I knew the job in hand was going to prove challenging. Everyone said so and everyone can’t be wrong. I knew kids needed some form of looking after; you know, feeding and the like and in turn a certain degree of responsibility was necessary for the position. You couldn’t go into this half-cocked; a teeny tiny person was completely dependent on you. For everything. You needed to think for them, be there for them, provide for them and on occasion, decide stuff. Important stuff. At times life altering stuff.
This was going to be hard.
But it wasn’t all doom and gloom surely. After all, people were still having children
like they were going out of fashion and if they could grow a baby, give birth
and make it through the first year relatively unscathed, there was hope for me.
I like to think I’ve done a good job. Of sorts. I also like to think that if someone ganged
up on any one of my kids or had a go at me my boys would stop them in their
tracks with a firm, “she’s the best mammy in the world.”
But of course you are never quite prepared. No-one is.
There is always something waiting to trip you up.
Here are my I-never-thought-of-that moments.
The expense
The first six months were easy. I needed to buy a few baby-gro’s and lots of
nappies and after that it was all free(ish).
But then along came the first pair of shoes. That hasn’t stopped. Kids will get sick. Even healthy ones will need a visit to the GP
and some magic medicine. Breastfeeding rocks but solid food has to be
introduced at some time. After years of
wishing they would eat something, anything,
mine have hit the bottomless pit stage.
It’s. Never. Ending. School
happens next with all of the books, shoes, runners and uniforms. Birthday parties, theirs and others. Will I leave college for another day? Ok then.
All of the opinions
Everyone has something to say. Especially if you do something a little
differently. Sometimes people are just
in bad form and they take that out on you but their comments can hit where it
hurts most; how you raise your kids.
It’s crap and it can come out of nowhere and leave you reeling.
The dirt
Someone smart/funny/drunk once said cleaning your house when
you’ve got kids is like brushing your teeth when you’re eating cookies. I
could spend all of the day cleaning up after my kids and I would still come
into the kitchen the following morning to find twenty-five cups and fourteen
plates in the sink. How? Just how?
Disappearing objects
I put down a pen, a cup, a half-eaten biscuit or a book,
return a few seconds later to find it gone.
No-one saw it. No-one took it and
no-one knows where it is.
School stuff
Major head wreck ahead.
Which school should they go to?
(Hint – pick the nearest. Traffic
will break you!) Then you’ve got age to
contend with. Is your Spring baby too young
to go at four and a half or is waiting a year for your winter one putting them
too old at five and a half? (answer -
wait. Five and a half is good. It’s very good.) From
after school activities to playdates.
From homework to school runs.
Bullying and sick days. From not
believing them when they say they’re sick to getting that phone call at 11.30am
to say you need to come get them. Home-schooling
seems pretty attractive from where I’m standing.
Recently someone caught me by the hand to tell me how big
the boys have gotten. They received my
stock response; “I know! It’s great!”
and it is great. I made to move on
because this person is adulting teenagers at the moment and I knew what was
coming and I really, really didn’t want my bubble burst. He kept a firm grip on my hand and beckoned
me closer.
I did it. I really
did.
I leaned in.
“Wait till they’re teenagers.”
POP!
And there’s the rub.
Stay tuned because by all accounts there is more to come.
When I saw your paragraph title 'The dirt' I thought it might actually be about my children, in particular the youngest, I think we could give yours a run for their money there!!!! Enjoyed this thoroughly, best wishes for 2016!
ReplyDelete