This morning I decided to make a smoothie. Although I seem to have no trouble gaining weight in this pregnancy, I feel like really "taking care of myself" has been a struggle. So a smoothie. Full of brewer's yeast, wheat germ, flax seed, fruit, yogurt, milk, all the good stuff. It took me ninety minutes to make. Not because I had to pick the fruit, milk the cows, or even grind the flax seed myself. No. It was because I am Mama and this morning, that meant diapers and bartering for peace and returning boy bits into diapers where they rightfully belong. But finally, I hit "blend" and had a luscious smoothie ready for my enjoyment. Sixty minutes later, after taking two sips and spending at least three quarters of an hour searching for (but never finding) Cookie Monster, I decided to really buckle down and just drink the damn thing. Enter toddlers into kitchen. "Noothie! Noothie!" Thirty minutes later, after consuming a good 80% of my breakfast, they were both busy tantruming over my glum announcement that our smoothie was all gone.
This is why I have not posted in four months.
This is the one thing that scares me about having a third baby.
I don't know how to get it all done.
Mothering, working, cleaning the house, making sure our refrigerator has more than an old jar of artichoke tapenade sitting on the top shelf, making sure we don't run out of dog food or milk or toilet paper, making sure Rhys and Quin know how much we love them and have the security in their world to grow into the people they deserve to be, making sure I remember to eat so that this new baby is born strong and healthy and robust...
...these are the things that I love and that consume me and often claim victory over my life.
And although it is crazy and full and hectic every second of every day, life has been really good.
We're lucky.
I am still blown away by how lucky we are.
I still can't believe I'm pregnant. From sex.
By surprise. Unplanned.
An infertile girl's dream come true.
Speaking of girls, I'm gestating one, and feeling pretty thrilled about that.
I have other things I need to write about.
I need to write about how I weaned the babies and it broke my heart, about how we're planning a VBAC and I'm simultaneously thrilled and terrified, about how this pregnancy has been an exercise in feeling confident in myself as a mother while finding the strength to ignore advice and input that isn't helpful to me, and about how I'm trying to squeeze every last drop of experience out of this pregnancy to savor the right now.
It all has to come later, and I confess that I have no idea when that will be. Maybe this week, maybe next month. It all depends on how things go with my morning smoothie.
Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blogging. Show all posts
Monday, January 10, 2011
Monday, August 16, 2010
I've got Lex Appeal!
A few months back, I was interviewed for a clever new podcast called Lex Appeal, which delves into the raw, human, sexier side of the law. In the wake of the Facebook buzz generated from these posts, the guys who do the show appealed to my vanity and asked me to do an interview. As a blogger, I was very excited to be asked to be a part of the show. On my blog, I'm in control. I get to go on and on and on and on about whatever I find oh-so-interesting. But being asked by somebody else to talk about the same stuff? Means that at least one other human being finds me mildly worthwhile. And cheers to that.
So without further lamenting about how fantastic I must be, I invite you to listen to the now-available final product. Enjoy!
So without further lamenting about how fantastic I must be, I invite you to listen to the now-available final product. Enjoy!
Monday, May 10, 2010
It's nice to meet you!
I've fallen into the unfortunate habit of over-sharing the mundane details of our adventures in erranding, especially trips to the grocery store.
I'm sorry.
I'm even more sorry that I have no real plans to stop.
I tell myself, "okay. Okay. That's enough for a while," but then we go to the grocery store and while I'm wearing Quin on my front, he discovers the wonderful world of (and do excuse the lack of sophistication in the following term) motorboating. Not the water sport, friends. The face-in-cleavage kind. With loud and exuberant sound effects. And I'm pushing Rhys in the cart and he and I are shaking hands non-stop while I say emphatically, over and over again, "It's nice to meet you!" because that's our grocery store game and he finds it hilarious and it keeps him from jumping ship and escaping to the banana display. And then Quin decides that motorboating is significantly more fun if he grabs onto my ears and pulls outward, so now we're really attracting attention as I push our cart with one hand trying to avoid a collision while one child practices manners, the other practices a total lack thereof, and my ears are stretched beyond the realms of normalcy and any pretense of comfort. And as all this is happening, I'm thinking how I really need to do a post on this because I have no self control and I cannot stop.
And so I'm sorry.
Thursday, March 18, 2010
Cinnamon and Angel Farts
When we were going through infertility, I was certain that the cruelest truth of our situation was that I was destined to be a mother. I am human; I have my flaws. Lots and lots of flaws. But motherhood? I could see it dangling in front of me, just out of reach. My unattainable destined perfection.
And then I became a mother.
Oprah did a show about a year ago on the truth behind motherhood. She featured successful mommy-bloggers like Dooce who confessed their deepest maternal woes and suggested that no matter how bright and glossy the exterior, we all have a poopy diaper or two stuffed under the couch that we're hoping nobody notices. And they were about a year ahead of me. Sleep deprived with two colicky preemies, I watched with a vague interest and no real connection. My entire life felt like that poopy diaper desperately hidden away. The idea of shining up the surface and slapping on a smile seemed insane and potentially harmful.
Now I get it.
And if it's not a wadded, soiled cloth diaper under my couch, it's the fact that I'm writing this while slowly sipping a shot glass full of maple syrup because I'm feeling too responsible to drink anything really serious at 9:52am but dammit my babies are sleeping and if that's not a reason to celebrate and imbibe on sweet condiments, I don't know what is.
I'm a year behind on the uptake, but I'd like to join the collectively pleading voices from that Oprah episode and ask WHY WHY WHY is it that so many mothers make this business look like cinnamon and angel farts?
Motherhood may be wonderful, and I believe it is, but it is also beautifully and recklessly real. I feel like life should suddenly come equipped with air bags and seat belts and a very serious helmet. For me.
I'm not the mother I expected I would be. I call Kyle and beg him to come home from work early. Demand, even. I try to reason with thirteen month olds. "This behavior is NOT ACCEPTABLE!" It is inevitable that at some point in the day, somebody will get hold of their toothbrush and demonically chase after Bella in a desperate attempt to brush her teeth. She will be having none of that and thus will settle for having her tail lavishly brushed with a toddler sized spin brush full of baby Orajel tooth cleanser. The meal I've spent thirty harried minutes lovingly preparing will be thrown over the side of the high chair. I will swear. I will grit my teeth and mumble and grunt and in the midst of it all will not be able to resist kissing those cute and chubby and defiant cheeks as I walk by. Somebody will vomit in my car. I will let that vomit dry using the excuse that it will be "easier" to clean up that way. My babies spend half their life looking like baby hobos with food smeared on their faces and banana gumming up their hair and I will leave it there because really? I don't have the energy to fight over that and besides, people spend a lot of money on strikingly similar spa treatments. I hold on for dear life and offer a snarky laugh at the timid and perfect mother I thought I would be.
This mother, this real life, breathing mother, is a human being.
Monday, December 7, 2009
Well Hello.
I haven't felt like posting lately.
I have, however, felt like eating fudge, listening to Christmas music, and watching two incredible little babies grow.
Over ten months old.
I've been arguing with myself over whether or not I want to blog about why I haven't felt like blogging.
But here it is. At the end of the day, I'm a frustrated writer. Frustrated by the confines of my blog, and frustrated that I don't have more time to promote it. That's all. And so in a childish indulgence of that frustration, I spent a few delicious weeks waving a big old F*&# YOU to my blog.
I think I'm going to get over it now.
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