Parenting - lemonluck Category

THURSDAY NIGHT SCENE HAIKU

life with four boys is
a lot like dessert at the
local biker bar.

Related: “bottle service” haiku // how we learned about this bar’s family-friendliness.

“Do you think you’ll keep going? Or are you done?”

I was attending C’s 9 month well check recently when the doctor asked me how the family was doing, throwing in the stock “4 boys… I don’t know how you do it” remark.

“I don’t know either,” I laughed, thinking longingly about my iced coffee waiting in the car.

“Do you think you’ll keep going? Or are you done?”

This question should not be vexing to my mental state. It comes up constantly, particularly when you seem to be on a steady once-every-other-year cadence of child production. For me, it’s often “will you keep going till you get a girl?” which irritates me for other reasons. But the fundamental curiosity — when are you going to stop expanding your family? — creates a quiet storm inside my head that rumbles around intermittently for the next few days that follow.

On the one hand, I answer “yes, we’re done.”

We have been in a state of endless accrual of stuff for the past 7 years. We have all the standard seasonal supplies (bikes, clothes, snow gear) to fit a boy at any stage of development up to 7 years old. We have diaper pads, baby baths, bouncers, swings, exersaucers, walkers, bottles, bibs, drying racks, sippies, plasticware, baby gates, drawer locks. With the exception of truly superfluous items or massive toy purges, we have effectively been unable to offload anything since J was born. We have a small boat of an SUV to accommodate our family size and the 4 x car seats, we have 2 boys sharing a room already, and we have a daycare bill that will equate to a significant raise in our monthly income when we get to stop paying it.

We are running a constant time deficit, and while we are more than comfortable letting standards slide with respect to things one might wish but not mandate (walk through the kitchen without coating one’s socks with a thin layer of Wheaties crumbs, for instance), we are already – with just one child in extracurricular activities – finding ourselves dividing children and tasks just to get things done.

For 7 years, we have not had a meal without cutting several people’s food into appropriately sized chunks such that they are not life-threatening choking hazards. We have not sat on our backyard patio without being spatially aware of where the youngest was and begging him to stop wandering into the street in search of the neighborhood playground. We have not left the house without a diaper bag or water bottles or snack packs or sunscreen or spare clothes. The mental management has left me so deeply resource challenged that I find myself making conscious determinations about things like “I need to be okay with a less-than-stellar performance review at work or I am going to burn out,” or “I will have to coast on the momentum of my relationships until I have time to be a good friend again,” or “I can only have fun once per week.”

And here’s the real talk: Dave and I had always talked about “3 with the option of 4,” and now we have 4 healthy, beautiful, boisterous boys. The notion of not pushing one’s luck comes to mind when considering not only another baby, but another pregnancy & VBAC delivery (at least, attempted by way of always delivering before someone would schedule you for an actual C-section) for me. And now, of course, of an age to be considered a geriatric mother!

I’m ready to move onto the next life stage. I’m ready to clear some shelf space, and worry less about a child accidentally putting himself in mortal peril by virtue of trying to eat a Lego, and for Pete’s sake put these 4 able bodied boys to work on some serious yard and home chores. I am busy. I am tired. But I am also so deeply, deeply happy.

So, yes, I say, “we’re done.” But I have yet to have that be a complete sentence. Rather, I am always compelled to offer additional context: “…but it’s still hard to say it out loud.”

There are a few reasons I believe I struggle with knowing I’m done.

The first is, simply, when you’ve created 4 wonderful children, with traits you recognize in yourself or your spouse but also some that are absolutely foreign, and you see them develop and change and become these little people that you are so privileged to know, it’s like you get the first read of the most extensive, exciting, page-turning novel and witness a story unfolding for the first time. How could you not want more of these people? It’s a slippery slope, I know, but to imagine not knowing C because we hadn’t gone for “the option of 4” is now a really sad contemplation. This train of thought falls apart quickly given the cost of pregnancy and birth to the mother (fun fact! The #1 cause of death for women ages 15 – 19 globally is childbirth!), but it still sparks a seed of greed in my brain… more of these lovely little monsters? Yes, please.

Then there’s the notion of “lasts” that would haunt me if I let them. I have become strangely emotional over bizarre “last first” milestones with C. Not just the obvious ones: the last first time he rolled over, or slept straight through the night, or moved from the bassinet into his own nursery… No, I’ve become highly attuned to the lesser known last firsts: the last first gummy smile before he cut a tooth, the last first stinky diaper after I added purees to his formerly exclusive breast milk diet, and the last first time he sat in the actual tub for his bath – and not only didn’t slip at all, but splashed so aggressively that his bath-mate, A, whined for maternal intervention.

Ultimately, and honestly, the root issue may be a result of the human’s frontal lobes being significantly newer than the limbic system. Maybe I am logically on board with being done for all the reasons above, but my animal instincts object & tell me to continue procreating. For better or worse, I do not live one of these unexamined lives that Socrates alluded to, so I am thrust into a state of contemplation when I detect this type of internal conflict.

Two comments that massively comfort me during those mental isolated thunderstorms:

  1. Dave said sincerely when I agonized about this one time: “you’ve physically and mentally given a lot of yourself to this for the past many years. It’s enough. It’s okay to turn the page and start the next chapter.”
  2. My mom told me, after I disclosed our considerations around – ahem – most effectively managing our family plan, and shared that I was concerned about doing anything “permanent” while I was still emotional about things: “then don’t do permanent. Take the temporary fix and come back to cross that bridge later.”

I guess it all comes down to this: motherhood is a paradox – especially in the weeds of the stage with young children. You are constantly busy, but simultaneously bored. You are lonely, but wish everyone would stop touching you so you could just have a moment to yourself. You are intensely terrified that you will make a mistake, but also feel more functional and capable and strong than you ever have in your life. I remember vividly the first day that I brought J home and watched him napping in his bassinet, with some version of clinical insomnia about to set in for me. I thought “what have I done?” and “this is so amazing; we should have done this sooner” in the very same breath.

It makes sense then, I suppose, that deciding that you are done can be equally paradoxical.

All this to say, we are done. But it is still hard to say it out loud.

Overheard In Our Home: Episode 4

THE OUT AND ABOUT EDITION

*****

Dave, pointing out signs for J to practice reading as we drive: look, J, another Applebee’s.
J: oh, yeah.
Dave, pointing at hospital across the road: and that’s where O, A, and C were born.
J: was I not born there?
Dave: no, you were born at a different hospital because we didn’t live around here yet.
O, pensively: I was born in… an Applebee’s.

April 2022, 4 years old

*****

Me: O! Oh my gosh, where did you find an arm?! Go put that mannequin’s arm back on her body wherever she is!

April 2022, 4 years old

*****

(Loudly, in the stall of a crowded public restroom)
O: I like your underwear, Mom!
Me: oh! Well, thank you.
O: I really like your underwear, Mom! It’s like princess underwear!
The large group of women waiting in line as we exit the stall: 🙂

February 2022, 4 years old

Sunday Get-Stuff-Done-Day

I went to dinner tonight with a group of colleagues. One of them asked me about the boys, and I filled them in on the latest highlights… many of them featuring A’s hijinks, of course. Another one somberly shook her head and remarked, “I honestly don’t remember how I did it with little kids at home. It’s so hard; it’s like I’ve entirely repressed it.” She almost immediately then tried to apologize for the seriousness cast over this – ahem – energy-intensive chapter of life, but I told her I actually found her observation comforting. It’s not in my head: it is objectively difficult.

The past few months since I went back to work, I’ve joked that Dave & I only have time for fun once per week. The rest of our time is committed almost entirely to simply keeping the wheels on the train at home. Take, for instance, Sundays, and our standard must-dos:

  • – Baths x 4 (45 min)
  • – Nail trims x 80 (10 min)
  • – Pack for daycare x 3: clean sheets, refresh spare clothes &/or outdoor play gear, & diaper supplies (1 hr)
  • – Pack J’s school: lunch + library book + sign reading log (15 min)
  • – Pack C’s bottles for next day + solid foods for the week (30 min)
  • – Grocery run and meal prep for the week (incl making baby purees for solids above – see below) (1.5 – 3.5 hrs)
  • – Family laundry (2 – 4 full cycles… as in, the manufacturer of our washer would not advise that volume of clothes in a cycle)
  • – Work outs (1 hr/each of us ideally)
  • – And then of course: 3 x square meals x 6 x people with varying dietary needs, many x diaper changes, so much x discipline, too many x reminders, and general parental engagement

This past Sunday, we also added time spent:

  • – Giving O a haircut (40 min – DIY by me while the boys are young and not discerning)
  • – Wrestling O 4x/day to let us give him his eye drop for his pink eye (should take 2 min but instead takes 5 – 10 each time, followed by anguished wailing for another 5 – 10 immediately afterward)
  • – Taking 2/4 boys to a friend’s birthday party (3 hrs)
  • – Sending updates on Teacher Appreciation Week at our daycare (I run the planning committee but have officially reached my resource limit and regret signing up again) (1 hr)
  • – On the phone with UPS trying to track down my breast milk that was shipped “overnight” (3 days prior) and never arrived after a business trip last week (30 min on the call & 5 years off my life)

Don’t get me wrong: time spent with these adorable little people is deeply, soulfully fulfilling. But then I look at the e-communication between me and Dave after the course of the day and think… if there was a way to spend more of the time doing things that enrich us as parent & child simultaneously, and less time just surviving the day, that would be okay with me, too.

One of My Favorite Ways to Spend Money

Is there anything more delightful to purchase than bedding for little kids? Between the many crib sheets, bed sheets, and — recently — a new set of bunk beds, I have derived so much joy from these purchases over the years.

In fact, I was so compelled to wring every ounce of happiness from this stage of life where the boys have such sweet interests (and such little insistence on making these selections themselves), that I ended up with 4 different prints for the new bunks: dinosaurs, vehicles, construction, and animals.

I also choose to believe that even as they age and grow, and their interests mature, and their long limbs sprawl across these prints, and they manage to sleep past 6am in these very beds… they will surely still appreciate these sheets as much as I do. If I’m wrong, don’t tell me.

Do You Ever Troll Your Kids?

Our bedtime routine for the older 2 boys consists of a few books, a few songs, and sometimes a story. I started the storytelling portion a couple of years ago as inspired by my uncle, who told epic tales about my siblings, me, and my cousins — and I do mean “epic” as I only found out later that he lifted a lot of his material from classics like the Odyssey or Iliad. The trick to storytelling is that they have to close their eyes to imagine the story, peppered with all the references that allude to their interests du jour. Before you know it, they’re sleeping soundly.

But as the boys have gotten older and a bit bossier with their requests for story content (“make the bad guy a giant!” “say that we’re traveling up a volcano this time!” “pretend that C has super strength and can defeat the monster in one punch!”), Dave has started to troll them a little bit during his nights putting them to bed.

Take, for instance, J’s fascination with dragons for the past few months. He requested stories about the brothers as dragons, and we obliged. But then he started requesting that his dragon self had multiple powers: fire and water. Or fire and water and ice. And eventually, without shame, he asked that Dave tell the story with J featured as an Everything Dragon. As in, everything power. As in, totally OP* and does not make for much of a contested battle scene at the story’s climax.

So Dave obliged and started telling stories about J as an Everything Dragon. But in the stories, the attack scenes were riddled with mentions of poppy seeds flying, or sesame seeds scattering around, or J getting soggy and crumbly from the rain. The big reveal finally happened: J was actually an Everything *Bagel* Dragon.

This happened subtly at first, but then in enough stories that eventually I could hear J explicitly request during story time: “Dad, can you tell me a story where I’m an everything dragon? But not the bagel kind.”

In the 90 – 120 minute saga that is bedtime in our house, I have to say, me loitering in the hall to eavesdrop on the hilarity of Dave trolling the boys with these types of things is probably not the material that would get us featured on Parents magazine, but it is definitely how I just spent my Friday night.

*overpowered/gamer-speak

Hangover Haiku

this is saturday
post cousin slumber party:
toddler hangover.

Breaking News

Scientists begin research on a newly documented pediatric medical condition. Ailment is triggered by environmental shift — namely to the parent’s bed in the early morning hours.

Observable symptoms:

Child exhibits gravitational pull towards parent’s body, and then seems to spontaneously generate at least 8 additional elbows and knees which are used as unconscious weapons of assault.

While not thought to cause permanent damage to the child, there are strong early indicators that the resulting poor night’s sleep is indeed contagious to adults.