Listen up, grasshoppers for these are the truths of motherhood and if there aren’t one or two things you don’t identify with listed
below, I’ll eat my pants. In the
immortal words of my tummy and thighs instructor - here we go!
You, as the mother figure, will end up doing all of or
most of the work. Be it through default,
design or no fault of your own.
There will be days where you won’t actually like your
child. You will always love your child with
an all-consuming passion, the likes of which you have never experienced before,
but there will be days where you will not like them. At all.
You will understand what real tiredness is. You think you know just because you made it
into work (but only just) having just had three hours of sleep the night before? Hah!
You’re in the hard place now.
You will develop a newfound respect for your
mother. How did she manage it? There was
always dinner on the table. At the same
time every day. And it consisted of
items that required peeling before boiling, none of your oven chips variety and
Donegal Catch with a few micro-waved beans job thank you very much.
You will multi-task like never before. So, once upon a time you managed to type a
document, answer the phone and sign for DHL all at the same time? Big whoop-de-do! Wait till you’re breastfeeding whilst
grilling rashers and sausages with the phone jammed between your ear and your
shoulder. That’s multi-tasking!
You will strike up conversations with complete and
utter strangers. People who bear a
striking resemblance to you – fully accessorised with buggy and changing bag
that suggests a week’s holiday not a trip to the shop for milk and
chocolate. And you don’t need to look
any closer to see that the go-faster-stripe down the leg of her tracksuit
bottoms (yes, you’re wearing them too!
You swore you never would but there you go) is actually a trail of baby
puke.
It’s day three in the Big Mutha House and your hair is
still unbrushed, you haven’t washed your face and/or your teeth and you’re
still wearing the same clothes. Including underwear.
You are shocked when you think how you used to spend
up to 100 euro a night socialising.
That’s a weeks groceries for crying out loud!
You see your town in a different light. You know the best parking spot in your multi
storey if the parent and child space is taken.
And it always will be. You know
the best café in which to get your buggy through the door without taking it off
its hinges. Also you’re on first name terms with the girls who work there and
they know your baby’s name and how many teeth he has.
It’s mother and toddler social club at the
supermarket, and you recognise the same faces in the aisles before 9am on any
given day.
You know what, if anything, is on telly at 4.30am in
the morning.
You go through a stage, a long one, where you will be
in your bed by 8pm of an evening because you will be forced out of it at
precisely 5am the following morning. And
several times in the hours between!
You not only welcome door to door sales people, but
buy special packets of biscuits to have with the cup of coffee. You don’t want life insurance, cannot afford
to fork out several hundred euro for an aerial photo of your house with the
option of airbrushing out your clothes line.
All you wanted was adult conversation.
And those posh Elite chocolate biscuits were nice!
The chances of being in your local pub before midday
will become highly likely. Hold on,
don’t get too excited! It will only be
to use their “facilities.” And you will
be greatly offended when they eventually point out their “Toilets are For
Customers Use Only” signs. You’re
indignant - you spent thousands in there, once upon a time! But they don’t recognise you any more!
Your GHD will be hidden under a pile of
dust/clothes/shoes or forgotten about altogether. Along with your waistline and highlights.
The window cill and your bedside table house nappy
cream, various bottles of baby medicine, teething stuff and the odd toy. Your chick lit favourites are replaced by
titles such as The Womanly Art of Breastfeeding, How to Baby Proof Your
Marriage, and Toddler Taming.
Your sexy lingerie is now “sensible” knickers and
nursing bras.
Your favourite items of footwear are runners (winter)
and flip flops (summer). Suddenly your
gorgeous heels, mules, peep toe shoes and FMB’s are accidents waiting to happen
when carrying your baby. To add insult
to injury only the right shoe fits now as your left foot has gone up a size
since the arrival of your second baby.
Your favourite item of clothing is your baby sling.
You don’t care anymore that it’s the weekend. It’s not like you’re going to get a lie in
anyway.
There are days where it is unclear who has cried more
– you or the baby!
You will, and this is 100% guaranteed, head into town
wearing soiled clothes, matted hair and wearing odd shoes, only to run into
someone you knew from your never a hair out of place BC (Before Childer)
days. This person will be perfectly
groomed (naturally) from head to toe and say something clichéd like, “you have
your hands full there,” (ya think??!!) or “you look great! Motherhood suits you!” (You don’t and it doesn’t!)
And the biggest truth of them all?
Parenthood is the biggest, most challenging job we
will ever undertake in our lives. It’s sexist because only women can give
birth. It’s discriminatory because women
receive paid maternity leave and men don’t.
It’s the only job that doesn’t require qualifications. In fact, if it
went before The Equality Tribunal it would most likely be thrown out of court.
If you saw an ad for it in a paper, you’d distance yourself as far as possible
from it. So why do we do it?
Because we don’t know any better, that’s why, and when
we do, it’s too late.
You’re home with your life sized bundle of
responsibility and there is no turning back.
Bring on the sleepless nights, the petty arguments with your Other Half,
the incessant flow of visitors for the first month or so and the sudden drought
when you’ve just gotten your head around things and are gagging for some adult
company.
Let’s not forget the alarming rashes that appear on
your baby and the mysterious way they cry even when they’re clean, fed and
warm. But it’s not all doom and
gloom.
It may seem like a thankless job. There certainly won’t be cheques, but in time
you will receive countless spontaneous bear hugs and sloppy kisses. It may not be as good as money, but it’s a
whole lot nicer!