You should know that out there, in the world, exists something called Cheese, Bacon, Onion Bread. And I bought it, I ate it and it was good.
Know this: All is not lost if people are making this bread for us to eat.
You should know that out there, in the world, exists something called Cheese, Bacon, Onion Bread. And I bought it, I ate it and it was good.
Know this: All is not lost if people are making this bread for us to eat.
I was at the dentist recently, having two teeth filled. He finished the first tooth, which he had drilled so deep I swear I felt my eyeballs cower in fear, and took his mask off.
“Are you all right?” he said.
I looked away from “CBC Newsworld: Politics” (mental note: next time schedule dentist’s appointment for 4 pm so I can at least watch Oprah) and nodded.
“I can tell you’re a mom,” he said, “you’re so calm.”
Calm?
Sure – when my face is frozen with anesthetic and I’m reclined in a comfy chair, watching TV. Unless the dentist and his assistant climb up on my lap and start screaming at me, one in each ear, I am sure to remain calm, relaxed even. Going to the dentist is almost as good as a spa visit these days. But with my kids, when I’m being a mom? I am not generally calm. And I am OK with that.
I used to be calm. In my life before kids – hell, in my life with just one kid, number one son being the mellow, bookish type – I was relaxed to a fault. Sure I got riled up about bad drivers and stupid politicians and people who walk too slowly on the sidewalk; I am a blogger, after all, but as a mother, as in most things, I was chill.
Then came number two son. On a good day I call him “exuberant.” The rest of the time he is a non-sleeping, shouting, early walker whose very existence has, naturally, turned our world upside down. My mellow older child hit the crest of his terrible twos just as the baby was learning how much fun it was to stay up all night and eat. Calm? Me? Just today I have yelled twice. Once in the middle of the park! Before this past year I don’t remember yelling more than twice total.
Here’s the thing, though. I sort of like not being calm. After a lifetime of bottling up my feelings and then exploding them into petty rebellion (my teens), angst-filled poetry (my ’20s), and snarky blog posts (my ’30s) it feels really good to yell, get mad, get frustrated, let it go.
I don’t remember the first time the rage overcame me. Let’s say it was 9 am, after a night of broken sleep, trying to get out the door with the toddler dragging his feet and the baby crying every time I put him down. That seems as likely a scenario as any. I lost it. I yelled and slammed things and my kids just stared at me, silent at least, waiting to see what would happen.
After I blew up, gave everyone a hug and got us all outside, I felt normal. Fine. Invigorated, even? Maybe. And I suddenly saw the upside of expressing your emotions in the moment instead of saving them for weeks or years, hiding them behind a mask of calm. No grudges. No hard feelings. Just say your piece, move on, go to the grocery store.
There are days I am frustrated with my new self, my mom-self, for being unable to find that calm, relaxed state when I want it. It is often out of reach, just on the other side of about 16 – 25 hours of straight sleep. Some days I blame the kids for this, for taking my calm away. I have to admit, though, that by relentlessly pushing and testing me, by being themselves, they have helped me become a better version of myself. I should thank them, not blame them.
Although it definitely does not always feel that way.
I will thank them someday. Maybe someday at 4 am, when they are just asleep after a night of partying, I will call them up to chat or have fifteen pizzas delivered to their apartments. As their mother I reserve the right to hold some grudges.
(Originally posted at the Canada Moms Blog.)
In November, 2006, I was the proud owner of too much hair and the proud new mother of a 4 month old baby. I was also participating in National Blog Posting Month and needed content BAD. I decided to get a haircut and I asked My (10) Loyal Readers to chime in with opinions about which haircuttery establishment I should grace with my sweaty, hairy presence.
A week later I picked one of the three haircuttery establishments and got my hair cut. Lots of it.
The end.
But wait, not the end!
A month later, someone found the haircut post and thoughtfully added her opinion. OK, thanks. Then, a few months later, someone else dropped in to suggest another haircuttery establishment. Uh, thanks? A few months later, someone else came by with a dissenting opinion. Now it is February, 2009, and one comment in favour of salon X last week was followed by another comment in favour of salon Y and then things started to get mean and I realized that there is a full-on STYLIST WAR in the Mizzle and they are fighting their battles on my blog!
The other day I got an email from someone claiming to be an owner of one of the salons. This person said that clients were coming in and talking about my blog and that all these terrible things people were saying were very bad for business! So I should come in and get my hair done for a discount!
Yeah, not gonna happen.
I went and closed the comments for that post, (feeling all the while like the lamest blogger ever [flame wars over HAIRCUTTERY]) because I am not interested in being a battleground for stylist warfare and also because a lot of the IP addresses were the same (in fact some of the email addresses were too. Top tip: if you’re going to post several comments under different names to make it look like you are one of many who have the same opinion, at least put different email addresses in the email field). I understand and respect that the business of haircuttery is very competitive in the Mizzle and that this is all deadly serious to the people involved but from my point of view
well
…it’s kind of funny. So I had to share. And to let you all know that no matter how small and invisible you might think you are, blogging away in your little drinking closet, there are probably at least three people in the city talking about you right now.* So be careful.
* I just totally made that statistic up. But I bet it’s true.
Fresco is walking.
It is truly terrifying and wonderful to behold, a 10 month old baby walking around like a little person. I don’t know who he thinks he’s fooling; he is still a baby to me, even if he is letting go of walls and careening around the house like a tourist on his 19th shot of tequila.
Good lord. Just thinking about the head-on collisions likely to occur today (and for the next, oh, 10 years?) makes me want to retire to my drinking closet.
Shut up. You do too have a drinking closet.
I bought some ugly shoes yesterday.
No, they are not “the real me.” I did not buy them because I wanted to get in touch with my non-vain, shoe-hating side. I bought them because they fit, they were on sale and because they are my ticket to freedom and happiness.
I have written before about my relationship with running. (Running for leisure, not to escape. No, really.)
Recap: The month before I became pregnant with Trombone, I bought new running shoes. Lovely, expensive, good quality running shoes. I was living downtown and I decided I should get back to running. All that smooth pavement, seawalls, etc.
They don’t fit anymore. They were size 10s and I am now a full-on size 11. I shrugged after I tried them on – lots of my shoes don’t fit anymore – and put them in the bag of Things I Might Sell Someday If I Get Around To It.
Then the sunshine and the warm temperatures started. Out for walks I am seeing people jogging, having pleasant times of it. I am yearning like Sarah McLachlan. But then I think: sure, and when am I going to work this in? An hour three times a week? At 7, when Fresco is in bed (and 2 hours before he wakes up again, usually) and Trombone and SA are upstairs getting prepped for bed, I have it in me to do three of the following things:
– read the Internet
– eat
– drink wine
– watch TV
– blog
– pee
– go to bed.
Only three. I rarely try to do four of those things, I know I would injure myself. I don’t see where exercise fits in there.
I mean, I would like to make it fit. I just don’t have high hopes. “Maybe in a few weeks,” I have been saying to myself, “maybe in the summer, when it is light outside until 9. Maybe when the baby sleeps all night or sleeps in till 7 am. And anyway, I don’t have any running shoes.” Yeah. So there. Because I totes HATE shoe shopping.
Yesterday I had an hour off in the afternoon. SA sent me out of the house and I went grocery shopping and then I was near a Running Room. I convinced myself not to go into the Running Room and look at shoes. Then I drove across the highway intending to go in to Winners and there was a store called The Shoe Company. I went in there instead and bought myself a pair of running shoes.
“Now what the hell are you going to do with these?” I scolded myself all the way home. The shoes were on clearance; size 11 shoes with pink and silver trim often are. They are pretty much the ugliest shoes I have ever owned, including the Keds with multicolour stripes I had when I was in grade 8 that someone said looked like they had been vomited upon. Of course they are not for a fashion show (see how I slipped that in? It’s like I am the mom of a teenager already!); they are very comfortable and supportive and I remember enough about what kind of shoe I need for running that I know they will be great for the kind of running I do.
I’m an overpronator, in case you are curious.
I came home. Trombone tried the shoes on and was delighted.
“I don’t know when I’ll use them,” I said to SA, “maybe later in the spring. Who knows. But I’m pretty sure my feet won’t get any bigger.”
“Mmm hmm,” he said, “shoes shoes shoes beer.”
I put them on the shelf. Looked longingly at them while I cooked dinner. “Oh impossible dream, I will continue to dream thee,” I thought poetically, stirring my cheese sauce.
A couple of hours later, nursing the baby, I remembered something. Something IMPORTANT and DECISION-AFFIRMING, something worthy of ALL CAPS. Earlier in the day, SA had run into the man who lives next door to us. The people next door have sold their house and the people who are moving in? Have a teenage daughter who babysits.
Oh hell yes. Just call me the Pink & Silver Bullet.