The Witching Hour.

Today the following happened between 4:30 and 5:30 p.m. 

Asher woke up from his nap really cranky. He’s been beating his head on the floor during tantrums, which is AWESOME! because clearly he doesn’t hurt himself enough as it is, right? Anyway, he got mad at Maverick for taking his toy and he proceeded to beat his head on the brick fireplace hearth. He not only has a huge bruise from it, but scrapes all over his head as well. Do other kids do this?! Because it’s graying me.

Later, I was feeding the baby on the couch while the boys played. I had just given her the bottle when Maverick scooted over next to the couch on his belly, peering under the side table. “What are you doing?” I asked. He had found a toy. Right then, here comes Asher, trying to see what his big brother is doing.

“ASHER HAS A BUG!”  

This is what I heard Maverick yell at the precise moment that Asher threw a gigantic, black, dead beetle in the air at us. I screamed at the top of my lungs, scaring the shit out of Pepper, who now HAD A DEAD BEETLE STUCK TO HER BELLY.

The baby was scared to death, for obvious reasons. It probably sucks when you’re trying to eat and people are running and screaming all around you and then the person feeding you screams … and so, she got back at all of us by having The Biggest Blowout Ever. When I realized that poo was soaking through my clothes I jumped up and rushed her to her bedroom, stripping us both.

That is when my next door neighbor stopped by. Of course she did. I couldn’t answer the door because I was too busy being half-dressed and rinsing poop off my daughter while my middle son stood in the bathroom pulling off his diaper and peeing on the floor as my eldest child yelled “MOMMY! MRS. DEBBIE IS HERE!” over and over and over and over and over again from the living room.

And that, my friends, is why they call it the witching hour. In case you didn’t know. I need a drink and my husband, in that order, as soon as possible.

Fresh Air.

I love having a daughter. LOVE. 

I was apprehensive about all the frilly pink stuff after having two boys, but I am full-on embracing it. Bring on the My Little Ponies and the sparkly nail polish and oversized hair bows, because this is awesome.

I love feeling not so alone in this house full of males. Last night I had to break down a bathroom door and capture a baby gecko lizard in a cup to bring him outside where he belonged. Those are two things I would not have been entirely comfortable with doing, say, two years ago. I kill spiders now. With my bare hands.

It’s almost like I lost some of my femininity and now I’m finding it again, because there is another girl to enjoy pretty things with …

… which balances out things like this:

That is Asher’s nasty, horrible scar from when he fell in glass a few weeks ago. Yikes. A million times over, YIKES. So in the midst of being swallowed up in a sea of scar tissue, bugs, bathrooms that smell like pee, and the smell of peanut butter and dirt on unwashed hands … Pepper is a breath of fresh air. 

Everyone knows I love my boys. But thank God for my girl.

Those Polygamists Are Onto Something.

Okay … here it comes. A rant. Somewhere, right this minute, Husband is reading this and breathing a sigh of relief that it isn’t directed at him.

I am in over my head with my current life situation. This is a fact. And the way I talk about it probably makes it seem worse than it is. Maybe. No. Probably not.

But when it comes down to it, I am living the life I’ve always wanted. I have three kids, I’m home with them, and when I wished for this life before it happened, I had no idea how hard it would be. Had I known what it would actually be like, I wouldn’t have had the guts to give it a shot. People talk about exhaustion and self-sacrifice and grace and hard decisions … they tell you about those things in parenting books and articles, in blogs and conversations. You nod your head like you understand, but really, you don’t get it until you’re in it.

Even when I just had one kid, I didn’t completely get it. It took two and then three for me to look up at the sky and say “YES! I get it now! Now PLEASE make it STOP!” But it’s not going to stop, because children are relentless. That’s another word I didn’t understand fully, but now I do. 

R-e-l-e-n-t-l-e-s-s.

Raising children is so incredibly hard, OMG. I don’t even know where to start trying to put it into words. Admitting this does not mean I am not good at child rearing (because if I knew what I was doing, it wouldn’t be so hard), I’m not coping well (people who cope well don’t admit out loud that they are sick of their children), I’m not religious enough (because if I was, God would cure me of my daily struggles), or I don’t love my family enough (people who love their families enjoy every minute of every day with them forever and ever, amen). 

Admitting that motherhood is hard certainly does not mean I need to take a pill. Believe me, if I really needed a pill, I’d take one. Those suckers work. But I feel like people constantly suggest this to me as a remedy for the hardships of mothering small children. They mean well, they really do. And honestly, if I weren’t me, and I were looking in on my situation I would suggest it as well. How does she deal with that shit?! That girl needs to take a PILL. A big one.

You know why so many moms are medicated? The demise of the village. We are isolated in an increasingly-complicated world, with rising expectations placed on everyone. It’s enough to make anyone crazy. I do not need a pill. I need help. I need support. I need to live in a village, where we can throw all of the children into a safe space and take turns watching them while the other women cook dinner.

Clearly, the only answer here is to become a polygamist.

12 Weeks.

Together, we have made it 12 weeks. Every day is a huge accomplishment, and I have made it 84 days. It’s slowly getting easier.

Pepper is starting to suck on her fists and drool a lot, which … dun dun dun … means she is maybe starting to teethe. I had this thought enter my head a few days ago after a rough night with Asher, who is cutting his 2-year molars slowly and painfully. When it occurred to me, I immediately dismissed it because I am in a fragile state and literally couldn’t cope with the thought. 

After a few nights of rest, I revisited the idea and decided that if I’m really lucky, maybe the two of them actually will teethe together and I will finally have an excuse to start drinking at breakfast.

Just kidding.

Fail.

Next week, Maverick will turn 5. The very next day, Asher will turn 2. We’re having a party at our house. I have absolutely no business hosting any sort of event right now, just so we’re clear. But … that’s what is happening.

We made a guest list, I bought invitations, and I sat down to crank them out while the little kids were sleeping. I’m awesome, I thought to myself.

It wasn’t until after I put them all in the mail that I realized that absolutely nowhere on the invite does it say the word birthday. It does not say what kind of party we’re inviting them to. Not even an inkling. When I went to Walmart for diapers and grabbed the invitations, I wasn’t thinking. I pretty much haven’t been able to think clearly for a year now, which has been demonstrated over and over and OVER again in various ways … but the important thing is, there will be cake. And a water slide.

I think. 

What the hell is this!?
I’ll just use it as a coaster.


A Letter To My Future Self.

This letter is to my future self. The one who has forgotten what life was like when she was 33 years old and living in The Blur.

Dear Future Harmony,

By now I hope you’ve gotten your shit together and started doing things you’ve been meaning to do like making the family attend church every week, and getting regular pedicures and starting a weight training regimen to prevent bone loss.

When you were 33 years old and the boys were a week away from turning 5 and 2 and Pepper was going through a growth spurt and you felt yourself slipping away — you may have forgotten that you did this, because you were living in The Blur — you wrote an email to some friends about how children are supposed to add to your life, not suck it away from you, and enough was enough. You felt like you were at a turning point: either you were going to fight for your sanity and take steps toward making your life the way you wanted it, or you were going to give UP and let the chips fall where they may, elastic waistbands and all.

I hope that you didn’t give up.

This letter is to remind you of how far you have come since that time. When you were in The Blur, time stood still. But then you would snap out of a week-long fog and realize each child was bigger than they were the last time you really looked at them. You didn’t know which way was up. You didn’t think you could do it anymore. And then the next day came, and you did.

If you have reached this point and no one has thanked you … I am thanking you. You carried on when you weren’t sure if any of it was WORTH IT. You did good. 

Here is a refresher of what you did when it felt like you were getting absolutely nothing done:

1. You gave this girl a bath almost every day like her dermatologist asked you to. You didn’t do any of the other things she said to do, but that’s beside the point, because it is a bitch to bathe an infant every day when you have a kid like Asher in the house. I bet the dermatologist doesn’t have an Asher in the house. Otherwise she wouldn’t have asked you to keep charts.



2. You take care of Asher. He fights you when you change his bandage over his stitches. He throws a complete tantrum when you don’t let him play in the dishwasher. He digs his elbow into your throat when he’s trying to get away from you. By now, I hope he’s outgrown this foolishness and you have forgotten how hard it used to be. THIS KID WOULD BE A LOT ON HIS OWN. And you wrangle him, plus two others, so good job.

Here’s a picture of him tuning a toy guitar before he tried to bash a hole through the sliding glass doors with it.


3. When you didn’t know what else to do, you took pictures with your kids. Some of them were BAD. And some of them were good. Because that’s reality.


4. You tried to embrace each child’s individual qualities, and show them how to be their very best self. Mothers are not supposed to change their children. They are supposed to guide them. Here’s a picture Maverick drew during his first weeks of kindergarten. You cried when you saw it. You’re the one in orange.


Who knows what you’re facing now that the kids are older. I’m scared to even think about it, honestly. I like to believe that things have gotten easier for you, that you and Husband found time to do P90X and develop more of a social life … but even if you haven’t, I know that you’re happy.

I’m going to keep calm and carry on like all the signs tell me to. And I hope that when you talk about the early years with your children, you do it with pride, because this is no easy task.

Hugs and Tequila,
Present Harmony

Those Two.

Asher … oh Asher.

I took him to have his stitches removed today. Stitches should be easy to remove, right? Just a little snip-snip? He did great when they took staples out of his head, which literally just happened. Maybe I’m becoming desensitized due to the frequency of events and this is why I assumed today would be easy. 

I took the baby with us, thinking she would just sleep the whole time, and we would be home before lunch. I was ill-prepared for what awaited us. I had no snacks. I had no fun and interesting anything in my bag. I had nothing I needed, including my wits. 

Today I learned (because I asked) that it’s not legal for the pediatric office to sedate a child. That’s unfortunate. My child needed sedation. He struggled so hard while being held down for the stitch removal that he busted his wound wide open again, and had to be re-stitched. They had to call in their two biggest nurses to hold him down while I fanned him (they thought he was hyperventilating) and willed myself not to lose it.

When it was all over, Dr. Patterson declared “I think we all deserve a cocktail!” And we all — me, the two nurses, and Asher — heartily agreed.

Then he said he’s never had a kid re-open stitches like that, and boy, is my kid strong. I think it shook poor Dr. Patterson up a little. Welcome to my world, good doctor. Welcome to my world.

After many tears were shed by all.

Next I would like to discuss the fact that Maverick has spent the past two weeks of kindergarten breaking my heart with reports that no one will play with him at school. I told him to give it time, he will make friends. He’s such a gregarious little guy, I honestly think he scares some kids with his loud voice and … zest. But that’s who he is, and it’s just right, and we would never tell him to take it down a notch. Things just take time to settle.

So … I put on my confident mommy voice and said “IT WILL BE OKAY! DON’T WORRY!” and smiled. But seriously, I died a little inside every time he talked to me about it. His eyes would get wide and his voice would lower to a whisper: no one will play with me, Mommy.

So. Incredibly. Sad.

Then he came home with this,

Which I can’t say for sure I understand, but it appears to be a note with some numbers on it. From a girl.