Tuesday 13 November 2012

Multitasking

Hey, been a while.

Multitasking is something that we women go on about, it's revered, a skill which is honed, and perfected by the modern woman. I sometimes fricking resent those suffragettes! I was cursing them a little this week...

We don't HAVE it all do we? We DO it all.

ANYWAY, by the by, this isn't a rant for the ladies. It's for any parent.
I watch the Duck sometimes and have to admire her lack of multitasking. If she is eating her dinner and I switch the TV on, she stops eating to gawp.  If she is walking and then decides to pick a flower, she has to stop. The legs stop working while she has to take this in.
If she has to put on her own trousers, there is no way she can talk, or remain composed. When stirring cake mixture she has to concentrate so hard that her brow nearly meets her chin, and she has been known to insist everything ever must stop so that she can have a poo. I've got to admire it.

Her dad and I, are totally different beings. While I cook dinner I am scanning my emails, filling the dishwasher, listening to the radio, thinking about work, compiling a mental to-do list and keeping an ear out for impending toddler doom. HE is reading a bedtime story, feeding the fish, folding the washing (good boy), turfing the cat out of the washing bin for the hundredth time and shouting at me to remember to get something out of the freezer for dinner tomorrow.

In the late evenings I hate to admit we sit in front of a film, internet surfing, xmas shopping, eating tea, holding hands intermittently (how sweet), checking reviews of tomorrow's film, googling THAT actor (who the hell is that?) and randomly discussing life.None of which we do efficiently. What happened? Who died? Oh but I already bought that! What's your name again?

I can't help but think toddlers have it so right. We should be concentrating on one thing at a time. It's so much better that way. If I am reading the Duck a story and totally immerse myself in it, regardless of the bloody mice being dragged in the back door, and the washing machine timer beep beep beeping, I can enjoy it so much more. And so does she. It's obvious but sooooooo hard to achieve.

It's the same with taking photos of everything. Maybe just experience it? The memory is good enough.

Maybe it's better NOT to multitask sometimes? Concentrate, be mindful, and all that hippy shit.

Wednesday 17 October 2012

Calling in Sick

You know when you have to call in sick and give an "official reason" even though your line manager knows you're ill and this is the third day in a row you've had to drag your sorry ass to the phone at early o'clock purely to say yes I'm still ill?
Well, it's stupid. And I resent it. So when I ring in tomorrow morning I'm thinking of giving the following reasons for my absence...

"I'm sorry I can't come in today because...

1. My dog ate my homework.
2. I have to go and buy a cabbage.
3. I'm worried I might shoot everybody.
4. I hate you guys.
5. Someone tied my shoelaces together.
6. I've got the farts.
7. The eggs are hatching!!
8. I won the lottery.
9. There's a gremlin in the staff room.
10. I forgot how to get there.
11. I'm dead.
12. My great aunt Fred has a hernia.
13. I'm going to a piano lesson.
14. A tree fell on me and I can't get it off.
15. I'm scared of ceilings.
16. I found a fly in my cornflakes.
17. My mate rang and said I REALLY need to go to the pub.
18. My cat fell over.
19. My fish has hiccups.
20. It's just not my bag (baby=optional)

Monday 24 September 2012

Rainy Day Play

UK people will know what I'm talking about when I say that today the weather changed quite dramatically. And I have a feeling that's it, we have puddles and cold for the foreseeable future.  From the Facebook statuses doing the rounds I can tell that most people have put their heating on already, have a september cold, and the hibernation eating has begun! Oh, is that just me?

ANYWAY, we're compiling a list of things to do with the Duck when the weather is shite, as despite loving our sofa we can get really antsy in our house if we're stuck in all day.


So, some rainy day plans we have so far:

  • Make a fort out of sofa cushions, pillows, blankets, etc. (my other half is really excited about this one)
  • Don all-in-one rainsuits and jump in muddy puddles
  • Go crazy with glitter and sequins and glue
  • Make xmas cards (tad early)
  • Make a photo album (the Duck loves telling us who everyone is)
  • Loads of cooking! I think Daph will like making pizzas...although she won't eat it...
  • making fancy hot chocolates with cream and sprinkles
  • play dough is genius, we could make some scented/ glittery versions
  • Buy some fabric pens and decorate t-shirts together
  • indoor fireworks (a bit far out)
  • potty training (no?)
  • Indoor picnic with obligatory teddies
  • Making our own skittles with empty pop bottles and then beating Dad at it 
  • Slinky races
  • Danceoffs
  • messy play with beans, pasta, jelly, cornflour, err.....
  • treasure hunt
  • Go to soft play centres
  • Pet shop visit (classic)
  • Supermarket bingo (you know when they have to find all the things on their card? I will be amazed if this actually works as currently the Duck screams as soon as she's in the door of Morrisons)
  • Going through a car wash (I used to love it okay?)
  • Making our own book
  • junk modelling
  • Having a random extra bathtime purely for play, add food colouring (tiny bit unless you want to look like the hulk), extra bubbles, foam, glitter, get the heating on, make it nice and warm and awesome.
  • Go to the swimming pool (considerably colder and yuckier)
  •  Cut up that pile of magazines and make a collage (and on the side a recipe file for mum)
  • Dig out all of mummy's necklaces and try them all on (this may have been unintentional)
OK that's a start...

Wednesday 15 August 2012

Graphic! Birth Story.

Well! I don't know who ON EARTH would want to read this, but I have to type it all out for my "Cognitive Behavioural Therapy", so I might as well put it here in case it makes anyone else feel better. Also it's probably cathartic and stuff, right? I have added extra comments for possible laughs.

Needless to say this is very personal, and graphic. Nobody will judge if you choose not to read.


Tuesday 11pm started having contractions, took myself off downstairs to watch all the Gossip Girl episodes I'd saved up to distract me. Didn't work. Put music and candles on. Didn't work. Tried to sleep. DEFINITELY didn't work. After a couple of hours woke hubby up and he cheered me on and I puffed and panted for a few hours. Rang for a midwife but none were available for our supposed "home birth", so decided to go in and get checked.

Wed 4-5am went to hosp, was checked, they said 3cm but baby was back
to back, and gave me gas&air for the pain. Chose to stay, that gas and air is nice.

7am-5pm Experienced older midwives took me to THE SUITE, it was like a hotel room. Hubby fell asleep on the double bed while me and the MWs chatted, drank tea and watched the Chilean miners on the news. We laughed and took the piss out of Ian. The ladies were lovely and laid back, and I was doing ok even though things were progressing slowly. They told me to hurry up!

5pm changeover of midwives, the new midwife was young, newly qualified and hard to
understand. Also had male student doctor attending with my permission, he was scarily gung ho. MW checked me and had gone back to 5cm.WHAT? This was really fucking annoying. I think her bedside manner had made me swallow my baby again.

Was in horrendous almost constant pain by now (don't know why?) and so exhausted. I couldn't see how I could survive 5 more centimetres, and begged for an epidural. Ian and the MW talked me out of it. Not knowing that the response to this should be a punch in the face, I accepted Pethidine instead.
It made me feel really dizzy and drunk, like I didn't have enough to deal with! MW wanted to burst
waters but this didn't do much except cause loads of pain.

6pm? contractions had become really painful and was so tired. No one
checked me but I was under impression I had ages to go. Begged for
epidural. They said I’d have to walk to another room for it. Had to walk down corridor to delivery room stopping every couple of yards to have contraction, bleeding on floor as I went,
yelling. MW clearly thought I was such a pain in the arse.
 
Once in the room the anaesthetist(?) said it was important to be totally still but I
couldn't as was writhing in pain, now believe was in transition. So here I am, desperate for pain relief but in too much pain to sit still, ooh what a quandary! 

Suddenly felt like pushing! MW said you're not ready yet, go and have a poo. Sat in toilet for ages pushing! Clearly it was not a poo. She said "don't push too hard, you can push a poo but don't push the baby".

Anyone who has had a baby, HOW THE FUUUUCCK IS THERE A DIFFERENCE???!!!

Anyway. That was nice. A room of people watching me try and not have a poo.

7pm? Finally got checked and was 10cm. (I fucking told you!) Urge to push had passed/ been
supressed, and I was exhausted. Tried to change position and push but
nothing seemed to be happening. Mw said they were worried about baby’s
heartbeat. (by the way this is bollocks, her heartbeat was slightly fast, as it fucking would be if you were being fucking born)
 In my ignorance/ desperation I agreed to episiotomy & forceps. Doctor came in and lots of
other medical people with various equipment filled room. Was put in
stirrups, really uncomfortable/ undignified and clothes all over the place. It really bugged me that my slippers had turned to be on top of my feet and I looked like a dick. Ahh the things you remember.

8.12pm Daphne born and marked as perfect, relieved and happy mum and dad! She never cried, was alert and looked us straight in the face. Most awesome moment of my life. And most fucking relieved.

The doctor had problems with placenta and not sure if he had to manually remove it. NICE.
 There was certainly a lot of tugging and squishing and  I bled a lot and there was a bit of panic about getting enough supplies to mop up!? Stupid prick of a doctor kept shouting at various staff for not having a particular size of swab or whatever. Was in stirrups for a LONG TIME and I couldn't feel my legs
any more. All hope of someone sorting my slippers out was totally gone. I swear I was there akimbo for about an hour while the doctor shouted at people and told me it shouldn't hurt anymore.
YOU'RE TELLING ME! I should have cried. The baby is out now, isn't it time you guys left me alone and fucked off? Apparently not, I had some gloriously slow student stitching up and god knows what shoved up my bum first.

Stayed 2 more nights in hosp due to bleeding etc, where I was mostly ignored as MWs thought it was my second baby. (that'll be my haggard good looks)
 Went home friday and had real tea and real hugs and a real baby to myself.

Hey, the graphic stuff  isn't over.

About a week later: passed large piece of placenta/membrane, went to GP who looked horrified that I should put it in a sandwich bag. What?? That's what we do with the midwives... From the other side of his office he asked what I wanted him to do about it. 
"I just wanted to know if I'm going to be ok, Doc"
The answer?
"Let's hope so."

Another week later: passed even larger piece of membrane, what the hell? Seriously it was like a hand. Nobody wants a hand coming out of them when they're knackered and trying to look after a newborn. Went to a different GP who booked me in for a hospital exam.

Another week later: Went to hospital for examination. Waited with labouring women on labour ward. Not the most fun time. Managed to finally get an exam and Dr and MW took out lots more membrane. I cried a bit, just didn't understand what was going on, and I wanted Ian and Daph.
 They were surprised by what they found, but said that must be all of it now and booked me an appointment for a scan.

At some point I gave up breastfeeding, there was work being done on the house and there were always people around, I was so tired and breastfeeding hurts! But they tell you it shouldn't hurt. Another lie. What's more, I was so stressed about this hospital stuff, was this normal? Everywhere I looked on the internet it was bad news.. it didn't even exist in humans... but it's ok, in cows, they tend to just die. HEARTENING.

A week later: Went for scan and they had no record of me. Went to various departments trying to find someone who gave a shit. 
Found the shit Dr who delivered Daph, he gruffly told me to “go home and be with my baby”. Left and cried. Then went back to demand my notes.
The Dr took me into a side room and said I should have asked before, I should have said I was upset. Such a penis. I said I’d been promised a scan, so he did a brief one and said there’s no point as you wouldn’t be able to see anything. Said a load of terminology he knew I wouldn't understand. Prick. Before leaving I asked to be referred to gynecology.

2 weeks later: Went to gynecology ward. Female doctor examined me and said there was no doubt I had an infection. Had a scan. They insisted I have a D&C the following day, due to LOADS OF FUCKING SHIT AND AN INFECTION IN MY WOMB. 

Heavy bleeding for another 6 weeks, weeping/ clots on and off for 3 months, various humiliating trips to Gp/ Gynae til I couldn't take it any more! Oh I forgot, there was an infected episiotomy and some kind of prolapse along the way too, they were nothing though really.

A couple of months later my 3 best friends of 10 years said I wasn’t coping well, and they didn’t want to see me ever again.

ANYWAY, good things can come out of bad things, and the best thing that has ever happened to me is my hilarious daughter Daphne. Just one look at her makes me so proud and happy. Motherhood is NOT a bed of roses, and whether I ever try it again is very doubtful, but having a child in your life is eye-opening. She is definitely my reason to live.

 


Wednesday 25 July 2012

It's just a tantrum

OK I think I may be coming out of my mental breakdown situation. Just in time for the Duck to enter the mother of all "DIFFICULT" phases... when I say difficult, I mean, she has gone insane. Where did my baby go?
When people in shops get annoyed, the ever-doting grandparents are mildly shocked, or daddy considers leaving, I will blame the insanity of the child on teething, the weather, or her attempting to assert her independence. What we all know, though, is that she's plotting to kill us all.

Yesterday we went to the supermarket. Sounds easy, except if you have reached THAT STAGE with a toddler. Fricking tears, tantrums and throwing things before we even got in the car. The 5 MINUTE journey was pure "I want my dummy I want my dummy I want my dummy", her dummy was in her hand, but this is of no consequence to an irrational short arse.
The Duck LOVES going in the trolley, she looks at everything and reads everything and charms passers by. OH NO. That was before. Now getting her to sit in the seat is like playing one of those wire buzzer games, you have to deftly lower her in while distracting and looking enthusiastic, all the time avoiding her feet coming into contact with any surface.... because once they touch that surface... BUUUZZZZZZ!! A kick sends the trolley flying, another hits you in the face, she screams as if being murdered and goes burgundy.

I DON'T UNDERSTAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAND!

OK, I tell myself. I'm a teacher, I do this all the time, kinda.  I put my best "neutral" face on. You know, the "I don't give a shit one way or the other MoFo", and calmly explain to her that she has two choices (it works in all the books). I'm trying.

She tells me to go fuck myself.
We fight for a little bit.

Mummy decides (it was totally MY decision ok) to let the Duck walk alongside the trolley holding onto it. In no way did I suggest that if she knocked over a pile of tins and got buried in beans she would deserve it.

And do you know what? She was fine. Perfectly behaved and gorgeous. She's growing up, getting independent, and I need to let her.

Monday 9 July 2012

Positive?


OK Nic, you feel like a complete failure in every part of your life right now. Yup, really feeling sorry for yourself huh? However, I’m changing the record! 
Yes, you feel like an ugly, fat cow, an unappreciated, shite teacher, a slovenly housewife,  a TERRIBLE mother, an unsociable, insecure person incapable of holding on to friendship, and you are insanely negative at the moment. Just in case you didn’t catch that.

HOWEVER. In my attempt to change the record, I am going to tell you how awesome you are.
10 ways in which you are awesome. You may not believe them but I am trying to convince you. Lovely husband’s idea.

1.       You have really good taste in husbands. I mean husband.
2.       You made a really pretty, intelligent baby. With said husband. Bonus.
3.       You are creative, you can make something out of nothing. You get funny looks, but it’s fine.
4.       You can see the beauty in simple things.
5.       You don’t need much money to get by. I think they call that resourceful. Or being a stingy bastard.
6.       When you’re comfortable with people, you can be quite funny, honest.
7.       You’re trying to follow a dream, and it keeps you going. You ignore people who think dreams never happen.
8.       You can make choices which others disagree with, and succeed.
9.       You’re not ENTIRELY ugly, I think your toes are quite nice, and sometimes your eyes look ok.
10.   You’re sympathetic and trusting. Perhaps too much, but this is supposed to be positive, so yes you’re AWESOME!

Hmmmm. Not sure how convincing that was, but keep trying. AWESOME!

Saturday 16 June 2012

Je suis MENTAL


Confession time. I’ve been harbouring a deep, dark and embarrassing secret. I think it’s a secret, although it could be plainly obvious for all I know.

Ever since my wee Duck was born, I’ve had post traumatic stress. WHAT? That’s right, no wars have I fought in, no car crashes have I suffered, nothing even close to “trauma” as far as I’m concerned. It’s ridiculous. 

What is not so ridiculous is the reliance on medication, pathetic fear of totally ordinary situations, avoidance of friends and the sporadic bouts of anger and sobbing. Not so funny. And quite embarrassing actually. And now the Duck is nearing two, I thought I’d better do something about it. So I am. 

Younger Nic, I wish you’d dealt with this earlier, but I can see why you couldn’t.  The thing is, the longer you let it go on, the more your happiness will dwindle, your holidays will be ruined, your relationships will suffer, your work will be marred, and your future will be decidedly wobbly.

My advice is to fess up to all of your pregnant/trying to be pregnant friends why you’re avoiding them, or why you’re short with them. And to not be so hard on yourself when you burst into tears at the news of a birth, when you shudder  then shout at your husband when driving past a hospital, and when you fiercely defend your choice to have an only child to well-meaning passers by.  

Then, enlist more help. The medication is all very well, but when that runs out you’re a fricking headcase!! Let’s try CBT. And a bit of honesty.

That. And find that bastard of an obstetrician and beat his head in with a shovel.

Friday 18 May 2012

When they're sick

You would do anything to make them not sick.
I am lucky to have a generally healthy and hardy little girl, I like to think because I keep my house so dirty, she has a good immune system (you believe me, right?) She has hardly ever been ill, and even then it's something totally random like she rubbed playdough into her eye and got conjuctivitis.

This time I couldn't recognise what was wrong with her, and it is SO scary. Her personality totally changed, she was clingy instead of independent, lethargic instead of bouncing off the walls. Instead of eating us out of house and home, she refused everything, and her round little belly disappeared. We couldn't make her warm enough, we couldn't make her cool enough. She wouldn't drink, she wouldn't take any medicine. She cried. A lot. Like continuously through the night. And she doesn't really cry. She just wanted to be hugged and hugged, and to sob. And then she came out in a rash from head to toe which had me wondering whether to dial 999.

Fricking scary.

It was only a virus. Jesus, I haven't slept properly for about a month. I need to go on that 10 Years Younger program.

ANYWAY, I'm meant to be informing you, younger Nic, and teaching you about mummyhood. I don't think anyone would react any other way to be honest, maybe now I'll be slightly less scared of a rash, but I doubt it will ever stop being heart-stoppingly worrying. She's my one and only little speckled egg, and thank goodness she's back to crayoning the furniture and spitting her milk across the room... (seriously, I am loving it...for the moment).


Not my kid ^^

So yeah, a few thoughts:
  • There WILL be a way to get the medicine in, DON'T panic.
  • Don't wait, phone the doc/ hosp
  • If they want to hug, it's probably a good sign.
  • Get lots of fluids in.
  • Be aware of temperatures/ clothing etc.
  • Trust your instincts.
  • Ask friends, I think I truly annoyed mine, but other mums do know a lot.
  • It WILL pass.
  • Love them lots.
I really hated this. Obviously. But I can't imagine what it must be like to have a properly ill child. One for whom any little cough can be life threatening. Or any change in temperature could cause a seizure. I can't even comprehend how parents cope when their child has a serious disease. And how do people manage in places without access to drugs and water, even for the minor ailments?

It's not a novel thought, but every now and then something happens which makes you very GRATEFUL, and very AWARE. And maybe a little bit guilty.

Whoa. All a bit serious for the Nicster. But that's the kinda mood I'm in! My mate is doing a sponsored swim for kids, here is her link https://www.justgiving.com/beccahwheeler so I'm just off to sponsor her, and then I'm going to pay http://www.gosh.org/gen/donate/dm-landing-pages/special-1/ a little visit too.
It would be cool if anyone reading this could do the same. I'm really not a preachy person though, so if you'd rather spend it on a new pair of selfish mean horrid shoes, then be my guest ;)

No matter how broke we think we are (right now we consider being in our overdraft to be a nightmare) sometimes it's just worth it. Be well, kids! x

Saturday 31 March 2012

What I'm learning from Peppa Pig

I was watching an episode of Peppa Pig with the Duck today, as you do.  It's actually the ONLY thing that will calm her down when she is crying hysterically, or puking... I remember not long ago being absolutely drenched  in sick, boiling hot child in my arms, but being so content that Peppa was on and the wailing had stopped.

Anyway, in this particular scene, Mummy Pig was working on the computer at home, and the kids came and harassed her, making the computer crash. Mummy Pig called Daddy Pig to fix the computer, and while she was downstairs making the dinner, Daddy Pig turned it off and on again then started playing games on it.

Can you see where I'm going with this?

I like Peppa Pig because it's realistic. There is some acceptance of mummies having to work, but Daddies still being the technical whizzes (!) or just calming the emotional dear down, and mummies still doing the domestic stuff, even though they have to do other non-domestic stuff... and also Peppa and George are REALLY quite annoying kids, which is also quite realistic. Little kids DO ask annoying questions, and DO cry over spilt milk, and DO tell it like it is (you have a fat belly Daddy Pig).

Bless him, Daddy Pig is never going to remember everything needed for a simple trip out with George, and Mummy Pig is never going to go up in the loft, but somehow it works.

I get the feeling that Peppa is going to be a shocking teenager, drunk, on the town with Susie Sheep at 13, and something tells me that George is going to be an emotional wreck, I imagine him as Ross from Friends, the paleontologist with domineering girlfriends. Perhaps my train of thought wanders a bit when I'm "watching tv" with the little 'un.

But hey, as long as we all fall over laughing at the end, it'll all be ok right?And we do that A LOT. :)

Thursday 8 March 2012

What annoys me is...

Ah the blog. When Facebook isn't enough.
What annoys me:

1. People who think being loud and gregarious makes you interesting.
2. People who think they are better than other people.
3. Pointless rules.
4. Time wastage.
5. Arse-licking.
6. Not saying sorry when you put someone else out.
7. Really bad spelling. A tyre puncher. REALLY???
8. exclusion in an inclusion zone.
9. People being martyrs.
10. Assuming. It makes an ASS mostly out of you.
11. Lack of listening skills.
12. Talking over people.
13. Thinking you're always right ( clearly I am)
14. People who believe everything they hear/ read.
15. People who give advice when it wasn't asked for ( oh shit I'm covering a lot of myself here) but specifically regarding child rearing.
16. Judgemental assholes.
17. Comments about weight.
18. Schools (and perhaps others) doing things purely for the money.
19. people "trying for a baby". Can you just keep that to yourself maybe? Ditto with being on your period, having a semi, needing a fart.
20. Slackers. If you want an easy life, go on the dole.

Monday 27 February 2012

Pregnancy myths

I am no expert, I just have a reasonably sane head on my shoulders and the ability to question.
I hate talking about pregnancy, but the number of silly rules is making me say, Nic, pay no attention! It is possible for a woman to go through all 10 months (yes) without knowing she is expecting, and therefore not heeding any "advice".

Check it out for yourself, but you will find:

You can eat pretty much anything you would normally eat ( seafood, sushi, eggs, peanuts...). Unless you're a die-hard tuna fan or cheese rind addict you really should be fine!

You can sleep any way you can, even on your (gasp) back.

You can drink alcohol.

You can drink tea and coffee.

You can exercise.

You can dye your hair.

You can travel in a plane.

You can't do anything to avoid stretchmarks, you either get them or you don't.

There is only a 5% chance your baby will be born on the due date. Not really a myth, but ignore the due date. French pregnancies are 42 weeks. It'll come out when it's ready.

The one myth I think could be disputed as true is the whole "eating for two" thing. Heck, you've got to have SOME fun!! Go get some cake and chill the hell out.


Thursday 2 February 2012

So, when are you having the next one?

It’s not a contest people.  Just because you have one doesn’t mean you have to keep going.

Let’s see how many people I can offend here… I will try not to judge (despite being an opinionated bitch) as I hope people try not to judge me. Ah who are we kidding, we all think we’re the best one.

Anyway, this post is inspired by those people who ask
“When are you having the next baby?”, “Oh you can’t have just one!”, “Oh you’ll be popping another one out soon”, “Are you pregnant again?”
JESUS H. CHRIST.

And this is just people on the street, or in the supermarket queue! People who don’t know me at all, and, if I’m honest, they’re giving a really stooopid appearance, a narrow view.  Because people who DO know me, know that having a baby was quite a fucking big deal, and “popping another one out” without a great deal of consideration just ain’t gonna happen.  I like to think people give it a bit more thought than that, that it’s not just “completing the family” or “so he has someone to play with”.  My family will be complete whatever it looks like, just like if we had never had kids, my husband and I are still family. Family is much bigger than kids.

Don’t get me wrong, I love children, I work with shitloads of them for god’s sake, BUT I believe they NEED a lot. They need all you can give. They are HARD WORK. And if you meet someone who thinks having kids is easy, can you send me their address please so I can shoot them in the face.

SORRY I’M A LITTLE BIT TETCHY AS I FEEL LIKE SHIT AND HAVE NOT SLEPT PROPERLY FOR APPROXIMATELY 4 DAYS. (disclaimer:this means nothing if you have a kid under 6mths)

Ahem. Anyway, I would actually love more, but I’m a realist. Unless it is acceptable to keep a baby in a wardrobe we actually have no room.  “What are bunk beds for?” people say… But I don’t want my kids to be squashed into a teeny house and not have room to be able to have friends to play! And people say you can move house, but not without a lot of debt, and I don’t want to be so stressed about money that I can’t get my kid a Peppa Pig magazine when she’s sick. I like those little extras. If she had an annoying little brother he’d be whining “what about meeeeeee?” and I’d have to cough up for a “Chuggington” comic as well and there’s nearly a tenner gone just with a few sniffles….

It’s not really about money.  But it is a bit.  I know you just cope when you have to.  But we’re a bit different, my bloke and I, and the thought of inter-railing through Europe with the Duck, showing her the randomness of life, is much more exciting to us than the thought of another sleepless year with a cute wee yoda. (this will never happen by the way, but we can dream)

Someone once said “Having two kids isn’t twice as hard, it’s three times as hard.”

I agree that siblings are good for kids, I wouldn’t change my childhood (or adulthood) with two sisters for the world, fucking hell we had so much fun!  But two very close friends of mine who were “only” also had AWESOME childhoods, they were/are not at all spoilt, in fact they are the most generous people I’ve ever met, and I think the view that only children are worse off is really outdated. 

I didn’t mean for this to be a rant, I’m just constantly surprised at how narrow-minded or assuming people are. And the continual assumption that I will soon be up the duff again, is nuts!  I ain’t sayin’ we’re not going to have any more, I just think it’s clearly a personal choice, everyone feels differently, and a LOT of thought should go into it. What have you got to offer another child? Who are you doing it for? Why? (e.g. I may be broody sometimes, or miss my bump, but that would be for me, what is the baby gaining in this situation?)
But you could say that about any baby.  And there’s a lotta babies born without much planning involved (I’m trying not to be hypocritical).

It’s the same when people get married, you shouldn’t talk about how now they can start a family, blah blah blah… how old-fashioned and narrow-minded is that? God I really hate tradition sometimes! And whenever I go to a wedding and it’s all about the future with kids, I cringe and can’t help but think you’re setting yourself up for a big old fall in the real world buddy.  Does no one realise anymore that kids don’t just “happen”?  I have never used the phrase “when I have children” (apart from maybe when I was 6) because I realise that it’s not a given.  It’s really bloody not.  It’s not something you can work at, or buy your way into, or pray for.  So many things can happen before a child is out there. It’s scary, but true.  And I’m talking even way back to your own childhood, to that first date, to your own health, who the hell knows.  You can’t take it for granted that you will have children. I am so grateful for my one, I didn’t dare believe it until she was born and marked out of ten and firmly in my arms.  I sure as hell ain’t counting on being lucky enough to have another one.

If we don’t have any more kids, and the Duck grows up to be spoilt, lonely and self-centred, I will consider myself to have done a bad parenting job.  It could happen.  But it could, and has, happened to kids with one or more siblings too.  At the various schools/ homes I have worked at, I must admit I have sometimes thought “why on earth do these people keep having kids?” but they must have their reasons, and it’s really not my business.

This article
 is American and a bit old really, but discusses the myth of the “only child”, and raises the religious aspect of reproducing… Also outdated in my mind… but then I’m not religious.  And I find it MENTAL that people  in this day and age insist on a traditional wedding in a church and only have children after marriage (but sex before marriage is fine I notice) EVEN THOUGH they aren’t religious, and don’t uphold (stupid) religious values. It’s really quite weird, and so old fashioned.  You do also realise you don’t have to wear a white dress or wear a ring, right?  By the way I’ve been called a hippy before. Can you hear yourself?!

I think I’m mostly a bit of a plonker, but I’m quite an open-minded plonker, I want to learn more so I’m not so ignorant.  I wish other people did.


Anyway, I ain’t judging (too much), and perhaps this involves a smidge of jealousy, as we can’t do anymore reproducing, because having another baby would make our lives very difficult, whereas lots of people can just go and do it.
But to make myself feel better, and back up a less-common view, here are some pros to one child-ness, even if it’s only for a few years!

1)      Holidays should be easier
2)      A small car is plausible
3)      Lots of attention
4)      Their own room
5)      More leeway with pets because of parental guilt
6)      Same as above with gifts, food, love…
7)      Less arguments
8)      Less childcare costs/ hassles
9)      Easier to get babysitter
10   Peppa Pig magazines
11   Single buggy
12   More sleep
13   If you think about it, your partner could be viewed as another child?
14   No favourites
15   No hair pulling
16   Less presents to buy at Christmas

OK I’m losing the plot now, and realise I have contradicted myself, and made silly points, and am generally probably as narrow-minded as everyone else, but hey
We’re all a widdle bit lacist. (Avenue Q?)

I also blame the (prescribed) drugs.

And also it’s my blog and I’m queen of the WORLD.


Sunday 29 January 2012

Dear Nic,

I'm so proud of you.
It has taken a while but now I'm older and a tiny bit wiser, I can say that if you were a friend of mine I would give you the biggest hug and let you know that you have done amazingly.
You were up against it when that little 'un was born, you got so ill and feared for your life, and doctors you should have been able to trust totally screwed you over. You were a perfect mother to your newborn despite the chaos in your own body. Friends couldn't understand, and they left. You were so sad, and so lonely, but you never let your baby see it, and she is the happiest thing anyone has ever met. You pushed yourself to try new things, meet new people, and make your life happy again. You realised that you have to be kind to yourself.
Never worry about treating yourself and doing things you love.

You are happy! And I am so proud of you. x

Tuesday 3 January 2012

Now we are One

Soooooo predictable.  You didn’t really think I’d be able to keep a blog up as well as a baby, a job and the run up to Christmas did you? Yes, yes, I failed.  But I’m getting used to that, and it ain’t gonna stop me.
The end of 2011 saw me trying hard to keep up with life, I started customising T-shirts and babygros like crazy, in any time I wasn’t at work and the Duck was reading her endless books, but for all the toil I got tonsillitis and couldn’t do my Christmas craft stalls! Booooo…. 

So now I HAVE to set up a proper website in order to sell the piles of clothes I have in the garage which are driving my husband INSANE. He loves his garage, and believes it should only contain useful, manly things like a lawnmower which never sees the light of day, or gardening tools which we have NO DESIRE WHATSOEVER to EVER EVER use. Seriously, we are terrible at that grown-up green-fingered thing.  The garden constantly looks like an abandoned bomb shelter, and any flowers or plants die within minutes.  They do, I swear they see the abyss they have entered and just give up.

Anyway, I have plans for 2012, so watch out.  A new website to hopefully actually sell some stuff,  some kind of fun exercise, more socialising now the Duck is waddling, more cooking from proper ingredients, and generally having an awesome year. Oh and lots of weddings coming up too! WOOP!

Now, back to the Duck.  She is one! She walks! She talks! (kinda)
What an amazing year that was, that little bundle has grown into a funny, happy and NUTS little toddler.  We are so proud of her, and I must tell you this Dear younger Nic, the hard work is so worth it.  There is no doubt in my mind that the first year is the hardest thing you'll ever do in your life, but it is all over so quickly and before you know it you’re crying into those tiny babygros which you kind of want to donate to your pregnant friends and kind of want to keep under your pillow to sniff forever…

Judging by how much fun this little family has had lately, my husband and I are MUCH more toddler people.  Same wavelength perhaps.  And now she has her own little interests which we try to encourage, and she learns so quickly that we just can’t keep up.  There is so much we want her to see and know.

That all sounds quite positive right?  Ahh what I’m not telling you is that the Duck has learnt to tip milk all over our already skank carpet at every opportunity, post various things into various places (don’t even start me) and react to the word “No” with what I can only describe as her mother’s inexplicable resentment of authority.   
It does raise a smirk when she shakes her head noooooo and carries on hitting the cat, only harder, though.