Girls Just Wanna Have Sleep

11:45 p.m.
Turn off light. Drift to sleep to sound of husband’s snores.

12:20 a.m.
Wake to husband’s voice, “Dear! I think I hear TwinBoyB throwing up!” Stumble around, find robe, trudge downstairs to find TwinBoyB crying in his bed. He tells me he vomited in the toilet and “Mom, I don’t want to have the stomach virus again!” I assure him he’s not going to be that sick and say with a distinct lack of compassion, “Now, please don’t wake up the whole house! If you are sick, go to the bathroom. Otherwise, sleep!”

1:00 a.m.
Finally return to dreamland.

3:20 a.m.
Realize I am awake and hearing Babygirl’s pitiful cries, “Mom! Mom!” I snatch the robe and weave my way to her room, where I smell the stink of a full diaper. This can only mean the attack of the stomach virus continues. I change her and we sit and watch her favorite video together (“Shrek”) for twenty minutes. Then I return her to bed. I also check on TwinBoyB. He is peacefully sleeping.

5:06 a.m.
I wake from a terrible dream in which our family was in Chicago. Babygirl began bleeding from all orifices and I was about to rush her to the dream world emergency room, when I realize she’s calling me again. She was awake for the day.

I changed her again, gave her a drink, turned on the video and tried to doze in the chair. Every ten minutes she woke me to attempt to use the potty.

7:00 a.m.
We headed downstairs. The day officially began. Who needs sleep anyway?

Friday Night At the Movies

I don’t recommend going to a movie on a Friday night at 7:00 p.m., mainly because everyone else in town goes to movies on Friday night at 7:00 p.m. I prefer Tuesday nights, which is when I’ll have to see “Million Dollar Baby” or “Hotel Rawanda,” which were my first choice movies for tonight. Instead, I saw “Hitch,” which was passably amusing. I am trying to see all the movies nominated for “Best Picture.” I still have three to go before February 27.

I noticed three teenagers at the movie theater tonight wearing flip-flops, ankle bracelets and capri pants. Spring has sprung, apparently, even though I didn’t get the memo and wore my fleece pull-over and sneakers to the movies. The crocuses might be in full bloom, but frost covers the grass each morning lately. (I did notice that blossoms are about to burst forth on the trees, however–but I’m still not baring my ankles in public quite yet.)

I have to say I am now obsessed with checking out the web-cam in Hawaii (link a few posts down). Just in case you were wondering.

All my kids have some kind of low-grade virus–headaches, upset tummies. Nothing serious–just cranky kids. Babygirl was better today than yesterday, though, so I think she’ll be completely well tomorrow. She asked to go to bed tonight at 7:30 p.m. I highly recommend having your challenging kids first and then wrapping up your parenting with an easy, compliant child.

Yesterday, I had a grand total of nine children in my house at one time. And I wasn’t throwing a party, either! I was babysitting three, two were neighbors and four were my own. The six boys played in the backyard. They set up forts and grabbed sticks for swords and Nerf guns with no ammunition and whooped and hollered and squinted in the sunshine and shivered in the shade.

Spring is good. Even if we can’t figure out whether flip-flops or fleece is appropriate. Maybe flip-flops and fleece? Maybe flip-flops made from fleece?

Mommy Madness?

The cover of Newsweek caught my eye this week while I waited in line to pay for my ice cream groceries. I paged through it because I noticed Anna Quindlen’s name on the cover and almost added the meager, glossy pages to my cart, but then I saw the price ($4.95), which is about $2.95 more than I will spend for ephemera. Fortunately for me, I found the articles on-line. Here is the article in its entirety. My comments are added in red.

Mommy Madness
What happened when the Girls Who Had It All became mothers? A new book explores why this generation feels so insane
I don’t feel insane and frankly, I never had it all, but this is my generation.
By Judith Warner
Newsweek

Feb. 21 issue – Back in the days when I was a Good Mommy, I tried to do everything right. I breast-fed and co-slept, and responded to each and every cry with anxious alacrity. I awoke with my daughter at 6:30 AM and, eschewing TV, curled up on the couch with a stack of books that I could recite in my sleep. I did this, in fact, many times, jerking myself back awake as the clock rounded 6:45 and the words of Curious George started to merge with my dreams.
Sounds like someone has unrealistic expectations of herself and of motherhood.

Was I crazy? No?I was a committed mother, eager to do right by my child and well-versed in the child care teachings of the day. I was proud of the fact that I could get in three full hours of high-intensity parenting before I left for work; prouder still that, when I came home in the evening, I could count on at least three more similarly intense hours to follow. It didn’t matter that, in my day job as a stringer for this magazine, I was often falling asleep at my desk. Nor that I’d lost the ability to write a coherent sentence. My brain might have been fried, but my baby’s was thriving. I’d seen the proof of that everywhere?in the newsweeklies and the New York Times, on TV, even in the official statements that issued forth from the White House, where First Lady Hillary Clinton herself had endorsed “singing, playing games, reading, storytelling, just talking and listening” as the best ways to enhance a child’s development.
Those things come naturally to a mother who is with her child. What’s the big deal?

All around me, the expert advice on baby care, whether it came from the What to Expect books or the legions of “specialists” hawking videos, computer software, smart baby toys or audiotapes to advance brain development, was unanimous: Read! Talk! Sing! And so I talked and I read and I sang and made up stories and did funny voices and narrated car rides … until one day, when my daughter was about four, I realized that I had turned into a human television set, so filled with 24-hour children’s programming that I had no thoughts left of my own.
How’s that possible if you were going to work all day? And didn’t anyone ever tell you that you can read while your child is otherwise occupied?

And when I started listening to the sounds of the Mommy chatter all around me in the playgrounds and playgroups of Washington, D.C.?the shouts of “Good job!,” the interventions and facilitations (“What that lady is saying is, she would really prefer you not empty your bucket of sand over her little boy’s head. Is that okay with you, honey?”)?I realized that I was hardly alone.
Those were probably nannies, not mommies.

Once my daughters began school, I was surrounded, it seemed, by women who had surrendered their better selves?and their sanity?to motherhood. Women who pulled all-nighters hand-painting paper plates for a class party. Who obsessed over the most minute details of playground politics. Who?like myself?appeared to be sleep-walking through life in a state of quiet panic.
“Quiet panic”?

Some of the mothers appeared to have lost nearly all sense of themselves as adult women. They dressed in kids’ clothes?overall shorts and go-anywhere sandals. They ate kids’ foods. They were so depleted by the affection and care they lavished upon their small children that they had no energy left, not just for sex, but for feeling like a sexual being. “That part of my life is completely dead,” a working mother of two told me. “I don’t even miss it. It feels like it belongs to another life. Like I was another person.”
Seasons of life are not forever.

It all reminded me a lot of Betty Friedan’s 1963 classic, The Feminine Mystique. The diffuse dissatisfaction. The angst, hidden behind all the obsession with trivia, and the push to be perfect. The way so many women constantly looked over their shoulders to make sure that no one was outdoing them in the performance of good Mommyhood. And the tendency?every bit as pronounced among my peers as it had been for the women Friedan interviewed?to blame themselves for their problems. There was something new, too: the tendency many women had to feel threatened by other women and to judge them harshly?nowhere more evident than on Urbanbaby and other, similarly “supportive” web sites. Can I take my 17-month-old to the Winnie the Pooh movie?, one mom queried recently. “WAY tooooo young,” came one response.

I read that 70 percent of American moms say they find motherhood today “incredibly stressful.” Thirty percent of mothers of young children reportedly suffer from depression. Nine hundred and nine women in Texas recently told researchers they find taking care of their kids about as much fun as cleaning their house, slightly less pleasurable than cooking, and a whole lot less enjoyable than watching TV.
And?

And I wondered: Why do so many otherwise competent and self-aware women lose themselves when they become mothers? Why do so many of us feel so out of control? And?the biggest question of all?why has this generation of mothers, arguably the most liberated and privileged group of women America has ever seen, driven themselves crazy in the quest for perfect mommy-dom?
Because motherhood is a tough job, a job that demands self-sacrifice (which is so NOT popular), a job which demands putting other people first. For some women, this is the first time they’ve experienced selflessness and it frightens them. They want it all. They want it now. And they don’t want to pay taxes on it.

I started speaking with women from all over the country, about 150 in all. And I found that the craziness I saw in my own city was nothing less than a nationwide epidemic. Women from Idaho to Oklahoma City to the suburbs of Boston?in middle and upper middle class enclaves where there was time and money to spend?told me of lives spent shuttling back and forth to more and more absurd-seeming, high-pressured, time-demanding, utterly exhausting kids’ activities. I heard of whole towns turning out for a spot in the right ballet class; of communities where the competition for the best camps, the best coaches and the best piano teachers rivaled that for admission to the best private schools and colleges. Women told me of their exhaustion and depression, and of their frustrations with the “uselessness” of their husbands. They said they wished their lives could change. But they had no idea of how to make that happen. I began to record their impressions and reflections, and wove them into a book, which I named, in honor of the sentiment that seemed to animate so many of us, Perfect Madness.
Unrealistic expectations . . . coming from? Television? Magazines? Books? I wouldn’t know because I refuse to participate in this craziness. I didn’t go to the sign-up for it, nor did I pay my $65.00. Just say no.

I think of “us” as the first post-baby boom generation, girls born between 1958 and the early 1970s, who came of age politically in the Carter, Reagan and Bush I years. We are, in many ways, a blessed group. Most of the major battles of the women’s movement were fought?and won?in our early childhood. Unlike the baby boomers before us, who protested and marched and shouted their way from college into adulthood, we were a strikingly apolitical group, way more caught up in our own self-perfection as we came of age, than in working to create a more perfect world. Good daughters of the Reagan Revolution, we disdained social activism and cultivated our own gardens with a kind of muscle-bound, tightly wound, über-achieving, all-encompassing, never-failing self-control that passed, in the 1980s, for female empowerment.
We are blessed and we should stop whining. I, for one, would never want my greatgrandmother’s life, or even my grandmother’s life.

We saw ourselves as winners. We’d been bred, from the earliest age, for competition. Our schools had given us co-ed gym and wood-working shop, and had told us never to let the boys drown out our voices in class. Often enough, we’d done better than they had in school. Even in science and math. And our passage into adulthood was marked by growing numbers of women in the professions. We believed that we could climb as high as we wanted to go, and would grow into the adults we dreamed we could be. Other outcomes?like the chance that children wouldn’t quite fit into this picture?never even entered our minds.
Speak for yourself. Maybe I’m just unusually smart, but I knew I couldn’t have it all, certainly not all at once.

Why should they have? Back then, when our sense of our potential as women was being formed, there was a general feeling of optimism. Even the most traditional women’s magazines throughout the 1980s taught that the future for up-and-coming mothers was bright: The new generation of fathers would help. Good babysitting could be found. Work and motherhood could be balanced. It was all a question of intelligent “juggling.” And of not falling prey to the trap of self-sacrifice and perfectionism that had driven so many mothers crazy in the past.
Apparently, she missed Mary Pride’s books, particularly “The Way Home,” which I read early in my marriage. Many women were already questioning whether you could have it all, especially all at once. And what in the world is wrong with self-sacrifice?
But something happened then, as the 1990s advanced, and the Girls Who Could Have Done Anything grew up into women who found, as the millennium turned, that they couldn’t quite … get it together, or get beyond the stuck feeling that had somehow lodged in their minds.
That, my friends, is called reality. Sometimes it hurts when you bash into it.

Life happened. We became mothers. And found, when we set out to “balance” our lives?and in particular to balance some semblance of the girls and women we had been against the mothers we’d become?that there was no way to make this most basic of “balancing acts” work. Life was hard. It was stressful. It was expensive. Jobs?and children?were demanding. And the ambitious form of motherhood most of us wanted to practice was utterly incompatible with any kind of outside work, or friendship, or life, generally.
In the words of M. Scott Peck, “Life is difficult.” And “most of us”? You aren’t speaking for most of us, I suspect.

One woman I interviewed was literally struck dumb as she tried to articulate the quandary she was in. She wasn’t a woman who normally lacked for words. She was a newspaper editor, with a husband whose steady income allowed her many choices. In the hope of finding “balance,” she’d chosen to work part-time and at night in order to spend as much time as possible with her nine-year-old daughter. But somehow, nothing had worked out as planned. Working nights meant that she was tired all the time, and cranky, and stressed. And forever annoyed with her husband. And now her daughter was after her to get a day job. It seemed that having Mom around most of the time wasn’t all it was cracked up to be, particularly if Mom was forever on the edge.

The woman waved her hands in circles, helplessly. “What I’m trying to figure out?” she paused. “What I’m trying to remember … Is how I ended up raising this princess … How I got into … How to get out of … this, this, this, this mess.”

Most of us in this generation grew up believing that we had fantastic, unlimited, freedom of choice. Yet as mothers many women face “choices” on the order of: You can continue to pursue your professional dreams at the cost of abandoning your children to long hours of inadequate child care. Or: You can stay at home with your baby and live in a state of virtual, crazy-making isolation because you can’t afford a nanny, because there is no such thing as part-time day care, and because your husband doesn’t come home until 8:30 at night.
Unlimited freedom of choice is a myth. And the either or of this choice is laughable . . . especially the part where if you stay at home, you are choosing to live in “virtual, crazy-making isolation because you can’t afford a nanny.” Here’s a thought: maybe if moms weren’t running themselves ragged attempting to be all things to all people, they could cultivate some friendships so they wouldn’t be in total isolation?

These are choices that don’t feel like choices at all. They are the harsh realities of family life in a culture that has no structures in place to allow women?and men?to balance work and child-rearing. But most women in our generation don’t think to look beyond themselves at the constraints that keep them from being able to make real choices as mothers. It almost never occurs to them that they can use the muscle of their superb education or their collective voice to change or rearrange their social support system. They simply don’t have the political reflex?or the vocabulary?to think of things in this way.

They’ve been bred to be independent and self-sufficient. To rely on their own initiative and “personal responsibility.” To privatize their problems. And so, they don’t get fired up about our country’s lack of affordable, top-quality child care. (In many parts of the country, decent child care costs more than state college tuition, and the quality of the care that most families can afford is abysmal.) Nor about the fact that middle class life is now so damn expensive that in most families both parents must work gruelingly long hours just to make ends meet. (With fathers averaging 51 hours per week and mothers clocking in at an average of 41, the U.S. workweek is now the longest in the world.) Nor about the fact that in many districts the public schools are so bad that you can’t, if you want your child to be reasonably well-educated, sit back and simply let the teachers do their jobs, and must instead supplement the school day with a panoply of expensive and inconvenient “activities” so that your kid will have some exposure to music, art and sports.
Ah, the myth that middle-class life is so expensive that both parents must work long, grueling hours . . . sure it is. If you need a brand new car and a vacation home and fancy duds to wear to your fancy job, maybe. Granted, in some families, a second income is necessary, but in most? “Most” of the moms I know who have careers outside the home do so for reasons other than dire economic necessity. Not that those reasons are wrong–every woman gets to decide for herself what is an important and valid reason to work, but the idea that both parents must always work to make ends meet, to survive? I don’t think so.

Instead of blaming society, moms today tend to blame themselves. They say they’ve chosen poorly. And so they take on the Herculean task of being absolutely everything to their children, simply because no one else is doing anything at all to help them. Because if they don’t perform magical acts of perfect Mommy ministrations, their kids might fall through the cracks and end up as losers in our hard-driving winner-take-all society.
Good grief. How dramatic can you be? Personal responsibility is a good thing. Blame yourself. Don’t shift the blame to society.

This has to change.

We now have a situation where well-off women can choose how to live their lives?either outsourcing child care at a sufficiently high level of quality to permit them to work with relative peace of mind or staying at home. But no one else, really, has anything. Many, many women would like to stay home with their children and can’t afford to do so. Many, many others would like to be able to work part-time but can’t afford or find the way to do so. Many others would like to be able to maintain their full-time careers without either being devoured by their jobs or losing ground, and they can’t do that. And there is no hope at all for any of these women on the horizon.
“No one else, really, has anything”? Are you kidding me? There is “no hope at all for any of these women”? What? I am not “well-off” and yet, I’ve chosen to stay home with my children. I cobble together a way to contribute financially to my household. Why do people in this country think that everyone is entitled to an easy, fulfilling life bulging with satisfaction at every moment? Just because you might not be able to make a particular choice at a particular moment does not mean you never will have that choice. Life is in constant motion. Situations change. Children grow. Be patient. Enjoy the moment. Relax. Slow down.

Some of us may feel empowered by the challenge of taking it all on, being the best, as Tea Leoni’s “Spanglish” character did on her uphill morning run, but really, this perfectionism is not empowerment. It’s more like what some psychologists call “learned helplessness”?an instinctive giving-up in the face of difficulty that people do when they think they have no real power. At base, it’s a kind of despair. A lack of faith that change can come to the outside world. A lack of belief in our political culture or our institutions.

It really needs to change.

For while many women can and do manage to accept (or at least adjust to) this situation for themselves, there’s a twinge of real sadness that comes out when they talk about their daughters. As a forty-something mother living and working part-time in Washington, D.C. (and spending a disproportionate amount of her time managing the details of her daughter’s?and her husband’s?life), mused one evening to me, “I look at my daughter and I just want to know: what happened? Because look at us: it’s 2002 and nothing’s changed. My mother expected my life to be very different from hers, but now it’s a lot more like hers than I expected, and from here I don’t see where it will be different for my daughter. I don’t want her to carry this crushing burden that’s in our heads … [But] what can make things different?”
How about setttling for less and enjoying that “less” more? I don’t feel sadness at all for my daughter.

For real change to happen, we don’t need more politicians sounding off about “family values.” Neither do we need to pat the backs of working mothers, or “reward” moms who stay at home, or “valorize” motherhood, generally, by acknowledging that it’s “the toughest job in the world.” We need solutions?politically palatable, economically feasible, home-grown American solutions?that can, collectively, give mothers and families a break.
No, what we need are people who understand commitment and sacrifice, people who don’t opt out of their marriages when the going gets tough and then divide up their families like spoils of war. We need people who understand that personal needs and desires don’t preempt the needs of developing children. We need people who count the cost of their choices before they set a tidal wave of consequences into motion. We need people who think before they act.

We need incentives like tax subsidies to encourage corporations to adopt family-friendly policies.
We need fewer taxes. We need less government interference.

We need government-mandated child care standards and quality controls that can remove the fear and dread many working mothers feel when they leave their children with others.
Oh, great idea. Let’s let the government be in charge. They are so efficient! And smart! And they are doing such a good job with our public school systems! And plus, they government has all that extra money just sitting around in vaults, right?

We need flexible, affordable, locally available, high-quality part-time day care so that stay-at-home moms can get a life of their own. This shouldn’t, these days, be such a pipe dream. After all, in his State of the Union message, President Bush reaffirmed his support of (which, one assumes, includes support of funding for) “faith-based and community groups.” I lived in France before moving to Washington, and there, my elder daughter attended two wonderful, affordable, top-quality part-time pre-schools, which were essentially meant to give stay-at-home moms a helping hand. One was run by a neighborhood co-op and the other by a Catholic organization. Government subsidies kept tuition rates low. A sliding scale of fees brought some diversity. Government standards meant that the staffers were all trained in the proper care of young children. My then 18-month-old daughter painted and heard stories and ate cookies for the sum total in fees of about $150 a month. (This solution may be French?but do we have to bash it?)
Now, why didn’t I think of this? Let’s just hire . . . oh wait. Who will we hire? If you want to work for $10 an hour wiping noses and changing diapers and singing “If You’re Happy and You Know It” raise your hand. Oh, um, where are all the college-educated women? Not raising their hands . . . they all seem to be running the other way. That’s okay. We’ll just hire . . . uh, let’s see. Who will settle for earning a meager wage to do a grueling, mentally draining, difficult job? Where exactly do we find these people? Junior highs? Welfare offices? Homeless shelters? Who wants to raise the children while the rest of us go off to work?

And to say that I might need affordable part-time daycare so I can have a life of my own assumes that 1) I don’t have a life and 2) that this situation is permanent and that 3) I can’t figure out a solution that is not government-assisted. Have you ever heard of friends helping friends?

We need new initiatives to make it possible for mothers to work part-time (something most mothers say they want to do) by creating vouchers or bigger tax credits to make child care more affordable, by making health insurance available and affordable for part-time workers and by generally making life less expensive and stressful for middle-class families so that mothers (and fathers) could work less without risking their children’s financial future. Or even, if they felt the need, could stay home with their children for a while.
Yes! More taxes! More government control! Make life less expensive! Who needs capitalism anyway?!

In general, we need to alleviate the economic pressures that currently make so many families’ lives so high-pressured, through progressive tax policies that would transfer our nation’s wealth back to the middle class. So that mothers and fathers could stop running like lunatics, and start spending real quality?and quantity?time with their children. And so that motherhood could stop being the awful burden it is for so many women today and instead become something more like a joy.
“Transfer our nation’s wealth back to the middle class”? Hello? Communism, anyone? Let’s put all our money into a gigantic pot and divide it equally. That’s only fair, right? And while we’re at it, I propose national Robin-hood-green uniforms for everyone, nothing flashy. No accessories and for goodness sake, no more highlights in our hair! Rob from the rich and give to the poor and sword fight if anyone crosses your path!

Women today mother in the excessive, control-freakish way that they do in part because they are psychologically conditioned to do so. But they also do it because, to a large extent, they have to. Because they are unsupported, because their children are not taken care of, in any meaningful way, by society at large. Because there is right now no widespread feeling of social responsibility?for children, for families, for anyone, really?and so they must take everything onto themselves. And because they can’t, humanly, take everything onto themselves, they simply go nuts.
THEY DON’T HAVE TO! (And wait a second. What would Strunk & Whitehave to say about ending a sentence with “to”?) I don’t want “society” to take care of my children. That’s my responsibility. And I do feel social responsibility in general–that’s why I make the life choices I do and that’s why I am raising my own children, not expecting someone paid $10.00 an hour to manage that.

I see this all the time. It never seems to stop. So that, as I write this, I have an image fresh in my mind: the face of a friend, the mother of a first-grader, who I ran into one morning right before Christmas.

She was in the midst of organizing a class party. This meant shopping. Color-coordinating paper goods. Piecework, pre-gluing of arts-and-crafts projects. Uniformity of felt textures. Of buttons and beads. There were the phone calls, too. From other parents. With criticism and “constructive” comments that had her up at night, playing over conversations in her mind. “I can’t take it anymore,” she said to me. “I hate everyone and everything. I am going insane.”
Sounds like she made some pretty rotten choices. She needs to relax those self-imposed demands.

I looked at her face, saw her eyes fill with tears, and in that instant saw the faces of dozens of women I’d met?and, of course, I saw myself.

And I was reminded of the words of a French doctor I’d once seen. I’d come to him about headaches. They were violent. They were constant. And they would prove, over the next few years, to be chronic. He wrote me a prescription for a painkiller. But he looked skeptical as to whether it would really do me much good. “If you keep banging your head against the wall,” he said, “you’re going to have headaches.”

I have thought of these words so many times since then. I have seen so many mothers banging their heads against a wall. And treating their pain?the chronic headache of their lives?with sleeping pills and antidepressants and anxiety meds and a more and more potent, more and more vicious self-and-other-attacking form of anxious perfectionism.

And I hope that somehow we will all find a way to stop. Because we are not doing ourselves any good. We are not doing our children?particularly our daughters?any good. We’re not doing our marriages any good. And we’re doing nothing at all for our society.
So adjust your expectations and move on. Life is difficult.

We are simply beating ourselves black and blue. So let’s take a breather. Throw out the schedules, turn off the cell phone, cancel the tutors (fire the OT!). Let’s spend some real quality time with our families, just talking, hanging out, not doing anything for once. And let ourselves be.
What an abrupt and dissonant ending to an article which called basically for better childcare and redistribution of wealth. How odd.

From PERFECT MADNESS by Judith Warner. To be published by Riverhead books, a division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc. © 2005 by Judith Warner.

© 2005 Newsweek, Inc.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6959880/site/newsweek/

————————————————————–

Well, there you go . . . she doesn’t speak for me, but then again, I am old-fashioned and I’ve made the choice to be my children’s primary care-giver. I’ve also made the choice to marry a man worthy of me and to stay married to him forever and to adjust my expectations so I don’t wonder what’s wrong with me when everyone else seems to be so much more and better and thinner than me.

Now, in your mind, go ahead and add disclaimers, because I surely wasn’t speaking about you and your more difficult situation. I was just recklessly giving my thoughts a place to sit.

For more viewpoints on this article, be sure to check out Chez Miscarriage and Mommy Life, both linked on my blogroll.

Oh, and one last thought. Someone has to pay the price for my having children. And it won’t be the government and it won’t be my children. I will pay the price, even if it means I sacrifice something.

Those Funny Kids

Yesterday, a friend of ours sent some hand-me-down clothing to Babygirl. Babygirl immediately requested to wear two skirts, a shirt and a sweater, all at the same time. I said, “Oh, look! What a cute skirt!” Later on, she gestured toward her hot-pink, plaid skirt and said, “I wearin’ my curtain.” Get it? Skirt? Curtain?

Last night at 10:30 p.m., I checked to see if the twins were going to sleep. I see the glow of their television (yeah, they have a television in their room, wanna make something of it?) and I said, “Hey, boys! Time to sleep!” And TwinBoyA said from the floor, “Awwwww, Mom! It’s about artichokes!” I stifled a laugh and said, “Okay, finish watching it but when it’s over TURN OFF THE TELEVISION!”

 Posted by Hello

Babygirl uses C0urney L0ve’s hairstylist. And yes, she pays too much. (Actually, this is just a really bad case of bed-head. Babygirl’s never had a haircut, which is sad, isn’t it, that a child should be so hair deficient?)

On Being A Good Enough Mother

In this month’s Newsweek, Anna Quindlen writes about The Good Enough Mother. I have always admired her writing and now, I like her even more. I love to hear a mother admit that she skipped all the seemingly mandatory kids’ sports leagues and after-school activities because she’d rather stay at home and read. I love to hear another mother mention that she hates to play board games. I, for one, refuse to enter the “Perfect Mother Pageant,” even though I hear it involves a really cool tiara.

Dreaming of Hot and Cold

Do you ever wonder what it’s like somewhere else? Say, perhaps on Mt. Rainier? Go ahead. Click. You’ll thank me.

Although, today, I’m thinking it would be more fun to go to Waikiki Beach, in Hawaii. Check it out.

But here I am. DaycareKid running in circles, Babygirl yelling at him to stop, almost three-month old CuteBaby in my arms while I type this. CuteBaby’s mom is coming in about ten minutes to pick him up. She is lucky enough to be able to come home and spend an hour with him, then she brings him back and he naps.

Today are half-days of school, so YoungestBoy will be home in less than an hour. We’re finished with school at home for the day, too, so we’ll have lunch as soon as CuteBaby leaves, then have naps when he returns . . . although, what do you think the chances are that the three boys will be quiet during nap-time?

I am thankful for a tri-level house today, with enough rooms for us all. Yet, I still wish I could click myself into a tropical place with swaying palm trees and aquamarine waves.

How Can I Get on the People’s Court?

Yesterday, YoungestBoy comes home from school with a flushed face. He hurries off, dropping his backpack, barely saying “hello.” Not much later, one of his brothers reports to me that YoungestBoy broke our family rules and took some Valuable Items to school. Another boy (let’s call him “Liar Liar Pants on Fire” for short) asked if he could show YoungestBoy’s Valuable Items to another boy. Liar Liar Pants on Fire told my trusting (gullible?) son that he’d bring back the Valuable Items, plus additional Items. My son thought that sounded like a good deal, so with Liar Liar Pants on Fire’s assurance that he’d give YoungestBoy the Items at pick-up time, YoungestBoy handed over the Valuable Items.

(“Valuable Items” could be any small item that a boy likes to collect. In this case, I purchased said “Valuable Items” at Christmas time because “Valuable Items” were all my son wanted. These “Items” cost more than any of his other gifts. They cost a lot of money, so not only are they valuable to my son because they are unusual, but they are valuable to me because I paid good money for them.)

Back to the story.

Liar Liar Pants on Fire immediately turns over the Valuable Items to two other boys, “Fence One” and “Fence Two.” At pick up time, my son says to Liar Liar Pants on Fire, “Where are my [Valuable Items]?” Liar Liar Pants on Fire says, “Oh, I gave them to [Fence One] and [Fence Two.]” My son says, “Why did you do that?” And Liar Liar Pants on Fire has no good reason.

I called Liar Liar Pants on Fire’s mom. She said her darling son would never have just taken my son’s Valuable Items. Her son must have thought my son gave him the Valuable Items and since her son knows he is not allowed to have said items, he gave them to someone else.

Well, pardon me for being logical, but what kid in his right mind would knowingly, willingly give his Valuable Items to another kid FOR KEEPS? Where would be the payoff in giving away his most prized possession?

After our conversation, she spoke with her son, who insisted that he thought my son gave him the Valuable Items. He confirmed that he gave the Valuable Items to Fence One and Fence Two. She said she’d talk to those children today and get back to me. She explained that her son is not even allowed to touch the Items in question and does not personally own any of the Items and yet, kids give him Items every day, which he then gives to other kids, because he is obeying his mother’s rules not to own the Items.

Today, YoungestBoy comes home from school, teling me that Liar Liar Pants on Fire gave him two Items. Not the Valuable Items, but two lesser Items. Liar Liar Pants on Fire is not even supposed to touch Items, according to his mother. Liar Liar Pants on Fire also reported today that he gave the Valuable Items to another kid, Fence Three, but not Fence One and Fence Two.

At 8:00 p.m., I called Liar Liar Pants on Fire’s mother again. I reported that Liar Liar Pants on Fire gave my son two Items today. I informed her I’d be bringing over those two Items so she could confront her son with them (she said, no thanks, you keep them). She said, “He doesn’t have any Items. I don’t know where he gets the Items.” I said, “Well, he’s obviously taking them from one kid and giving them to another. These Items my son brought home today belong to another kid who is at home this very moment crying to his mother because his Items were given to someone else today.”

Liar Liar Pants on Fire’s mother said, “I know he is not stealing the Items.” I hastened to assure her that I wasn’t accusing him of stealing . . . yet part of my brain is saying, “Hellooooo? Taking from one kid–lying about it–and giving to another kid. If that is not stealing, what is it? Communism? Robin Hood-ism?”

She assured me that both Fence One and Fence Two admitted they had the Valuable Items. She said they agreed to bring the Valuable Items to school tomorrow.

We’ll see.

Meanwhile, I’m thinking dark thoughts like, “That’s it! I’m going to People’s Court! I’m suing this little Liar Liar Pants on Fire for everything he’s got!” Or “Just give me a second alone with Liar Liar Pants on Fire and I’ll get to the bottom of this, the little lying thief!” And “I am SO writing a note to the principal and copying all the staff!”

Where is justice?

(Oh, and believe me, my son will suffer consequences for taking Valuable Items to school. If he loses Valuable Items for good, that will be his consequence. If they are returned, we will think up something equally devastating. He broke our house rules, he broke school rules and he knew better. None of this would have happened if he’d left Valuable Items at home where they belong. And none of this would have happened if my son had already developed a jaded sense of the world, along with the idea that other people cannot be trusted.)

UPDATE: Two of the three items were returned yesterday. Good thing I didn’t slap anyone.

Nothing Says Love Like Chocolate. And Tulips.

My husband’s day off is today. And he’s sick with yet another cold. He showered early, went to work to prepare for the wedding he conducted today, then went to the dedication ceremony (and luncheon) for the local Rescue Mission. Then he stopped by our house while I was grimacing as I corrected the boys’ math assessments to bring me a red vase of purple and red tulips.

I, being the gracious type, said, “Hey! You broke the rules!”

Fortunately, I had a Valetine’s Day card stashed away because even though we always agree to not celebrate Valentine’s Day in any way, he always does anyway. I heart my husband.

The boys made their first-ever cake today from a mix. I showed them two boxes and said, “What kind do you want to make? This is plain yellow cake, like vanilla, and this is chocolate.” TwinBoyA said, “Chocolate!” And I said, “Chocolate? Even though it’s Valentine’s Day?” And he said, “Yes! Nothing says I love you like chocolate.”

I guess I was worried about my shortcomings as a mother for nothing. I’ve taught him the most important thing: Nothing says I love you like chocolate.

Two nights ago, I finished reading The Shipping News by Annie Proulx. Now I’m at a loss. What to read next? I have literally an entire six-foot bookshelf of unread books, but how can I choose? I think that I might read The Perfect Storm, since my brain is already hanging out in the Atlantic Ocean, smelling the reek of fish carcasses and feeling the sting of salt water.

When I’m between books, I feel suddenly unlashed from reality, which is completely the opposite of reality, isn’t it? I reluctantly close the back cover of a book and flip closed my book light and look around at my regular life, my kids, my husband watching Fox News, the folded laundry ready to be put away, the dirty clothes tangled on the bathroom floor near a trail of wet footpuddles and I think, what? How’d I get here? Just one second ago I was in Newfoundland and it was winter. Where did Quoyle and Wavey go?

If I wait too long and don’t jump into the pages of another book immediately, I might find myself drifting for weeks, bobbing along on a pathetic sea of the newspaper and The Reader’s Digest . . . I need to dive deep, to submerge into the world of books. Otherwise, little pieces of my brain break off like chunks of driftwood and float away. I’m not kidding.

(By the way, last night, I noticed a rather goopy wet spot on the kitchen floor near the fridge. I sopped it up, sniffed it, looked for the source. I followed the slime trail back up to the top of the fridge and shuddered for a second, imagining all kinds of rotted stuff up there. Have I mentioned that I am not Martha Stewart? Anyway, it turned out to be, well, a leaking “brain.” Guess that zip-lock bag wasn’t sealed very well.)

One More Thing I Learned

My mother taught me how to bake potatoes when I was but a young girl with hair that always looked like it needed brushing. Scrub, poke with a fork, wrap in foil and bake. I skip the foil part now, but I always stab the potatoes because I’ve heard they will explode if you don’t.

I dutifully explained the explosion risk to my son when I taught him to bake potatoes Friday night. I didn’t really believe it, but I passed along this wisdom because that’s what we do. We teach our children what we have heard, right? Well, guess what? My mother was right. A potato will explode if it is not poked. I have the proof in my smoky oven.

My fingertips are cracked and bleeding, which is probably because I cleaned a toilet recently. Tonight I finished typing 110 pages of transcription (that’s about 8-10 hours of work), so tomorrow I will avoid cleaning supplies in the interest of skin regeneration. As we learned in science class last Friday, our fingertips have a great many nerve receptors and so I say OUCH, especially when I type an “L.”

Last night, I went to see “Finding Neverland.” As usual, I went alone and arrived just before the movie began. I went rather reluctantly because Johnny Depp has never really interested me, but I found myself weeping intermittently through the movie. I also thought the following things:

1) My children would be so much cuter if they spoke in English accents;
2) My children would be so much cuter if they wore linen suits with Peter Pan collars;
3) The dog in the movie, a Newfoundland, reminded me of my own Newfoundland, Greta, who lived with us for two years. I missed her, even while I reminded myself of the shed hair and the itchy skin and the baby gates we had to step over to get into the kitchen;
4) I want an English cottage to summer in.

I loved the movie, even though I had to walk out with my eyes averted because I’d been crying so hard I was embarrassed.

I’m going to bed tonight with my house in disarray. Last night, I scurried around at 11:00 p.m., picking up dishes with spoons stuck to dried milk and bowls filled with popcorn kernels. I picked up trash and clothes and toys and videos and Legos. I cleaned off the kitchen counter and put a roast into the crockpot.

Tonight? None of that. I’m leaving it as is. It’ll be here tomorrow morning. And so will I.