The More Things Change

Two really good days in a row; that’s more than I’ve had in months. I should be grateful. I am, so grateful, but I am also greedy. I want more. I would like weeks. I would like months. Oh! how I wanted more than two days of laughter, long naps, clean noses, but two days was all I got. By Thursday it was clear I’d been had.

(Of course most days are just fine, normal days. Really good ones are hard to come by. Really bad ones are far more common.)

As I said to Saint Aardvark Thursday night, I want it to STOP SUCKING, make it STOP SUCKING, it just keeps on SUCKING. Maybe I was a little melodramatic. But when your baby finally, at 10 months, sleeps through the night for the first time, you get your hopes up. You don’t want to, but you do. You know you shouldn’t, but you do. The next night he wakes up four times and so you are not just really tired tired tired – did I say tired? – but sorely, bitterly disappointed. And then when your toddler, whose nose, after weeks of a bad cold, was finally not in need of blowing for TWO WHOLE DAYS wakes up the same day with a brand new cold for fuck’s sake,you are not just tired and disappointed but outright angry. Trouble is, there’s no one to be angry with.

SA suggested Gordon Campbell or Stephen Joseph Harper but I would rather be angry with someone who would show emotion when I punched him.

We had one bad day to make up for the good and then one normal day to offset the bad and now we’re back on track with our old routine; thrice nightly wakings, teething, coughing and snot. Oh yes and the 45 minute naps have shortened to 30 minutes. Fine, fine, fine. We were so ambitious at the beginning of the week, we made plans for the weekend. Fools, we were! Slayed by our own ambition. Late breaking Friday, the plans canceled.

I have other posts I would like to write but right now I am going to drink some wine called Winds of Change from South Africa (and try to get the stupid Scorpions song out of my head). I leave you with photos to prove that all is not lost and I am just being petulant and overwrought.

First we have Fresco singing along with the radio. Seriously. He is not crying. This is his rawkface.

Then, of course, Trombone. Could his eyes get any more blue? Ridiculous.

This is half of me. The good half.

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Independence Day

When you are lost in a string of terrible, dark days, it seems the light will never shine again. 4 am will last forever. This endless day turned to week with its screaming and shrieking and the tugging at both of your pant legs at once; this is the day, the week that will be repeated until you are inching toward your grave, just trying to get some rest, those kids still tugging, pulling you back.

Then the light days come. Everything aligns; the sleeping, the sunshine, the good health and excellent humour and you see that, of course, silly woman, darkness can not last forever. So you write it down in case you forget. It is likely you will forget.

This morning, after the baby’s nap, we headed to Queen’s Park, about 3 blocks away. Trombone walked, something he doesn’t do very often with me because it often suits both of us that he ride. Usually when I have the kids in the buggy it is because I want to go somewhere. As in, I want to actually GET somewhere. Toddlers, they meander. But today meandering was in our favour as we had no other plans, plus walking wears him out which equals longer nap, so he walked.

Aside: I do overschedule the children. Not in a “ballet class at 2, playgroup at 3” sort of way but in a “we are going to Safeway now to buy ginger because I need to get out of the house” sort of way. I schedule for me, not for them although I think they do benefit from a routine. And I schedule for me because otherwise, the days just float around, refusing to settle, like clouds of smoke above my head. I need something tangible taking me from 6:30 am to 6:15 pm or odds are good I will despair. Will the day ever end? Who knows!

Back when I was first at home every day with two kids, it was summertime. We’d get out of the house by nine, wander around the neighbourhood, spend 2 hours at the water park, whatever took our fancy. It wasn’t easy by any means; I still had an infant strapped to me and a toddler who wasn’t able to put on his own shoes or climb into the swing by himself. But it was easy because we just put on our pants and went. Days went by, seemingly at the speed of light. There was no clock watching.

Well, hardly any.

Then came Fall. Rain does not deter me but it started to deter Trombone. Suddenly, Why is the slide wet? I don’t WANT to go on the swing. No, your toweling job is NOT adequate. We began to spend a lot of time at the library and at the drop-in gym. Not coincidentally that’s when we started getting sick all the time.

Winter? Housebound for 2 weeks because of unshoveled walks and messy streets. It is to weep.

My schedules went out the window. The days dragged and were dark and mean. We spend most of our time on our main floor, which is the kitchen and living room and those four walls have never looked so much like the bars of a jail cell. In the past couple of weeks, Fresco has started climbing the stairs whenever he is put down. Up, up and away; get me out of this room and its terribly boring EVERYTHING, I HATE IT.

Then, this week; sunshine. Warm. The baby sleeping. The toddler a genius. My hair atrocious but – oh well. Suddenly, I sniffed spring when I opened the front door. I sniffed Hope. Thank goodness I thought, now at least we will be outside again.

Then I had a flash of memory from last summer, a mom at the playground saying sympathetically, “I was you last summer. It is so much better this year.” Hey, my “this year” is almost here! I am entering spring with a one-year-old and a three-year-old, not a two-year-old and an infant. (Please don’t tell me what happens with the 1 / 3 year olds, I prefer to be surprised.)

I had not considered that just as the seasons have changed, so have my kids. They are older, smarter, more mobile, more independent by the day.

* I must break to address that this really had not occurred to me and THAT is why I am NEVER having any more children. I need the fifteen brain cells I have left just in case I want to get a job outside the home some day.*

There we were at the park, where we had not been since early Fall. Trombone ran, he waved sticks, he chased squirrels, he climbed up and climbed down and went away from me and came back. I didn’t have to lift a finger. He is almost 3. The last time we were there he had just turned 2. There is a big difference, I am noticing. He was mostly baby; now he is mostly kid.

The baby just watched and laughed and clapped his hands.

Me? I stood there and marveled at the difference a few months and some sunshine makes. I didn’t have to lift two children at once. I didn’t have to haul out a boob to freeze off while the baby changed his mind about being hungry. I didn’t have to sniff anybody’s butt in public to determine if mine were the stinky ones.

I did have to use my shirt sleeve to wipe two noses because I am an idiot who leaves the house without a tissue or wipe or piece of spare cloth to her name. However.

Best of all? With Trombone walking, it takes a half hour to get to the park! With me walking & pushing the boys in the buggy, it takes 7 minutes. That means when I get back to overscheduling our days, that’s 23 minutes I don’t have to schedule for. 46 if you include the return trip.

At some point I will be nostalgic for those dependent days, when no one went anywhere without my say-so or my boob in his mouth. Because we have been inside so long, the change feels more a transformation than a transition, like we are beautiful butterflies emerging from cocoons; what I see now is so much better than where I’ve been. Like going from impatient, grumpy pregnant lady to beaming mother of newborn, I am high on the richness of the experience. I will come down eventually.

But I really do think it is going to be an excellent spring and summer.

* except that I just figured out why the baby is finally sleeping normally. Because daylight savings time is 2 weeks away. Graaaaaaaah.

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In The Middle of An Ordinary Day

This morning I was blessed by sweet angels with pretty bells on their shoes. Trombone went out to gymnastics with my mom and I was left with a baby who napped all morning.

I know. What?

I sorted my sock drawer. I dug out a bunch of stuff from under my bed. I swept the kitchen floor, several times. (not because I was bored; because it was that dirty) I turned on the CBC and lo and behold, it was Jian Gomeshi’s show “Q,” where apparently I missed an interview with (the) DAN HILL yesterday, drat and damnation.

(Incidentally, I have heard “Sometimes When We Touch” no fewer than 10 times in the past two weeks. Grocery stores, hold music, random pre-set button stabbing in the car; it’s everywhere! That’s why I had to put that quotation up on the left sidebar, there. You didn’t even notice, did you? That I claim to be “…just another writer / still trapped within my truth…”? But now you’re humming, right? Now it’s stuck in YOUR head too! Haha!)

Half listening, as you do, I wandered about, sorting, recycling, eyeing the baby monitor nervously because surely at any moment that baby would wake. (but he didn’t! I know! What? King of 45 minute naps relinquishes crown after only 6 month fight?) And then I heard the most arresting, astonishing musician: Antony and the Johnsons. I heard part of a song called “For Today I am a Buoy.” And then the song below, “Another World.” I am not sure whether I love the music enough to become a full-blooded fan, to be honest. But I was amazed by it. And to be amazed by music, to be stopped in my tracks by a voice, is such a gift.

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You Crazy Kids and Your Doo-dads

I don’t go to baby stores very often. But today the opportunity was offered to me so I went to BabiesRus land to purchase a new gate for Trombone’s bedroom doorway because the old one is kaput.

Oh, BabiesRus on a Monday afternoon. Soothing, spa-like music playing. Neatly stacked piles of clean, organic baby hats. “Sales Leaders” anxious to help you select just the right snookum-basket for your snookums. They look at your belly when you walk in the door. I am proud to say no one asked to help me the whole time which means I don’t look one bit pregnant.

And of course, the other shoppers. Women in various stages of bloom, often with partners or best friends in tow, notebooks in hand, looking at everything Very Closely. A low current of anxiety runs through the air. Is this the right car seat? Is this the right stroller? Is this magic 3-pack of receiving blankets going to make everything OK? SOMEONE TELL ME! WHERE DOES THE POOP GO IN A DIAPER GENIE?

I got the gate I wanted and was walking back to the till when I saw it. I swear to god I thought it was a dentist’s chair. Why would you want a dentist’s chair for your infant? In your house? But no. It is The Sweetpeace Newborn Soothing Center. Mein Gott. I mean, a lot of baby gear looks like “a contraption” but this thing, it looks like a contraption like in that movie, um, um, Honey I Shrank the Kids, where the dude invents a device that makes his toast and wipes his ass and washes its little robot hands in between.

Lookatit!

How much, Wally? For this peace and comfort and quiet in your home, for a glorified baby swing? TWO HUNDRED SIXTY NINE DOLLARS, Wally. $270 for a baby swing that swings sideways too: whoopee! $270 for a baby swing that you can plug your MP3 player into, that has the following hilarious features:

– 4 unique seating positions that imitate how you hold your baby

Or, you know, DON’T hold your baby because you never need to – because of the Soothing Center!

– 4 cradling motions create 4 distinct sensations

Bad word choice. “Distinct sensations” makes me think my pants just got wet.

– 3 recline positions offer comfortable choices for a growing baby

Never offer a baby a choice!

– 6 speeds allow you to choose the right amount of movement for your baby’s mood

What baby has SIX moods? Unpossible.

– 5 point harness provides gentle ventral pressure that reassures your baby like a hug

Yeah. The hug of You’re Not Going Anywhere! Straightjacket Hugs: A Memoir.

Anyway. I stood there for a while and stared at it and laughed and I hoped the wide-eyed couple putting things on their registry saw me and wondered why I was laughing and did some research and realized how ridiculous it is to spend that much money on someone you’ve never met, on a piece of furniture that will necessitate your moving the couch into the basement to make room, or at the very least, on something that is beige.

And then I came home, to my baby who now falls asleep without any rocking or jiggling or anything, but only if he has his fingers in my mouth. Proving that babies are weird and unpredictable and you should never spend too much money on one. It’s like playing the slots.

On the other hand, now I am wondering if the Soothing Center has an “orifice” attachment. Like, a little pretend mouth that I could – oh, nevermind.

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Wherein I Become A Believer in Wet Sock Hocus Pocus

The other day I was at Save On Foods just for a change of scene and they were selling buckets. So I bought one. You never know, right? The only time I remember that we don’t own a bucket * is when I am about to clean something and then I can’t because – no bucket! and what I don’t need is more disincentive for cleaning things. Here, this red bucket is $2.50, take it home.

* actually we DO own a bucket but it became an Outside Bucket last summer, meaning it got sand in it and dirt and toddler stuff and then Trombone took off the handle of the bucket and decided it was his antlers and he was going on a pony ride so we hid them so he wouldn’t put his eye out. Basically, we don’t own a bucket.

I bought the red bucket on Wednesday. Naturally I did not have a chance to clean anything between Wednesday and last night but I did use my bucket. I used it to soak my feet in hot water right before bed so that I could try out the Common Cold Cure I wrote about yesterday.

First, I heartily recommend soaking your feet in hot water before bed. Even if you don’t follow through with the rest of the ritual, hot water on your feet is darn nice.

So there I was, perched on the edge of the bed, feet in the bucket, Saint Aardvark laughing his ass off at me. Then I put on two cotton socks soaked in cold water. SA laughed harder. You probably have never tried to put wet socks on your feet. It is hard to do and – I have no doubt – very amusing to behold. I put my new, handknit, wool socks over the wet socks and hopped into bed with the new book I am reading, Through Black Spruce by Joseph Boyden. My feet were toasty warm under the covers. (When I got up at 10:30 to feed Fresco, they were still a bit damp and it did feel pretty unpleasant when I got out from under the covers but it was short-lived discomfort. And by the time I rose for the day at 6 am, the socks and my feet were dry.) I was reading along thinking what a good book! holy crap! and suddenly I realized that I could breathe clearly and I was very tired. I put my head down on the pillow and that was that. It was about 10 minutes between the moment of sock application to the moment of clear nasal passages.

Yes, I am Ultra Scientific.

Now the night before, it took about 45 minutes lying propped on two pillows, tossing and turning, to get one nostril clear enough so I could sleep. And then 45 minutes again each time I woke up in the night. (3 times) But last night, my head was clear all night long. I truly thought I would wake up cured.

I did not wake up cured. I still have a bit of a cold but it is very mild. I was expecting to be afflicted like my parents, who have had this cold for 10 days and my kids who have had it for 7 and counting.* I know that I feel better today in large part because I got more sleep than the night before. But I got more sleep because I could breathe better. And I am pretty sure I could breathe better because of the socks.

Laugh all you want. I’ll be over here, enjoying some delicious food that I can taste because my nose isn’t stuffed up.

* and I also fully acknowledge that I should be knocking wood right about now. Or at least not telling the Internet how awesome I feel, lest I wake up tomorrow with oh I don’t know, is there something I haven’t had in a while? Strep throat?

See how I’m taunting the Internet gods? Come on. Give me strep throat. Tonsillitis. I DARE YOU. I HAZ BUCKET.

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