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Stuff I have learnt since becoming a parent. This is not a definitive list. But only because they are not teenagers yet.
You won’t remember
anything in the early years.
Your own name, your child’s
name, which day of the week it is, the last time you had a full night’s sleep
or the last time sat down to eat without a child on your lap. You definitely won’t remember the last time
you visited the bathroom alone. Make a
list. Make lots of lists. You will need them.
Mothers lie.
They just do. Usually it is For Your Own Good. They tell
you it won’t hurt when it is going to hurt like hell. This will come into its own during the
Heartbreak Years aka the teenage ones. They tell you it’s gorgeous when you suffer a
disastrous haircut and end up looking like a brillo pad. They will swear blind to their vegetarian
daughter it’s vegetable and not chicken soup.
Mothers
cry.
On the outside they seem like
strong, go-to people who always have the answer to everything and know the
right thing to say at all times. But they’re
not and they don’t. They’re only human
with feelings of their very own who close the door and bawl after you’ve gone,
despite waving you off cheerfully and telling you it’ll be alright.
Mothers
hurt.
They feel pain just like everyone
else. Maybe more so. Sometimes people don’t realise this because
mothers are so good at hiding it and putting on a brave face. And also maybe because they know what’s ahead,
what is unavoidable and that sometimes you can run but you can’t hide.
Mothers
worry.
About everything. They worry that their kids will be too warm,
that they will be too cold. They worry
about them going hungry or being left out.
They worry that their kids might
be worried about something because recent studies show worrying Is Not Good For
You.
Mothers
fear.
They fear the fear. There is no getting away from it. If pushed they will be hard pressed to tell
you what that Fear actually is. But it
usually revolves somewhere around the vicinity of their children.
Mothers
have a sixth sense.
They are finely tuned experts at
calling your bluff. This mostly always
works because mothers are amazing like that.
They have the knowledge. Knowing their
offspring inside out is alwaysa given.
Mothers
are always right.
This is a universal fact. Even when they might be slightly wrong. It
saves a lot of hassle in the end if this is accepted from the get go.
Miscellaneous
The minute you make that cup of tea
the one who is asleep will wake up. Guaranteed.
It might look exactly like the dinner they get in crèche but it will get
pushed away because it “tastes funny”. Equally
you can call it Nana’s dinner if you like but they won’t buy it.
Kids have an innate compulsion to
keep your arse away from a seat, any seat, and if you do manage to park it,
they will have you hopping off it before you can say “cat on a hot tin roof.”
Lastly but definitely not least, it
does and will pass. Takes a few years
though. Especially if you have a couple
of kids in quick succession.
Sorry.