Mothervention.

Today I’m going to share a new word with you. I think I made it up? I Googled it with no results, so I’m going to go ahead and take credit for it. But first I’m going to tell you why. 
Last week was exhausting. 
ONE was sick and TWO continues to try to electrocute, burn, or drown himself every time I turn my head. I had a hormonally-driven meltdown two different times and they were both directed at Husband. I needed a solo trip to T.J. Maxx by myself to dig through the racks in peace — and I mean I needed it, in a BAD way — yet our current budget doesn’t allow it.
So I bought diapers. 
I made more perfectly good food that no one ate.
By the time the weekend rolled around, I had had it. I was sick of children and whining and being cooped up and not having enough time to think. What I needed most, I decided, was a mothervention.
Mothervention (muh-thur-ven-shun): noun
1. The act or fact of a mother in need of intervening assistance.
2. Involvement of one mother in the affairs of another.
3. The need for normalcy.

Basically, I needed a night out. Badly.

Thank goodness. That’s all I have to say. Thank goodness two of my friends could meet me and rectify my situation. Somehow, sharing and discussing problems makes my own issues seem manageable. Because they are. They are. They are. I’m not alone. None of us are alone. 

The three of us sat in the restaurant for nearly five hours and talked and ate and drank and relished in the fact that we didn’t have to stop what we were trying to say to tell so-and-so to sit in their seat or put the fork down or stop banging on the table. Childlessness. It can be bliss.

Five hours of mothervention later, I returned home feeling chipper and have pretty much remained so ever since. I waited too long for that night out. I always do. 

Do as I say, not as I do. Go get your mothervention. Or intervention, whichever suits you best.

Antithesis of Sexy.

If ever you find yourself wondering, “What’s the opposite of sexy?” Or, if you are in your early twenties,“What will I look like in 10 years?” Then by golly, you’ve come to the right place.

It’s 6:52 on a Friday night and I’m wearing sheep pajamas, bitches.

Vasectomy.

Yesterday, Husband told me he wants to have a vasectomy. He’s done having children, he said. To that I say, hmmm. That’s too bad

He says I’m trying to overcompensate for the fact that I am an only child by having as many children as I possibly can. When that made me laugh, he tried another tactic: telling me I’m getting old. Low blow, Husband. And quite ineffective.

So in the spirit of vasectomy avoidance, here are some pictures I found on my phone today that for one reason or another never found their way to the public. Surely he will see these and reconsider his position.

Surely.


Bad Words.

ONE has learned the words “stupid” and “hate” and is now using them in sentences like “You’re stupid Mommy” or worse … “I hate you!” It’s horrifying and terrible and embarrassing. Mostly it’s embarrassing.

Guess who taught him those words? 

I did. 

Both of them were learned from me … because I loathe Walmart. Every time we go there I say “I hate Walmart” or “THIS IS SO STUPID!” Because I do. And everything about it is. I am totally to blame. I would love to blame Walmart. Or Husband. But unfortunately, as a parent, I should have been saying something like “I have a strong dislike for this establishment. It’s so silly.” 

So now I know how parents end up talking like idiots, using words like fiddlesticks and smartypants. Now I must undo what I have done. Before August 27, the first day of preschool. Lord help me.

Oh shishkabob.

Home For A Year.

Yesterday Husband and I were talking and I realized, we fight a lot less than we used to. We both credit the fact that I’m at home full time and not trying to juggle housework, children, and a high stress career. Just thinking about that makes me want to punch someone in the face. 

It’s working for our relationship. I am so proud of Husband and grateful to him for allowing me to grab life by the balls and quit my job, something extremely risky in this economy. I have been home for approximately one year. And finally, FINALLY, this is where we are now: my children can finally play together like normal children.

We have come so far.

If ever I get discouraged, all I have to do is browse through the year’s worth of pictures on my cell phone. I find things like this:

And this:



I am so happy these days are behind us

That’s a weird thing to say, I realize. It seems like a lot of mothers pine for the days when their children were tiny. Not this mother. I was so stressed out all. the. time.

 Life is much easier now. Now I can finally say …

(deep breath)

WE MADE IT. I let both of my children watch way too much TV. I allowed ONE to eat way too much candy. I drank too much wine. I was on and off medication. I thought more than once that I couldn’t do it. I wanted to go back to work. I wanted to give up. I cried. And cried. I wondered if my marriage would make it. I wondered if ONE was psychologically damaged. I wondered if TWO would ever stop crying.

Making it through this year is to date my greatest accomplishment. I couldn’t have done it without my man. Thank you so much, my meat-eating, messy, lint-making, scatterbrained, SWEET Husband.

Behind every sane mother is a wonderful man.

Oopsie.

Our next-door neighbor is extremely obsessive about her lawn. I keep accidentally running into her grass when I back out of the driveway. At first I thought it was accidental, like you know … part of my charm. But now I’m thinking it might be accidentally on purpose.

Embarassment.

Husband and I have been talking about modesty for awhile. I don’t want my sons to have any embarrassing memories of their mother, so I’ve been trying to be more mindful of what I wear around the house.

This can be a problem, though, when you have more than one child. They all have to come with me to the bathroom, to the dressing room, etc. I can’t exactly leave a three-year-old and a 10-month-old unsupervised. Combine this with the fact that ONE is extremely inquisitive, has an excellent memory, and notices everything. Every. Thing.

Last week, ONE asked me, yet again, how babies are made. The kid is three. I wanted to yell “STOP ASKING ME THAT DAMMIT!” but instead I gave him a vague reply about mommies and daddies that love each other have babies sometimes. He totally wasn’t satisfied with this. He said in an exasperated tone, “No, Mommy. HOW. HOW are they made.” 

I steered off that topic thank God and then he said that he wished he had been allowed to go to the hospital with me when TWO was born. He wanted to see how he came out of my tummy. And then he flat-out asked me, “HOW did TWO get out of your tummy?” So … I told him. 

Me: Out of my vagina.

ONE: Whaaaaaaat? (starts laughing hysterically)

Me: Yep.

ONE: How? That’s where you pee! That’s a tiny hole! HOW DOES THAT HAPPEN MOMMY??

Ugh. At this juncture I said we’ll talk about it when he’s older and then I said a silent prayer that he’d forget about it — and if he remembered, he’d ask his daddy.

Fast forward several days. We found ourselves at the library. I had to pee so we went to this teeny tiny bathroom located right smack in the middle of the Children’s Section. It was cramped in there with the stroller, and before I could stop him ONE exclaimed in his very loud voice, “MOMMY! Is that where Asher came out? Wow! That’s so tiny! And he’s so big! HOW DID YOU DO THAT MOMMY??” 

As the three of us made our way out of the bathroom, I did my best to look dignified while at the same time wishing for the Curious George section to swallow me up. And if you’re thinking no one heard, think again. That bathroom is like an echoing canyon and there is no fan to hush the sound.

Apparently this is the price you pay for trying to be age-appropriate honest with your children. But I can’t lie to my son, and I can’t hide things from him. That boy asks questions, and I mean a lot of them. Maybe he’ll be a loud-mouthed doctor one day.
 

On Becoming Amish.


I’ve been in a bitchy funk because we have absolutely no money and it’s really stressful. It’s no one’s fault, really. Just life. Moving is expensive, and it’s going to take us awhile to catch up. Thank goodness TWO will stop drinking formula in approximately 6 weeks, which will save us about $100 a month. Whenever  I wonder to myself, where is our money going?!?!? all I have to do is look at TWO’s little mouth. That’s where it’s going.

Sometimes I get really discouraged about it all and I all I want to do is whine and wallow in self-pity. It’s obnoxious. And childish. And then I have to remind myself that I am 32, I need to get it together, and I get to stay home with my children. I am very, very lucky to have a Husband who works so hard for us. And being obnoxious is no way to say thank you.

So thank you, Husband, for allowing me to raise our children. We have nothing but each other, and pretty soon I’m going to be sitting on my hair because it’s getting so long. We may or may not lose power before your next paycheck. All in all, we’re becoming more like the Amish every day.