Notes from Mother’s Journal, II

It was close today, you guys. We almost didn’t make it out of the house. I was thisclose to just saying, you know what? I know it’s sunny and spring and shit? But we are going to play inside. Scratch that; YOU are going to play inside and I am going to make-believe I am in a coma. Trombone is on the third day of a cold and Fresco is on the first and I at least like to have clean noses when we leave the house so it’s wipe, wipewipewipe okay let’s GO wipe wipe wipe. Happy Earth Day from my house. I think in the past calendar year we have used enough tissues to feed an entire village of people who eat tissues.

Then we have the potty, which is in the downstairs bathroom, which bathroom is the size of a closet because it is meant for one person to use at a time. Trombone likes to use the potty but he likes you to read him a story so I’m in there, sitting on the toilet lid with my leg up against the doorjamb as a wall to keep Fresco out of the bathroom. Which leg he, of course, sinks his four teeth into with a ferociousness not seen since Hannibal Lector. Fresco has his own agenda,

(full stop)

which is to climb up on the chair we use as a step stool for Trombone at the sink and then, once he’s up, he likes to smear his hands all over the sink because that’s how far he can reach right now and shout about how fun it is and then sometimes for some extra ick-factor he licks his fingers.

So there are three of us in the bathroom; one of us keeps getting up to look behind him to see if there is poop, the other one is balancing precariously on a chair over a stone floor and one of us is reciting Mr. Brown Can Moo and it’s a good thing she knows it by heart because her hands are occupied keeping everyone from near disaster, concussion and bodily fluid catastrophe.

This morning to keep him out of his brother’s poop, I ended up sticking Fresco in the buggy out in the kitchen and buckling him in.

And when I regained consciousness…

I know, it’s an Air Farce joke but it’s relevant. Truly.

Quick question to distract you: How many peanut butter and jelly sandwiches can one child eat before something bad happens? I believe Trombone is on peanut butter and jelly sandwich number 7 in a row. I am less worried than I am fascinated. How long can this go on? Stay tuned, I will let you know.

We went out and Fresco tossed his hat out of the buggy about eight times per block. I am determined not to lose this particular hat, I really like it, plus we have lost a thousand million hats in the past few months. I am drawing the line at this one, so I backtracked about a thousand million times to get it. “Hey, lady, you lost a hat,” is now officially the number one thing people yell at me on the street. A distant second place goes to, “Cool buggy!” and trailing at third, “Boy you sure are busy!”

The dude at Starbucks took my cup and said, tall? And I said, actually it’s a grande because I have learned that the baristae like it when you know how many oz are in your travel mug. And he said, well you get a tall for free and his co-worker said, because it’s EARTH DAY so I said tall, yes, tall is what I want. Then he filled the cup up to the top for me. I like that guy. I don’t fetishize Starbucks coffee at all but uptown the Mizzle there is not a lot to choose from. Some days “You burned this coffee!” is better than “You brewed this coffee last July!” you know?

We soldiered on to the Sunshine Park, this awesome little field + swings + sandbox and toddler play structure park smack dab in the middle of a residential neighbourhood. It was renovated last summer and I was sad because pre-reno, sure, it only had the swings but it had picnic tables and a bench and post-reno it had only a play structure and a sandbox and nowhere to sit if you were me. But today when we got there, there were two new benches! Perfect. I sat on a bench and didn’t get sand in my underwear and drank my coffee and didn’t even spill it – the last time I went to this park with a cup of coffee I put it down on the grass to run off and stop Fresco from leaping off the slide and when I came back my cup had tipped over and the grass was all soggy with coffee. That was a sad day. But today was not. We even remembered our buckets and shovels.

There was a pair of brothers at the park and it was amusing to me how each older sibling (Trombone and the other guy) felt free to treat each others’ younger sibling as his own. And the younger siblings, accustomed to hearing “No it’s MINE!” were undeterred by perfect stranger older brothers ordering them around and continued their merrymaking apace.

Why yes I am writing Victorian fiction now, why do you ask?

And so, the cold wind blew the cobwebs out of my brain and the mean out of my mouth and that whine out of the children and when we came home we were smiling, even as Trombone asked me why why why about everything, “Oh how curious he is,” I thought, graciously.

After all, that is the point of going out for a walk, right? In my world it is.

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One Year

Sarah’s second-born, Lilah, didn’t sleep at night for over a year. Was it 18 months? It was a long time. And Sarah and I don’t talk very often on the phone because we are poorly coordinated but I remember this conversation, saying to her, How do you DO that? How do you not sleep through the night for 18 months? Not Lilah, of course, but Sarah. How did she DO that?

Apparently, you just do. You just hope for the best every night and every night and every night and every night and then one morning it happens. Apparently. It hasn’t happened around here more than four times in the past year but I have faith. Every night I lie down, close my eyes and hope for the best.

Like anything else, you just do. You don’t have a choice. It’s like I say to Trombone, you can be as unhappy as you want about washing your hands but you have to do it. He huffs and puffs and yells about it but I think he sees that I am not hypocritical about this, that I understand what it is like to have to do something you don’t want to do. Like get up in the morning, for example. Five times out of seven I don’t want to. Seven times out of seven I do it anyway.

On our way to the hospital to have Fresco, I tore a branch of fragrant cherry blossoms from the tree outside my parents’ house. Yesterday after his birthday party I took another branch from the same tree. I was being sentimental, I thought, but the more I thought about it, I realized it was more than sentimentality. It was that the cherry trees blooming again were a tangible sign that a year had, indeed, passed.

At lunchtime today I was making Trombone a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. He said, “If I lifted that jar of peanut butter, I would drop it and peanut butter would go EVERYWHERE.” I said, “Yes, probably.” It is a 1 kg jar of peanut butter. He said, “Tell me about the time YOU dropped the jar of peanut butter.”

This is a new thing with him; he tells a story and then you have to tell the same story and then he tells it again and then you keep going until you’ve had enough.

I said, “Well, when Fresco was 4 days old, I was making you and me some breakfast, some toast and peanut butter. And he was so little that he had to eat all the time. So I was nursing him and holding him with my left arm. And I tried to open the jar of peanut butter with my right arm only the lid was on too tight. So I had to put the jar between my legs like this. And then I dropped it on the floor.”

“And did it go EVERYWHERE?”

“Yes it did.”

And then he told me the story and then I told him the story and then he told me the story and then I said, “I was so upset. And at the time I thought that was the worst day of my life.”

Because it was my first day alone with two kids. Because it was day four post-birth and that is a rough day anyway. Because I didn’t know it yet but SA would be working late that night so the 6:20 pm deadline I was working toward got pushed up and that extra 45 minutes would very nearly break me. All those things together were overwhelming enough but I was also aware that it was early days. That it was a long way to the end of the Newborn Tunnel. And that the only way out was through.

One foot in front of the other.

We got here.

Can I get a hell yeah?

***
Dear Fresco,
Thanks for being born. You truly do light up my life.
Love, yr. mother.

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Conversations

Me: I haven’t posted to my blog in a long fucking time!
Complacent Me: Yeah? And?
Me: Like, a WEEK!
CM: So you gonna go in there and be all, oh, hey everybody, here’s why I haven’t posted in a week?
Me: No! I hate it when people do that!
CM: So…
Me: I know! I need something. I need to take transit or something. It’s been too long. I’m off the horse. I don’t even know where the horse IS.
CM: Yeah. Horse.
Me: Anything?
CM: You are asking the WRONG you. Try CreativeYou.

***

Me: I see the beauty and the wonder in the world around me!
Creative Me: That damn tree is blooming now. Super.
Me: Hey. What’s with the attitude?
CM: I’m fucking TIRED man.
Me: But you’re CREATIVE ME. You have to be, like, inspired and stuff.
CM: I made you a baby. Two, actually. Two babies. You’re WELCOME.
Me: But –
CM: That’s hard work. I’m a slave to hormones. Maybe you should wean. Or stop weaning. Anyway. Have you checked with AngryYou?

***

Me: Yo. Wassup.
Angry Me: Sigh.
Me: You not angry today?
AM: Am beyond angry. Am done with pronouns. Will raise ire next year.
Me: Not even angry about how you have no energy and haven’t slept in god knows how long?
AM: Why be angry? No point. Try Poignant.

***

Me: OK. Last try. PoignantMe?
Poignant Me: Sweeeeetheart.
Me: Yeah, so –
PM: Oh, I HEARD about the whole blog thing. Yes. Terrible. So. Here. You have this beautiful baby. So beautiful. And he is almost a year old!
Me: Uh huh. Fresco.
PM: He’s darling. And he is walking and he says GAH and he says NANA for banana and he doesn’t even shout much anymore. Do you remember the shouting? You thought it would never end.
Me: Well he does still shout if you don’t get him his food fast enough…
PM: Of course. But hasn’t he taught you a lot about, well, EVERYTHING?
Me: —–
PM: Hasn’t he? Haven’t you realized that there is value in a strong personality and what doesn’t kill you, etcetera and also that you are the most content, all-embracing, otherworldly mother of all time? Haven’t you?
Me: I am not sure I have.
PM: Oh. Couldn’t you try? Could you weave it in with a charming anecdote and maybe something about a filthy person on the bus? Music! Don’t forget music! And a dear photo at the end.
Me: I’m not sure that’s the lesson. Or that I have learned a lesson. Or that there IS a lesson.
PM: Oh.
Me: I think it’s just the exhaustion talking.
PM: Yes, probably. Maybe the hormones. Because of the weaning.
Me: Yeah. Do you have anything else? Anything in a spring renewal / new year sort of thing?
PM: No, I pretty much only have the baby’s birthday thing.
Me: Right.
PM: Sorry.
Me: Yeah.

***

Me: Internet?
Internet: Yes!NO!Drama.Tweep!Tweeple!Blogospheric synergizing!Monetize!Anthropomorphize!
Me: Sigh.
Internet: Hereandhereandhereandhereandhereandhere! People die. People laugh. LOOKIT!
Me: Yeah, I know, there’s a lot –
Internet: AND!ALSO!TSHIRTS!
Me: Yeah.

***

Me: Hey Fresco?
Fresco: Gah!
Me: It’s almost your birthday, hey.
Fresco: Gah!
Me: What would you like for your birthday?
Fresco: Nana!
Me: Banana?
Fresco: NANA!
Trombone, whispering: He would like a firetruck FLASHLIGHT!
Me: Really.
Trombone: Yes!
Me: I’ll see what I can do.

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The Only Reason I Would Consider A TV In My Car

In the summer of 1999, my husband and I, at that time just friends, took off for a two-month jaunt around North America in a Dodge camper van with carpet and captain’s chairs. We camped and drove and camped and drove and ate Taco Bell bean burritos (only $0.79 USD!) and drank wine from boxes and sweated a LOT – the van had no air conditioning and it was a hot summer in the American South, go figure – and when we came home we were 20 pounds lighter, our hair unruly and bleached from the sun, our skin brown from dust and campfire smoke. There is a photo of us that we asked a passer-by to take just after we returned to Vancouver. We are posing with the van in a back alley, filthy and free and slightly glaze-eyed at being back in the city.

Two great loves were born that summer. Ours for each other and mine for traveling great, purposeless distances by car.

The van is long gone and I have since completed a few road trips just as compelling in a Toyota Tercel to Winnipeg but my longing to spend another summer cavorting with no sense of purpose other than discovery and adventure has not faded. Even as I am currently mother to a 1 and 3 year old, in a suburban townhouse, with no hope of parole, er, vacation, for a few years yet, I have been considering the possibility of packing up, driving away, aiming vaguely for the East coast. Could we do it with kids? And would we want to?

Reality answers me quickly. We could do this trip when the kids are older. Not old enough to be tweeting our every failure from the back seat but old enough to find roadside attractions interesting. Not old enough to run away at a rest stop but old enough to no longer need an afternoon nap. I have no idea what magical age this might be. I suspect it does not exist.

And while part of me longs to do a big, cross-Canada trip, because I think that by ground is a wonderful way to discover the country of your choice (how else would I know about the tallest cross in the Western Hemisphere in Groom, Texas, the gorgeous Qu’Appelle Valley in Saskatchewan, or the Taco Bell in Jasper, Alberta?) I admit that a large part of me isn’t sure she would want to.

For one: the planet. With all the other changes to consumption we have made and are making so that our world will continue to be inhabitable, how could we justify driving 5,000 kilometres just for the sake of it? Just so I could hang my elbow out a window on the highway and make a few Xs on a road atlas? Even in a fuel-efficient car like our Honda, the obvious choice to be made between driving for no good reason and staying home is, well, staying home.

And two: the kids themselves. To me, the road trip means freedom, spontaneous u-turns, taking a chance on what might be a very bad cheeseburger. Of course the kids would have their own agenda, would have to define the fun for themselves. With four people in the car, I could see hours of bickering about that cheeseburger. Miles of sulks because the u-turn spilled someone’s drink. And most importantly, the feeling, in me, of being trapped rather than free.

So it wouldn’t be for them that we would pack everything into the trunk and take off for the great unknown. It would be for us; an attempt to re-capture our youth and our hot-footing ways. And like any endeavor where you drag along your kids to fulfill your own agenda, I suspect it would fail miserably.

We will be better off waiting to explore the Maritimes until the kids have flown the coop. Maybe by then we will do it by jet pack!

But tell me – do you road trip with your kids? Out of necessity or because it’s fun?

(Originally posted to the Canada Moms Blog)

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As If I Needed More Reasons To Be Grateful for Spring

Fresco has many qualities that I think would make him an excellent bounty hunter or Navy SEAL:

– he has amazing powers of focus
– he will not be deterred from the task at hand, whether that be chasing a cat or getting Trombone’s cup of milk
– he is tenacious when he finally reaches his goal
– he is a physical powerhouse, relative to his size and age
– the windpipe pinching thing
– when all else fails, shout like a mofo and someone will help you.

Unfortunately these same qualities make him a bit difficult to take to the library.

It was the warmest day of the year. I suggested a park visit and Trombone said no, the library, so we went. Gathered up four tripsworth of books we weren’t reading anymore, dumped them in the buggy, handed each kid some crackers, huffed and puffed up the hill.

(I find it is helpful, motivation-wise, to think while I climb the hill about how many pounds I am pushing. Trombone = 35 lbs. Fresco = 23 lbs. Buggy = 30 lbs. Books = 10 lbs, at least. My purse = negligible by comparison but let’s say 4 lbs. That’s a total of em, em, em, 102 lbs on a 45 degree incline. Hey look, I’m at the top!)

(Go ahead, check my math, you know you want to. Nerds.)

This past winter we have gone to the library A. LOT. Where else can you go with two children of different ages that does not involve the Baby Gym? (Oh, don’t tell me now, I don’t want to know. Winter is OVER.) At first it was easy. Fresco would sleep in the carrier. I would read stories to Trombone and whatever other children happened by. It got harder when Fresco got mobile and stopped napping at that time of day. He would crawl away, I would pull him back by his foot, the other patrons would laugh, etc.

But now? It is impossible.

I didn’t frequent the library when Trombone was this age, so I have no basis of comparison. But even if I had done, Trombone at 11.5 months was a mellow, pre-walking baby who loved books more than stuffed animals. I hardly think I would have had a problem.

People, I am stunned by how tiring it is to go to the library with this one-year-old of mine. Who walks. And ignores his name when I say it. And wants to take everything off the shelves, everything, all at once and then wants to eat peoples’ sandwiches (sidenote: why was there a daycare having their lunch against the stacks in the children’s section? When it was 17C outside?) and then wants to eat the tiny puzzles and then wants to climb the shelves to get to the giant stuffed lion on the top shelf THANK YOU LIBRARY FOR THAT and all the while Trombone in the background, sweetly, “mummy can you read me this book?” and me having to call over my shoulder, “no I can’t but we’ll take it home and I’ll read it later when your brother has been tranquilized” and then you get ALL the funny looks from the grandmas and the nannies.

He is a dervish, passing the spinny shelves and spinning them, grabbing five Goosebumps paperbacks from the young adult section and dropping them in favour of the the Hannah Montana magazine, trying to climb some poor boy’s leg while the boy sits on a stool at the computer playing a Barney computer game. There’s me behind him, picking up everything and putting it back, grabbing him and carrying him back to the book room, handing him lovely board books to look at that he drops with a huff and then, with a flick of his devastating eyebrows, he is off again.

It’s not that he doesn’t like books. He does. But he has to be in the mood. The library is just far too exciting.

Ultimately I think it is good that Fresco can walk. I don’t have to carry him as much. Sometimes he even pushes the buggy, which is a big help. He has achieved a level of mobility that pleases him so he does not shout nearly so much anymore. But I am seeing now the advantages of the kind of toddler Trombone was. One who walked before he ran and ran before he jumped and could say the words “walk” and “run” before he even attempted either. At the very least, one who turned around when I said his name and who even CAME to me when I called him.

Saints alive! How good did I have it!

Motion carried: There will be no more library trips involving Fresco. (Unless said library trip involves beer. And then I will be that drunk lady with the bad hair at the library.)

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