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20 Things I’ve Learned About Motherhood In 10 years

1 ) Kids are tougher than you think.

After giving birth to a premature child ten years ago, and watching her smash her head repeatedly against the coffee table as she learned to stand up, I realised that although our kids are constantly bumping and bruising themselves, they rarely break.

2 ) I am tougher than I thought.

Having given birth three times, walked everywhere through three pregnancies and gone through (still going through with the last one!) three tantrum phases, I’ve learned that I rarely break. I think I will more often than I actually do.

3 ) It’s not always the parents’ fault.

When I became a parent, let’s say in the first six years, I honestly believed two things: if something bad happens to your child, it’s your fault for not watching/supervising them closely enough. If your child misbehaves or is rude, it’s the parents’ fault for not raising them properly.

Time has reminded that which was taught to me in my child studies days: children are individuals. Time has taught me that you can watch your kids as closely as you like; sometimes they will wait until the split second when you’re not looking, jump from one bed to the other, encourage their little sister to do the same, who will then land face down on the frame of the bed, slicing and detaching her lip apart from her gums, needing a trip to the emergency ward. All done two metres behind their parent’s back.

Time has taught me that you can drum manners into your child, but when they aren’t with you, they will test their boundaries with regards to manners and rudeness with other people. They will say and do things they wouldn’t dream of saying in your presence, because they know what will happen. They don’t know what will happen if they try it with a teacher or another parent, so they’ll try being rude around others to see what will happen.

Time has taught me that despite what I’ve taught my children, life happens. People get sick, families go through crises. Children experience stress, and this shapes their personalities, their responses to things, the way they cope. As they learn to cope with stress, they may make mistakes, and I have learned that this is no reflection on a child’s parenting.

4 ) It doesn’t matter what other parents think of  my parenting, unless it affects them or their children directly.

I used to get upset when other parents would judge me, as a first time mother. I hated being judged for ending breastfeeding my eldest daughter when she was two weeks old. People, who didn’t know the reasons why I made that choice (and to me, they were the right reasons), or how devastated I was to do so. It hurt so much to have people openly tell me that I mustn’t care very much about my daughter’s health and well-being. To tell me that I didn’t try hard enough, or that I was selfish.

If someone were to say that to me now, I wouldn’t care what they think. I think, if anything, I just think less of the person for doing that now, and feel sorry for them. If you now had an opinion about my choices and it doesn’t affect you, I no longer care to hear it.

I do care, however, if my choices, my parenting, my children’s behaviour is affecting other people. I care if my kids damage your belongings when I visit your home. I care if my child hurts your child. If my child’s behaviour does affect you, I do want to hear it, so I can act on it and try to make things right.

5 ) The majority of the Aussie population thinks it’s cruel to not celebrate xmas and easter or to tell your kids santa, easter bunny, and the tooth fairy are not real.

Refer to point 4.

6 ) Many people believe that atheist children are empty vessels waiting to be filled with religon.

Refer to point 4 and back the hell off.

7 ) Contrary to what my child studies classes taught me, it’s ok to say no to your kids.

Sure, it’s not great for every second word that comes out of my mouth to be ‘no’, but saying it occasionally will not damage my kids, in fact, they’ll be better people for it. When they go to school, or get their first job, hear someone else say no, they will cope.

8 ) Praise is good in moderation.

I was taught in my child studies to give lots of praise. On the internet, there’s a gazillion articles explaining why we shouldn’t praise our children. As a mum, I feel that it’s my job to let my kids know that I believe in them. I like knowing that my kids will be able to come home after working a long day at school to parents who have something nice to say to them. Who like something about them.

I like knowing that my kids can attempt and complete tasks without a constant need for approval.

9 ) You really can raise kids without smacking them, and still discipline them.

I’ve been warned over the years that my children will be juvenile delinquents because I refuse to smack them. Touch wood, this hasn’t been the case yet. I’ve been told that children who don’t get smacked are wild, horribly feral children and the cause of the decay of society. I’m honestly just not finding that to be the case, so far.

10 ) Most problems can be dealt with if you can encourage your kids to talk to you about anything.

Half the battle is convincing kids to talk to us about what is on their mind, what motivates them, what worries them. I believe that when a child takes this leap of faith, it should be rewarded with kindness. So far, it’s been my experience that if we can be kind when our child opens up to us, then they are highly likely to do it when they really need to but might not want to.

11 ) Love doesn’t divide when you have more than one child, it multiplies

You don’t break your love in half when you have a second child, or in thirds when you have a third. You double it, then triple it.

12 ) I really have a foul temper when someone  messes with my kid.

I think they call this the ‘mama bear’ instinct.

13 ) A strong bond and closeness between mother and child is something worth striving for, always.

14 ) The most important (and gut wrenching) job we’ll do is to teach our children how to break away from us.

15 ) The teenage years frighten the living crap out of me.

16 ) The best present we can give our kids is our presence.

No matter how obsessed kids seem to be with the latest toy or goodie, the thing they want most is their parents’ time and love.

17 ) There are standards, then there is reality.

I care about my kids’ nutrition. But it is ok to feed my kids less than perfectly healthy food now and then. I prefer they don’t watch too much telly. But I’m ok with it if I think it’ll make a hard day easier on all of us, now and then. I never realised before becoming a mum that occasionally my standards would have to momentarily drop, and that’s ok.

18 ) I’m not a helicopter parent, and I’m not a free-range parent.

I like spending time with my kids. I like leaving them to play on their own or with each other, with me stepping back. I like teaching them the skills needed before I give them the independence. That’s what works for us in our family.

19 ) It’s not a contest.

No one cares that you grew the fattest baby, or fed them the most organic food. No one cares if you breastfed the longest, or had the most natural birth. No one cares how early your kid walked or potty trained. Most people are just happy to see children well loved and well looked after, in whatever form that takes.

Oh, and better yet; your own kid won’t care about any of these things, either.

20 ) Motherhood is the wildest ride there is.

…and I wouldn’t have it any other way!

I’m sure I’ve left something out, so I hope you’ll share yours too.

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Dealing With Anger in Children

I’m writing this with a bruised chin tonight. You see, Mr 4 decided that he was so angry at the world, that throwing a heavy wooden toy at my face would make him feel better. Charming.

I mentioned here yesterday and also to my son that my partner is going to hospital next week for a long time. Every other time his dad’s gone to hospital has led my son to become increasingly angry and upset. Unfortunately, he expresses his anger explosively and violently. He becomes defiant, breaking the rules on purpose to get a reaction. He tries saying disrespectful things, such as ‘shut up’, that he knows he isn’t allowed to say.

After having broken the news to him about his father’s impending hospital stay, I braced myself for all of this. My son was right on schedule today, exploding like a time bomb.

As you can imagine, I also feel anger over his behaviour. Like any parent, sometimes I handle it well, other times I handle it terribly. What better time for me to write about this subject, whilst it’s so fresh in  my mind? I’m going to write a series about anger management for children over the next few days. Over the course of the series I’ll share how I dealt with my son’s behaviour this time around.

Each day, I’ll cover different aspects that I’m teaching my children about anger. They include:

Finding the source of the anger

Healthy ways children can express their anger

Ground rules for anger

Consequences for harmful expressions of anger

Repetition

Anger in the real world

Teaching a child how anger works.

I hope you’ll journey with me during this series, and share your thoughts and ideas with everyone. What I’d love to hear from you today, is what you feel causes your child/ren to get angry?

Other reading:

Is it ever ok to lose your cool?

How do I stop tantrums?

Emotional development – how help children talk about feelings.

 

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Inner B Mum Organiser Giveaway

 

Are you feeling organised for school, yet? Maybe your kids have gone back already, or if you’re in NSW like me, today’s the big day. I spent all of yesterday, madly running around, making sure everything was ready for my daughter’s first day back at school. Talk about stressful!

To help make life much easier, Inner B is giving one lucky reader the Mum Organiser, in fushia pink.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I’ve actually had a look over this gorgeous diary, and I’m so impressed. It costs $44.95, and can be easily customised according to your family life. You can store your appointments, to do list, birthdays and anniversaries. It has a unique format which allows you to plan all of your family’s activities. It has a section for you to write in all the important things, such as details for your children’s dentist, local pharmacy, GP, local hospital, and whatever else you need regularly.

Inner B always makes sure to remember mum too, though. The Mum Organiser therefore also has a personal well being contacts section for you to keep your physio, hair dresser, massage therapist, and all those other contacts that make our lives more manageable.

Then, it has a household contact information page, for pretty much everything; local council, your accountant, electrician, gas, water, internet providers, and so on. As if that weren’t enough, there’s space for your entertaining contacts, your brilliant ideas (come on, we’re mothers! We have ‘em all the time!), things you want to do and places to visit, your dilemmas, goals, health and fitness ideas, favourite websites and passwords, must read books, must see movies, must listen to music, favourite restaurants, retail stores you like, items borrowed and lent, phew! (This is reminding me of that ‘I’ve been everywhere, man’ song!)

And then, there’s family medical information, current immunisation schedule, dates to remember, (eg, check fire extinguishers, torch batteries, all that practical stuff we all get caught out on), kids’ favourite activities and it even has holiday and party planning sections, with checklists and all. Bloody hell. Pretty much all it doesn’t do is wipe your butt for you!

What I also love about this organiser is that it looks so cool. It comes in four different colours: fushia (shown here), butter, lime green and the most popular colour of them all, turquoise Tiffany Blue. You can also buy refills for it every year too.

So, here’s what you have to do if you want to win this baby:

First entry (both actions mandatory):
- Go to Inner B and tell us which Inner B product would help you to get organised the most, in the comment section.

- Sign up for email updates from Hear Mum Roar. If you already are signed up, that’s fine. And yes, I do check!

Optional entries (one extra entry per action):

- Follow Hear Mum Roar on twitter.

- Subscribe to Hear Mum Roar’s RSS feed.

- Tweet this giveaway.

- Follow Inner B on twitter.

If you have extra entries, please mention in the comments box below what you did, so I can check. Thanks!

The lucky winner will be drawn on Sunday, the 6th of February, 2011 and is open to Australians only.

Good luck, people!

Update:

I ended up deciding to buy some goodies from Inner-B for myself. Since Diminishing Lucy was interested in seeing what the Tiffany blue mum organiser looks like, I thought I’d share the photos of my purchases here, as the Tiffany blue was my favourite colour, too. I also bought the completely AWESOME meal planner. It’s magnetic and fits really well on the fridge. Each meal square is a cute little magnetic tile. The kids have been going stir crazy choosing meals, because they love sticking the pieces on. Valerie was kind enough to send me the planner notepads (meal planner and daily planner) just to be nice. I’ve got to say, I’m very impressed. I’m not the most organised person in the world, and all this stuff has been a godsend.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Inner-B

 

Other reading:

What I did on the first day back to school

Finding the time to do it all – time saving tips

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Mothers Supporting Mothers

Some of you may be familiar with the bright, bubbly, always fun, Lori from Random Ramblings of a Stay at Home Mum. Things aren’t so great for her at the moment. She has two very young, beautiful children, and a husband in intensive care, fighting for his life. Things are not looking great at the moment, but Lori has asked that everyone send their best wishes to her family, since all we can ever do is hope, right?

She hasn’t asked for money or any other support. However, Aussie mums being the inspirational women they are, have banded together to collect donations to help her out anyway. As a mother who has been in the predicament of a partner in hospital, being told that your partner may not make it, I can vouch for what a huge support this is.

When you are in this situation, your days revolve around visits to and from hospital. You spend large chunks of your days on the phone, in the hope of hearing  good news, or simply what you need to do next. You’re updating family on the situation. You’re tired, stressed, trying to entertain small children who don’t understand why daddy doesn’t come home. Still feeding, changing nappies, and so on. All too quickly, breakfast, lunch and dinner roll around, and you need to summon up the strength, energy and presence of mind to to prepare and serve this. All too often, particularly when you’re on the run to and from hospital, these meals end up being whatever takeaway you can get your hands on.

And the bills! Oh my god, the bills don’t stop. You worry how you’ll pay them. So, if you’d like to lend a hand to a beautiful woman during an incredibly difficult time of her life, you can do so via the widget below. It won’t fix the situation, but it will be one less thing for her to deal with. This is what being a  mother should be about, also a blogger: supporting the community that surrounds you.

I will be donating as soon as I get paid, and I’m so proud of everyone who’s done so already.

Also, in other news, as some know, my partner has been in hospital since Tuesday night after having a nasty seizure. The good news is, he’s returned home and found some good specialists to help him further with his health issues. I keep hoping that Lori will be able to boast the same outcome, and I’m wishing hard for this to happen.

I hope everyone else is well, and I think now’s the time for us all to hug our partners and our children just that much tighter.

Edited to update: It’s with great sadness that I share that unfortunately Tony, Lori’s husband, has passed away. We offer our condolences and all our love, from our family to yours. I’m so sorry. I just hope we can raise more money to assist with day to day living expenses, and/or funeral costs.

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The Great Breastfeeder’s Mullet

 

So, as I’ve mentioned before, I’ve weaned Missy 2 off the boob! It’s been maybe a month or more now. I’m still finding my body isn’t settling down just enough yet. But what I’m really excited/impatient about, is the prospect of growing back all that lost hair as a result.

In the photo above, you can see all the lovely short bits of hair regrowth coming in at the front. My hairdresser assures me it’s all good, healthy regrowth. It’s great to know now I’ve stopped breastfeeding that the alopecia (hair loss) is coming to a halt. But grr! I’m sick of having to slick my hair down with loads of gel just to avoid looking like I have a damn mullet!!

Here’s another good one without gel. Take particular note of the lovely effect on top:

(While I’m making wishes, let’s wish for a new lounge, huh?)

I’m going to make some more flaxseed hair gel soon, because I’m telling you, I’ve been going through gel like there’s no tomorrow, plastering down those short bits. It’s funny, because I’ve always had gigantic, boofy, naturally curly hair. When the hair first started dropping rapidly as I continued to breastfeed Missy 2 (she’s my third child, and I didn’t have this problem with my other two children, as I stopped breastfeeding one child at two weeks old, and the other at five weeks old), I was all, ‘yeah! Bring it on! I’ve got loads of hair to spare! It’ll be great not being boofy for a change!’

Little did I know how limp and lifeless the rest of my hair would become. And that when it began to grow back, it’d be all, business in the front, party out the back. Doh. Much like these guys…

I’m thinking I need a new plan of attack, as I spend the next few months googling ways to make it grow back quicker. Maybe it’s time to start wearing scarves and thick headbands. I’ll still slick it down on lazier days too. So, if you see me wearing more headgear, you’ll know that’s why.

What I want to know dear reader, is did this happen to you? How long did it take for your hair to grow back to normal? What did you do with your hair in the meantime, besides laugh at it? And can you really do anything to make your hair grow faster?

Other reading:

Motherhood: cinch or sentence?

 

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Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – will you let your child see the movie?

If you’re a true Harry Potter fan, then you’ll know that tonight is an important night in the grand scheme of things: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows is on at the movies! Squeeee!!!

All of us here, bar Missy 2 are gigantic Harry Potter fans. We have every single book (although Chamber of Secrets has gone missing; we must replace it immediately) and DVD. My fiance, Missy 10 and I have read all the books a gazillion times (Missy 10′s been reading the books since she was 6, and watching the movies since she was 2. She’s truly grown up on Harry Potter). The movies? We’ve watched those a gazillion times one hundred. We’ve even had Harry Potter movie marathons.

Mr 4 loves his Harry Potter as well, but obviously just watches the DVDs at his age. Which leads me to the great debate that always comes up every time the next movie in the series is released: is it right to take a child to see Harry Potter at the movies?

It’s a debate I’ve been quite vocal about in many forums. There’s always someone claiming, ‘I went to see Harry Potter last night, and I couldn’t believe that an 8 year old was allowed to go see it!’ I often wonder if it’s my child they’re talking about.

We’ve probably been taking Missy 10 to see the latest Harry Potter movie since she was about six, maybe? Much to many peoples’ horror. Yes, we know they’re not rated for her age. Many have shown concern that young children might be scared by these movies.

When the Prisoner of Azkaban was released in theatres, that seemed to bring out the strongest reaction from the punters. Many were concerned that the Dementors would frighten children. My daughter had already read it, and seemed just fine. Plus, she’d seen every other movie in the series by that time without any fear, so we felt confident in our decision. It turns out, she was fine. It was exciting for her to think about how she imagined the story from the book, then see it made into a movie.

The Goblet of Fire movie also drew concern for keeping children from watching it. Why? ‘Because it’s got dragons in it’, I was told by several people. Hmm. Dragons are one of my daughter’s favourite things, right up there with dinosaurs. She’s loved dragons for years now, attracted to the mythology of them. It turned out, during the predicted ‘scariest’ part of the movie featuring the dragons, she laughed loudly in the movie theatre at how fast the dragons were as they chased the Tri Wizard Cup contenders.

Mr 4 has watched all of the series at home, and has never had a problem. Would I take him to the movies to see this new movie? No. Only because at his age, I know he won’t be able to sit still through it. But I would take him to a Disney movie and put up with his fidgeting. As for Missy 2, she has been brought up with Harry Potter in the background from birth, and we’ve never had a problem. She likes certain parts of the movies, but at her age, they don’t hold her attention very well.

When we make a decision about whether or not a movie is suitable for our children, we don’t adhere to the ratings. We take note of them, indeed, but for us they are more of a guideline. We’re more likely to think about the personality of each child, what they are afraid of, what they are interested in and of course, our values.

We generally aren’t keen on movies that are too violent, but we make the exception with Harry Potter, because we feel that it is a classic tale of the fight between good and evil. Not that we feel it’s overly violent anyway, any fights are usually of the magical kind, so it’s not really the same thing.

We also avoid movies that we feel would sexualise our children at too early an age. If we’re still undecided on a movie we haven’t seen, we’ll watch it first to check if we think it’s suitable or not. So far, this has worked for us.

What’s your approach with children and movies? Do you follow the ratings by the book? Do you watch everything first, before you let your child? Do you have some other way you decide? Also, have you seen the latest Harry Potter movie yet? How was it??

Other reading:

Helping kids to make choices

 


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Brianna Lopez – why we need to speak up

I found this story on facebook about a beautiful five month old baby girl, and was first moved to tears, then moved to speak up. Watch the video below about this poor child. Warning: graphic content, may disturb some readers.

As a mother of three precious children, I, as I’m sure all of you cannot imagine how this could happen. How could family do this to their child? How could family watch this situation and not intervene? How could they not take a single photo of such a sweet girl, not once in her entire life? How could they refuse their little girl the love from her community even in death? The angel inside her memorial cage tells us to be quiet, don’t speak about this. Bollocks to that.

We should speak about this loudly. We owe it to this baby to remember how lovely she is. How undeserving.

We owe it to all children everywhere to speak up if we know it’s happening.

All these bastards who did this to her want, is for people to pretend it never happened. When we hear about child abuse, it’s common for people to say exactly what they’d like to see done to these evil people. Well, I say, speak up! That is their punishment. But more importantly, we must speak up so that little Brianna’s life, which was void of joy, protection and love, can amount to something positive. To take away the pain of the children who are still living, still being mistreated.

Let’s hug our children tighter after watching this. And let’s report child abuse. Speak for those who have no voice.





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Motherhood: cinch or sentence?

There’s quite a debate going on over at Mamamia with regards to an article written by Jacinta Tynan called, ‘Motherhood is easy‘. I read it with some strong emotions myself. I found myself nodding at the idea that a positive attitude towards child-rearing is beneficial to everyone involved. I found myself incensed at quotes like these:

“I can’t see what all the fuss is about. Ask me if I have another, but from where I stand motherhood is a cinch.

Yes it is tiring, and yes it is time consuming with showers and emails a sudden extravagance. But it is not hard. Hard is being tied to a soulless job for 80% of your waking hours. Hard is fighting cancer, or having a child who is. Or not being able to conceive a child when you ache for nothing more. Soothing a crying baby who won’t sleep for love nor money is a privilege not a hardship. Wiping spew off your jacket before bolting out the door to a meeting is funny, not a drama.

It is not fashionable to say so. For the past decade or two – coinciding with most of us trying to squeeze a career in with motherhood simultaneously – we have heard the cry of mothers’ martyrdom. It has become de rigueur to complain about how arduous the whole thing is, one upping on whose baby sleeps the least, chucks the most, and who has less hours in the day.”

“I do think we could learn a thing or two from our mothers and grandmothers. You never heard a peep out of them bucking in to double the workload and double the kids with no online groceries or disposable nappies. Sure they didn’t work (most of them) but they also appreciated that being a mum was one of the better things in life. My mum had six children, no help and, on occasions, a job. Yet she gave it her all with grace and joy. Our generation acts as if we deserve a medal.

It’s not like we didn’t know what we were signing up for. Most mothers want to be mothers, longing for the day when we will hold our own baby in our arms. How tragic to begrudge it because we can’t get a thing done around the house.”

Then I went on to watch the video on Mia’s blog post where she interviews Jacinta, and she readily admits it’s hard. Eh? So which one is it, then? Hard, or not hard?

I agree with her on many things. That motherhood is abundantly rewarding. To not stress over the small things. But the insinuation that if a mother is having a hard time of it that they are ‘making a fuss’ if they complain does not sit well with me. Or that a mother who makes a complaint feels deserving of a medal is ludicrous to me.

I too, once had a first child who was nine months old. I found her to be very easy to look after as well. Because she hadn’t yet hit the stages of toddlerhood and all the wonderful, developmentally normal yet frustrating bits that comes with it. But I was still able to see that I was lucky, and to have some understanding of why some other mothers were struggling. Other mothers had older kids than me, more kids than me. Some parents had less support than me. Who was I to tell them, ‘I don’t see what all the fuss is about?’ I certainly didn’t see them as any less loving of their children or begrudging of having them, simply because they were having a rough day/week/month/life!

When I was a new mother, I too made sweeping statements about parenting issues, though. I was dead against giving any of my children a dummy. Said I never would. And with my  first, I didn’t. Because I was able to focus on one child, and ok, she never seemed to ‘need’ a dummy, but if she did, I imagine being an only child, I would’ve been better equipped in time and energy to provide her with that comfort in many other ways. My next two children had dummies, so of course, I was forced to eat my words! I have since learnt to be very careful about sweeping statements when it comes to parenthood, because they always come back to bite you on the bum.

I believe this: parenthood is hard sometimes, easy other times. When it’s hard, you push through it. The more positive we can be, the better. But it’s ok, necessary in some cases even, to talk about problems we are facing. If we don’t, that stress can manifest itself in unhealthy ways that aren’t good for us or our families.

I remember in April last year, when  my fiance was admitted to hospital for poisoning. He spent a week there. I held my head up and ploughed on as all us mums do when times get tough. A voice in my head, that I didn’t let anyone else hear kept whispering at me,

‘what if he dies?’

‘What if your children lose their father?’

‘You’re running out of energy/strength! You’re going to fall in a heap.’

The first couple of days were hell. Mr Four, who was at the time two, was resentful of me for calling the ambulance and taking his father away. He resented me every time I told him that Daddy wasn’t coming home today, and he behaved accordingly, screaming at me in the supermarkets, as I pushed the double pram down the street and all day long at home. He acted out, destroying things, hurting his sisters and myself.

My fiance had taken our keycard which had all our money so that when this ‘blew over’ as we tried to optimistically believe, he could get a train or taxi home. As a result, we didn’t visit him for the first few days. Then we ran out of toilet paper. Then fruit. I had the other keycard at home, and was biding my time until my fiance’s pay from his job went into that one.

Now, as positive as I tried to remain, this is where it gets important to tell others if you are struggling. I confided to my best friend who lived just around the corner from me, that we’d run out of fruit and toilet paper. My beautiful friend, as soon as she could, was at my doorstep, presenting me with fresh fruit for the kids and loo paper. It got us through until that money showed up in my keycard, and I will be ever grateful for her help.

There was no shame in being honest about a difficulty. Over the next few days, we visited my fiance in hospital everyday. It was what kept him hopeful, during so much uncertainty. It was what kept the kids hopeful. Every night, we’d eat a family dinner together at the hospital kiosk, and be completely grateful. It was looking doubtful to us all that he’d be out of there any time soon.

I would come home, keep doing the mothering gig with three tired little ones, and collapse on the lounge. There were thousands of negative thoughts to fight off, and I like to think I did my best. But they were still there.  I talked to my father on the phone, and I finally admitted that if my darling was going to be in hospital for a long time, I’d need to work out a routine, because the day trips to the hospital were physically taking it out of me, no matter how positive a spin I wanted to put on it.

From that discussion, my dad suggested that I take one day off a week from visiting the hospital. I cannot tell you the relief it felt for someone to give me permission to say, ‘this is too hard, is there an alternative?’ and actually have one offered, when I simply could not think anymore. I just felt that my head was going to pop open, and all ability to reason and problem solve was long gone. If I hadn’t talked about this negative, I truly believe I would’ve lost the plot or lashed out at someone. The good news? He was out within a week.

That’s my arguement for why I think we need to complain as parents, sometimes. I also am a strong believer in being positive. I remember a few months later, my fiance’s mother died. At exactly the same time that our family got the swine flu. My fiance was down the coast with his family, making arrangements. The night before his mother’s funeral, my eldest daughter vomitted everywhere then became unconscious to the point where I couldn’t rouse her.  I put her in an ambulance, and hot-footed it to the hospital with the two littlies in the double pram, on a freezing winter’s night, on a train.

I had no idea if I would be able to make it to the funeral the next day, but of course, it was a high priority. I just knew I couldn’t leave my daughter in someone else’s care the next day if I had any doubt she’d be ok. We waited hours to see someone, as there were many other families afflicted with swine flu also. I kept telling myself, ‘just keep pushing on, entertain the kids as much as you can, ride it out, ride it out…’ Just when I thought we could not spend another minute at that hospital, they finally let us go home with the doctor’s blessing that she’d be ok to be looked after by someone else the following day.

My body felt as though it was on empty, and that horrible little negative voice, came back:

‘now you have to take that trip back home’

‘you can’t do it, you’re ready to collapse, yourself’

‘look at your daughter, she can’t make the trip home, even. You are so screwed!’

I tried to reassure my eldest daughter that we’d make this trip as quick and easy as we possibly could. She looked doubtful. I don’t think I was very convincing.

Then, a miracle happened. Mr then Two piped up in his adorably shrill voice, bright as a button, ‘we had a fun time at the hop-it-tal, didn’t we?’

Here I was, thinking how terrible it was that I’d dragged these two little ones out in the cold, and I had no idea what an adventure it was for them! My eldest daughter and I looked at each other, rolled our eyes, and laughed so hard at the irony, that it gave us the strength and energy to make that trip home more easily.

I guess what I’m saying is, in parenthood and life, there is a balance of good and bad. Positive and negative. To deny one and ignore the other is counter-productive. We can’t be all doom and gloom 24-7. We can’t be Pollyanna all day long either. What I’ve learnt from this? We all have our easy times, and our hard times.

When you’re up on your luck, spread it around. Go help out the other person who’s down on theirs. When everything’s turned to crap, tell someone! It doesn’t make you less of a parent, nor a person. Let others help you.

As for now, I will never, ever, say parenting is easy. It’s hard. But you know what? All the things in life I’ve valued the most have never come easily. There’s a huge price to pay, and I pay it willingly. I love my fiance, I love my kids, my own little family, with everything I’ve got. And if I want to bitch and moan because Missy Two has smeared her poo (again!?) then I bloody well will. Then I’ll laugh about it later.

What is motherhood to you? Easy, hard? Or somewhere in between?





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Balance, balance, wherefor art thou balance?

This is a guest post from the lovely Kristin at Wanderlust.

Balance

I’ve always been good a good multi-tasker, a high energy person able to keep lots of balls in the air at once. Before I married I worked full-time, studied evenings and weekends for my graduate degree, stopped at the gym on my way to work in the mornings and managed to squeeze a satisfying social life in between all of this. So I imagined fitting kids into this equation wouldn’t be too hard, right? Right?? Oh settle down you in the back! If we all knew what parenthood was going to be like going into it our species would come to an abrupt halt.

Yeah, so, those images of me rocking a cradle with my foot as I put the finishing touches on my dissertation, or edited the final version of my novel? Dust. Go ahead and insert laugh track here.

The first few years of parenting are like being caught up in a cyclone. You have no idea what has hit you. You are powerless. You simply surrender because honestly, what else is there to do? You diaper, feed, soothe, bathe, dress, undress, sleep (well, not really sleep) in an endless loop. At some point, however, you wake up and realize your children have gained a modicum of independence and you can do things on your own for brief periods of time (go up and down the stairs, read a book, pee alone!) and it is deliciously liberating. It is about this time that fate whispers in your ear that perhaps, perhaps your life can be blessed with balance.

After all, there are scores of books and articles in women’s magazines dedicated to the topic. Articles with pictures of slender women with nice complexions sitting comfortably in lotus pose. It must actually exist, this balance. I’m sure I could achieve it if I just managed my time better, said “no” to the things that drained me, spent less time reading emails, took more bubble baths, dressed in earth tones and lit candles and baked organic cupcakes with my daughter, right? Right??

When I first came out of my mommy coma and started to do things for myself again, it was exquisitely gratifying, like a long rain after drought. I renewed old friendships. I read books. Lots and lots of books. I traveled to Australia with a girlfriend. I wrote. And wrote and wrote and wrote. All of this fed a deep need in me that I had abandoned during the selfless, faceless first years of childrearing. And yet it just touched the tip of the iceberg. Because there was still work and kids and all the day-to-day responsibilities of a life. But there was also something else. There was a noticeable backlash from my children. When I would sit down and open up my laptop (which was often) they would respond. First with sighs, later more strongly.

My daughter told me, “I think you love your computer most of all.”

My 5-year-old son: “I hate your computer.”

And two nights ago my daughter had a dream that I was leaving to go to Australia but could only take one child with me.

Wow.

Okay.

Here’s the thing. Balance is a fine concept. But it is just that. A concept. There are times in our lives when it is more achievable than others (retirement comes to mind, our twenties perhaps). I don’t think raising small children is meant to be an easy, relaxing time in our lives. Throw full-time work into the mix and it’s even less tenable. (Though, honestly, I don’t know that it’s any easier for those parents who stay at home – just a different set of challenges.) I’ve come to accept that I will probably not feel well-rested and sated in all the myriad ways I would like to be for quite some time, and that’s okay. That doesn’t mean I will stop seeking balance. It’s a necessary goal. But I think of it less as a final destination and more as a mark by which I navigate, something that keeps me from going too far off course in any one direction.

Lately, this has meant closing up my computer and getting down on the floor to build a train station out of Lincoln logs. Or sewing the arm back on Bear. Again. Or baking cupcakes with the kids (not organic, sorry) and letting them lick the bowl.

My kids will probably never have as much of me as they would like. I will never have as much of me as I would like. We’ll each have to live with that and do the best we can. I’m willing to give up more of myself to them now because I know that one day, I won’t have the honor of them wanting to spend all their time with me. I want to enjoy being at the center of their universe while it lasts. Soon enough, life will call to them and I’ll be left with time on my hands. At that point, I suppose I can unearth the tub from beneath the plastic boats and crayola bath crayons and cherry bomb no-tears shampoo that currently live there, and take that coveted bubble bath.





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I am Woman

 

On starting this blog with a brand new name, my nine year old daughter questioned me on why I named it, ‘Hear Mum Roar’. So, I told her about Helen Reddy’s song, ‘I am woman’ and explained how it is a play on words. It became clear to me that she’d never heard the song, and I decided I would be failing in my duty as a mum if she got to adulthood without seeing/hearing  it on video. So, I found the above video on youtube and played it to her. Then I decided, what an excellent way to celebrate my new blog, and really drive home the message of my vision for this blog.

My daughter watched and listened. The reaction? ‘Meh.. it’s alright. A bit boring,’ and wandered off to play. Which pretty much sums up motherhood, doesn’t it? We do all the boring bits, we bite off more than we can chew, and we do it with a strength we never would have imagined we possessed until life threw all the challenges of motherhood at us. We worry and stress. We work tirelessly at giving our kids the best, and we all have a different idea of what is the best, but we all still strive to give it.

Our kids can be forgiven for thinking it’s all a bit boring, because we move heaven and earth to give our kids a wonderful childhood. Better they think what we do is boring than to have a boring childhood, right? Most of all, we do it all willingly. We do it with a bottomless love. So, for mothers everywhere, this blog is for you. If you like, let it be your sanctuary. When you think you have nothing left to give, but life won’t let you sit down and catch your breath, think of this song. Know that you are far from alone, but one of millions of inspiring human beings.

Other reading:

I am woman lyrics

Motherhood: cinch or sentence?

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