now THAT’S a good mom.”   

I often talk about everything I do wrong here. I relay my failures and my messes and my children’s messes and the hormonal wreckage I leave behind me at every turn. In sum, I don’t give myself enough credit. Because I am a good mom, and a good wife, and a good person. My children are a lot to handle, but I can take them anywhere because they know how to act in public. They both say “excuse me” and “thank you,” and “yes ma’am,” and “please.Even my little 19-month-old.  

And while I am cutting myself some slack, I think it’s fine that I have gained 40 pounds in 30.5 weeks of pregnancy, because my job right now is to survive … and sometimes survival is just ugly.

So back to the yellow slip. This was the explanation written on the back:

I find this comical for several different reasons. I mean, have they met my son?! Of course he was trying to be the teacher. He probably thinks he could do a much better job of it. He tries to be the parent at home all the time, and the driver of our car, and the police, and the family doctor, and the freaking President of the United States. That’s how he rolls. Clearly, he needs to learn that he’s not in charge. He’s four. This is a work in progress, and I’ll do what I can, but I can’t guarantee he will ever grow out of the belief that Maverick Knows Best.

ANYWAY … when I asked him about it later, he said that he told Andrew “You can do it yourself!” when Andrew asked the teacher for help with his finger puppet craft. And then Andrew proceeded to bite ONE on the stomach.

Preschool sounds super-dramatic to me, and I’m kind of glad I don’t have to go there anymore. I have grown up troubles, but no one bit me on the stomach today. In fact, I treated myself to an iced coffee and some chocolate cinnamon bread from Starbucks, and the person in line ahead of me paid for it. And so we soldier on bite marks and widening girths and all.

With Love.

Recently one of my friends told me that ALL moms lose it on a regular basis. They just don’t talk about it. 

This kind of pisses me off. What’s so wrong with admitting that motherhood is hard? And I don’t mean Algebra-hard. I had a really hard time with math in school. I was good at the other subjects, but I was at a remedial level in math. In fact, my issues with math almost kept me from graduating college … I could not for the life of me pass a math class, my brain just cannot compute numbers. I still use my fingers to count. At 33 years old.  

So motherhood isn’t hard like mathematics, it’s hard like GOOD GOD I might die.  

It makes me dig deep. There are times when it almost seems insurmountable, like I am so exhausted and over it, and yet there are little kids at my feet who are screaming and snotty and need something. They need their mother, or some adult, but I am the only adult here. Sometimes I feel sorry for them, that they have no other option — just the very pregnant and very hormonal Mommy. And so by the grace of God I find strength when I feel I have none, and patience when I’m out of it, and my love for them carries me through. After they have been asleep for an hour, I think they’re cute again — and after I get a full night’s rest, I am ready to start another day.

This week I had a freak out which involved me thinking I don’t want to be a stay-at-home mom anymore because it’s TOO HARD. If you’re reading this and think, “It can’t be any harder than working full-time and rushing to pick up the kids/cook dinner/take baths, etc,” then I’m here to tell you — I’ve experienced both sides and they are both extremely challenging. Neither side has it easier than the other. Seriously. Being a mom is hard.

I wish more people would talk freely about these things, because I can’t be the only one who requires a glass of wine to get through the hours of 4-7 p.m. I’m pregnant now, so obviously I have nothing to take the edge off except some lemon-raspberry flavored Natural Calm. But don’t worry, I make do with what I have access to.

So back to my fleeting desire to return to the work force: I decided that despite the fact that I feel absolutely batshit CRAZY, I am doing what is best for my family. No one else could do as good of a job of caring for my kids, even when I’m doing a really crappy job, because I do a crappy job with love.
 
Also, this boy …


 … loves to drink water from the toilet.

Changes.

ONE and TWO are officially sharing a room. It’s bittersweet and very cute. My “baby” is no longer a baby … no more changing table, no more crib. It’s full-on, big boy mode now. 

Here is an iPhone camera journey of the past few days:

Right after I took this picture of ONE next to the huge dresser, he pulled all of the drawers out and it tipped forward to fall on him before I pulled a ninja move and pushed it back upright with my body weight. 

That was stressful.

That’s an understatement.

ONE’s bed is on the left, TWO’s is on the right.

Unsure what to do with the diapers for TWO, I just arranged them nicely and called it a day.

Most of their toys are stored in their closet. I donated a lot of the junky ones … SHHHHHH.

For now, TWO is still sleeping in the Pack N’ Play. Last night he got out of the “pink bag” he’s been zippered into lately and refused to put it back on. He seems interested in his big bed, but I’m not sure he is ready to sleep in it without freaking out. We‘ll see

In the meantime, I have shut the door to Pepper’s room and I never want to look at it again. 

SO OVERWHELMING.

I Need An Assistant.

 Here are some of the people who watched me incorrectly eat a tamale.

I need someone to follow me around and assist me with LIFE, because I seem to be incapable of functioning at full capacity.

Like just now, when I opened our storage closet outside to get a beach ball out and somehow accidentally turned on the air compressor and freaked out and called Husband repeatedly (no answer … GOOD THING I’M NOT IN LABOR) before realizing the mayhem would stop if I just unplugged it from the wall.

Also: the tamale. Before Saturday, I’d never eaten a real tamale before. I don’t know how that’s possible, but it is what it is. I didn’t realize you have to unwrap it from the corn husk before you eat it … I mean … they look just like burritos. So I was eating a lovely lunch this weekend with my fellow alumni and their families when I took a great big bite out of my tamale and discovered too late that the corn husk is not … biteable. And once you bite in, there is no ladylike way to deal with the situation. 

Also: the slide. Last week, I tried to be adventurous and take the boys to a park by myself. It was going well until TWO followed his big brother to the very top of the play set, a good 12 feet up in the air, and was standing on the top of a platform looking over the edge like he was thinking about jumping. Bigger kids were running all over the place and I just knew one of them would knock him down and he was going to break something.

I didn’t think any of this through before I climbed up to where he was, squeeeeeeeeeeezed through the opening with my huge belly, and picked him up. The only way down was via slide. So down all three of us went. A little girl was standing at the bottom and I yelled at her MOVE!!! We can’t stop!” before we landed in a pile. I’m sure it was quite a spectacle, there were people everywhere but I was so stressed out from the ordeal that I was oblivious to the stares.

Never. Again.

In the past few weeks I have: screwed up our bank account, mismanaged multiple situations, called my children by the wrong names, and scheduled the delivery of the boy’s new bedroom furniture for tomorrow … not thinking about the fact that we still haven’t gotten the OLD furniture out yet. A queen-sized bed and huge armoire aren’t going to move themselves. I don’t know what I was thinking, but we have no choice but to press on. 

Tonight will be the first night that the boys will share a room — this was unplanned. We still don’t have mattresses for the twin beds that are arriving tomorrow. Until we can procure some, ONE will sleep in the toddler bed that his little brother rejected, and TWO will remain in his Pack N’ Play. Husband will have to disassemble ONE’s old bedroom furniture when he gets home from work, and I have no idea how he will get it out of the house. Good luck to him. 

I’m fairly certain from this point on, with the boys sharing a room, no one will be getting enough sleep. I normally do not operate in this helter-skelter kind of way. This is not who I am! Luckily, this weekend my friend Melody brought me something called Natural Calm. You mix it with water. It’s safe for pregnancy and I hope it will help me cope with life, because what I really need is an assistant and some Prozac.

Please make me calm.