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  One morning, I woke up, and I had twins. Herein you will find our stories, trials, tribulations and lessons learned. Places you can go and thin...
 
 
 
 

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Parents - Do You

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It's 7 a.m.; your newborn is crying.  Time for a morning feed, then you may as well get up for the day.  Struggle to get the pot on the boil, rub your eyes, and start getting breakfast ready.

It's 7 a.m.; your alarm goes off, blasting you out of bed.  It's just as well; you heard your baby stirring anyway.  Stumble into the nursery, change baby and get him milk, toss on your business wear, kiss baby goodbye, brush your hair in the car, and get to work 10 minutes late, anyway.

It's 7 a.m.; your kids are playing downstairs.  Now they're fighting.  Time to get up.  Race downstairs, break up the fight, change and feed them, start preparing for the day, make breakfasts and lunches, fold the laundry, look at the clock and wonder how it's noon already.

It's a hard job to be a parent.  These are just the three scenarios I've lived through.  Single mothers have a different and even more difficulat morning struggle, while families with two working partners also have to get the kids to daycare before getting themselves to work (I assume 10 minutes late, as well.)

In all this hustle and bustle, preparation and execution, it's easy to lose yourself.  It's more important, after all, to feed the kids and tidy the living room a bit than to shower.  You can always shower later.  You can always get dressed later.  You could even put on jewelry or fashionable jeans, but would it even matter?  Who cares if you are a hot mess, right?

When I first became a stay at home mom, I made a few promises to myself.  I would get dressed everyday.  I would get the babies out of the house at least once a day.  I would clean at least a room a day.  For the most part, I've made good on these promises. (I fully admit, the cleaning sometimes takes a hit.)  But I should have been more specific.  My attire frequently consists of sweatpants and a t-shirt.  Our outings sometimes take us only as far as the garbage cans in the back of the complex.  And sometimes it's all I can do to get the dishes in the dishwasher.  Maybe these aren't your priorities.  There are many mothers who feel complete in sweats and like playing inside with the kids.  Maybe, though, they'd like to exercise more than they get to.  Maybe they'd like to read a book.  But it seems so selfish to take that time for yourself, no matter what the activity.  There are other, more important, things to be done.

So that it doesn't seem like a big deal to skip the shower - or the sit ups, or the next chapter - at the time, but little by little the lack of you in your life will take a toll.  You slowly begin to feel not good enough.  You could be perfect and just not feel good enough.

As a good friend of mine said, "Everybody has these thoughts.  Mine usually go like this: "I should shower. I should put clothes on, but who would notice. It doesn't matter. I don't matter."

And that's the key right there.  It's a short jump from it doesn't matter to I don't matter.  And you do matter.  Most importantly, you are the rock on which your children will build their lives, but you are also so much more.  If you feel like you don't matter, even subconsciously, your kids will pick up on that.  So even if you can't pick yourself up for you, try to do it for your kids.  It seems like taking time for yourself would be detrimental to them, but, really, anything that helps you, helps them in the long run.

You need to take the time.  It doesn't have to be a dramatic change.  Keeping a piece of yourself day by day will take only a few minutes.  You don't have to take an hour and read an entire book.  You don't have to take a luxurious bath.  You don't need to meticulously make yourself up.  You don't need to do a full 90-minute workout at the gym.  Remember, in time, you will get these things back.  Babies are not babies forever.

For now, though, compromise.  Take a moment to match your top to your skirt, if that's what matters to you.  Read a few pages after you put the kids down for a nap, or, if you work, after you put them to bed for the night.  Do kid-friendly exercising if that's your thing.  I'm told babies love yoga workouts and obstacle

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parentwin 5 pts

Thank you, Patty.

You have no idea how much your comment means to me.

Nobody wants to be Ethel 5 pts

I remember my parents came to visit, the kids had been sick and all the bathrooms were filthy. I was so tired and probably slightly depressed, I didn't care. I remember my mother washing my windows to help out. Of course, she always washed my windows when she came to visit... The last time she came to visit she polished the silver.

I also remember when my husband was out of the country for 6 weeks. I was mowing the lawn while they were at a neighbor's house and folding clothes at 2:00 am. Then the oldest got the chicken pox and the fun began!!! Luckily, my mother in law came out just when the youngest started breaking out.

But you are right...I taught myself yoga from pictures in a book to exercise and relax to go to sleep and boy that shower was a life saver and helped me realize that I could make it through.
Thanks for your blog
Patty

parentwin 5 pts

Blogging helps. There are some for which being a sahm is their dream, their perfect lifestyle. That's not necessarily me. I have the option of going back to work, and I'm going to pass for the time being because I love my time with my kids, but that doesn't mean I'm cut out for it or good at it. We all try just the best we can, don't we?

http://parentwin.blogspot.com/

Karinya @ Unlikely Origins 5 pts

Oh, man. I'm with you.

I'm a WAHM and so, for now, I get at least a little bit of non-child-centered adult time most days thanks to part-time daycare and a supportive partner, but ...

our goal is to someday skip that daycare and make me a SAHM. I'm excited in most ways, but things like this makes me nervous. Do you find that blogging/connecting with others this way makes the lifestyle easier and keeps you in the "adult" world a bit more?

blogging with love at Unlikely Origins: How a Computer Geek, a Writer, and an Opinionated Toddler Form a Family. ( http://unlikelyorigins.blogspot.com/ )

theoutcast 5 pts

I related to much to your posts and the sentiments around your kids. Lovely!

I'm glad I'm not the only Mom who saves water by skipping a shower every once and while.

Heather blogs about Motherhood & Other Offensive Situations at http://www.ultimateoutcasts.com.

parentwin 5 pts

Thank you for your kind comments on my posts! I, too, have gone for almost a week without a shower at certain points, and my house was perfectly warm...

And as far as the haircut story goes... I've never witnessed anything like that in my life. It's sad to have confirmation that every hairy-eye I think I'm getting... I probably am. But, like I said, those people judging, they must not know.

My actual blog (although you can read all its content here) is at http://parentwin.blogspot.com/

theoutcast 5 pts

Oh how we can all relate. Your advice is wonderful. Moms of multiples are superhuman. Seriously, I'm convinced. I only had a singleton.

Confession: I once went 7 full days without a shower when my baby was little. Seven! We lived in a very cold house at the time. I'm hoping that tiny factor makes skipping a shower for a week more acceptable. Oh yeah, and I was tired too....

Heather blogs about Motherhood & Other Offensive Situations at http://www.ultimateoutcasts.com.