Mommy Guilt Part II

Having just been on an actual business trip I assumed my little brush with Mommy Guilt in New York would be out of my system for good.

Not so much.

This weekend I flew to Boston and left behind one screaming, crying, pleading daughter. She was miserable. She held onto my shirt for dear life as I tried to get out the door bellowing, “Mommy I NEEEEEED you. NO GO. Mommy I NEED you.

As my brother tore her from my side, I watched the tears roll down her face as I closed the door. I left. I walked out. My daughter screaming about how much she NEEEEEDS me and I closed the door in her wet, wet face. UG.

It was awful. It was all I could think about as I drove the airport. As I parked my car. As I sat in the lounge.

Then I had a martini, called home to hear she was now happily playing, took a deep breathe, and got on my flight.

I nearly sat down in my assigned seat guilt free. I nearly, nearly kept my mommy guilt in check reminding myself this is only the second time I have ever left my children and that they were in capable hands. Then some cute little bastard of a kid in front of me turned around and flashed me a “hi there” smile and I was a puddle of guilt. Stop it kid. STOP.

Once I arrived in Boston I was fine. All was well I checked in at home and proceeded to enjoy myself.

I thought about the kids, but it didn’t CONSUME me. I was relaxed, I was happy and again I was very close to being Mommy Guilt free. Hell, I was PROUD of myself.

Then I called the Kaiser’s cell at EXACTLY the wrong moment.

He was in the car on his was to urgent care with my sick daughter. ON HIS WAY TO FUCKING URGENT CARE.

I tried to stay calm. I tried really hard not to scream into the phone: WHY WHY WHY WHY WHY WHAT HAPPENED WHAT IS GOING ON I WANT DETAILS AND NOT JUST SHE HAS A RUNNY NOSE BUT MINUTE BY MINUTE PLAY BY PLAY OF EXACTLY EVERYTHING THAT HAS GONE ON SINCE I WALKED OUT THIS DOOR WHAT COULD POSSIBLY HAVE CAUSED THIS DO YOU KNOW WHERE THE MEDICINE IS AND WHY URGENT CARE AND NOT THE PEDIATRICIAN AND OH DON’T FORGET ABOUT THE NEBULIZER FOR BREATHING TREATMENTS AND WHAT EXACTLY IS HER TEMPERATURE AT AND WHAT HAVE YOU GIVEN HER AND HOW WAS SHE 3 MINUTES AGO AND YESTERDAY AND NOW AND WHAT ABOUT LAST NIGHT AND HAS SHE SLEPT AND IS SHE ASKING FOR ME AND OH MY GOD I AM THE WORST MOTHER EVER SHE TOLD ME SHE NEEDED ME AND SHE REALLY DID NEED ME AND I JUST LEFT HER THERE WITHOUT ME AND CAN I TALK TO HER AND WILL YOU CALL AS SOON AS YOU ARE OUT OF THERE AND DON’T FORGET WE SWITCHED THE INSURANCE AND MAYBE THIS IS THE SAME AS BEFORE THAT THING SHE HAD AND OH MY GOD I’M FREAKING OUT WHERE IS COUNT WAFFLES AND WHO HAS HIM AND WHAT DID YOU TELL THEM AND WHY CAN’T HOUSEBOY HELP AND DO YOU KNOW WHERE WE KEEP THAT ONE MEDICINE UP IN THE CABINET IN THE KITCHEN ABOVE THE TOASTER AND AND AND AND AND AND

I asked maybe two or three of those thoughts racing through my head before the Kaiser cut me off

She is fine. I have it under control. Don’t worry. I can handle this. She is fine. ERIN calm down she is ok. I know what to do. Just have a good time and don’t worry. There is nothing you can do from there anyway. I’m her father. I can handle this. She is FINE.

What I wanted to respond with and what was going through my mind was

I KNOW you are her father and I KNOW you can handle it BUT I AM THE MOM AND I HANDLE THESE THINGS AND I KNOW SHE WANTS ME BECAUSE SHE IS SICK AND I SHOULD BE THERE WHEN MY DAUGHTER NEEDS ME AND I AM THE MOST HORRIBLE MOTHER EVER AND I NEED TO GET ON A FUCKING PLANE AND COME HOME RIGHT NOW.

What I said was

Ok. Ok. Ok. Ok. I know. Ok. Ok. Ok. I know. I know. Ok. Ok. I know. Call me as soon as you leave urgent care.

Helpless. In Boston. Unable to hold her feverish body against mine. Unable to do the things that only a Mom can do to comfort a sick child. Unable to hear what the doctor said. Unable to tell the doctor all the things I know. Unable to make sure she had exactly the amount of fluids she needed to avoid dehydration. Unable to make sure she had the only dropper with which she will take medicine from. Unable to check on her brother at a birthday party. Unable to do anything. Unable to even speak to her at the very moment. To kiss her hot forehead. To hold her as she sat in the chairs of the doctor’s office waiting. Unable to remind her that the doctor will check her ears and her nose and listen to her chest. Unable to reassure her. Unable to comfort. UNABLE.

1 hour and 22 minutes later the cell phone rang with news of bronchitis. Prescriptions. Breathing treatments. And one tired but upbeat 2-year old super excited about her new sticker.

Breathe Mommy. Breathe. It was handled just fine and you were not involved. It was taken care of and you were not in control. Everyone is OK and it was not YOU who saved them all. It was not YOU who found the sitter for the 4-year old and arranged to get the prescriptions picked up and administered the breathing treatment through the mask that normally makes the 2-year old freak out and it was NOT YOU who got her to sleep fever free and comfortable.

It all was done without any effort from you. None. Zero.

It’s hard not to walk away from all of this feeling as though I am NOT NEEDED, but really, that is exactly what this is all about. I spend so much time devoting myself to these children, this life, this family; I think I really believed I was the only one who could do what was needed to keep them healthy. To keep them clean. To keep them fed. To keep them alive.

Horrible of me, I know. But true. I AM THE MOM I DO EVERYTHING AND I AM THE ONLY ONE CAPABLE.

I’m sitting on the airplane now, headed back to my home and family, and am wondering how I got so very controlling. Is it because of this feeling right now, the one in the pit of my stomach? The one that screams to be the one responsible so that I KNOW it’s done the way I want it done. Not the way anyone else would do. Certainly not the way their father would handle it. Of course, he handles it perfectly and with ease, but it’s not how I would have done it. WHY DOES THAT MATTER TO ME SO MUCH?

It’s scary to give up any sort of control and when it comes to my kids, I almost can’t handle it. I almost lost my shit and found the next flight out. But I didn’t. I kept my shit together and tried my damndest not to think about what was going on 3-thousand miles away. There was nothing I could do – or was there?

Its funny, I almost didn’t make this flight. For those watching the news right now you can see this big ass storm over, oh, exactly where I was. And as I sat in the airport wondering if I would actually leave Boston on time or AT ALL, I took a deep breath and refused to let myself freak out. Just have a good time go with it you can’t control the weather.

Don’t get me wrong, there are days I think I can control the weather, but today I was living in the more sane part of my head, aware that today, at least, I was not Queen of the Clouds and it would all be ok if I had to stick around in Boston while this storm passed.

I realize many mothers and fathers don’t have the same fears and control issues that I have. Many of you learned in the very early stages of parenthood that leaving your children with grandma and grandpa for a quick get away or a night out was totally acceptable, much needed and (gasp) fine.

While I spent the past 4 years telling myself it was totally acceptable, much needed and (gasp) fine, I just recently started DOING IT. I’m still not exactly HAPPY they can live without me, but I’m learning to handle it. I’m learning that even if I don’t really feel like it’s ok—in reality it IS ok. For real. No lie. Even if it means I concede power, control, and miss a few of those moments and breaths my children take.

And when I get off this plane I will do my best not to speed home at 90 miles per hour and burst through the door just to make sure everyone is alive and ok. I’m going to be calm, cool, and maybe even try and drive a bit slower so I can listen to something other than children’s music and think an entire thought without it being interrupted by a flying French fry from the backseat.

Maybe.

Disney Double Birthday Blowout

…because this is how ALL theme park trips MUST end…

disney 095

Writers Block…or something

Since I’ve returned home from New York, I’ve tried several times a day to blog.

To tell you about my sex life.

To tell you about my monster children…and how angelic they were for their father and horrific they are for me.

To tell you about being away from my kids and husband and how it’s made me more sane.

But I can’t seem to write. I’ve been cleaning, and cooking, going to the gym (I know…shocking), making plans for a weekend double birthday bash at Disneyland, planning a date night with the Kaiser, and sowing seeds in the spring garden.

So since I can’t seem to put together a sentence this week…tell me what you’ve been doing. Or offer some writing exercises, because I’m stuck.

🙁

Mommy Guilt

Today I kissed my children goodbye, hugged and kissed my husband goodbye, and boarded a very full flight.

I sat next to an obnoxious woman with a terrible perm, draped in an awful, black, mink coat…she shoved her tabloids near my arm rest and popped her gum. We flew just like this, across the entire length of the United States.

I landed in a cold airport, and was driven by a nice Polish man to my hotel. I ordered some food, had a drink, took a bath.

Not once did I feel guilty for having left my children. Not once did I feel like I should call, or return home…or even send an email.

However, I feel guilt for NOT feeling guilt.

What a terrible thing. To feel guilt over not feeling guilt. Here I am, in New York, on business and I am feeling guilty for not feeling guilty. Devra, oh Devra…Help me.
For those who do not know, Devra is the foremost expert on Mommy Guilt. Qualified to speak on the subject, despite those credentials having been left out of a recent Washington Post story including her name and her wonderful book. None the less, here I am, 3,000 miles from my children, away for the FIRST TIME EVER (except for the birth of one and my recent surgery) and I am not worried. I am not feeling pain or longing.

Oy. I’m a terrible mother.
Maybe tomorrow I will miss them horribly. Tonight, I just want to sleep in peace, for the first time, alone, in 4-years.

sticking with the tampon theme…

Dear Wendi Aarons of  Austin, Texas,

I puffy heart you.

QofS

AN OPEN LETTER TO
MR. JAMES THATCHER,
BRAND MANAGER,
PROCTER & GAMBLE.
Dear Mr. Thatcher,
I have been a loyal user of your Always maxi pads for over 20 years, and I appreciate many of their features. Why, without the LeakGuard Core or Dri-Weave absorbency, I’d probably never go horseback riding or salsa dancing, and I’d certainly steer clear of running up and down the beach in tight, white shorts. But my favorite feature has to be your revolutionary Flexi-Wings. Kudos on being the only company smart enough to realize how crucial it is that maxi pads be aerodynamic. I can’t tell you how safe and secure I feel each month knowing there’s a little F-16 in my pants.
Have you ever had a menstrual period, Mr. Thatcher? Ever suffered from “the curse”? I’m guessing you haven’t. Well, my “time of the month” is starting right now. As I type, I can already feel hormonal forces violently surging through my body. Just a few minutes from now, my body will adjust and I’ll be transformed into what my husband likes to call “an inbred hillbilly with knife skills.” Isn’t the human body amazing?
As brand manager in the feminine-hygiene division, you’ve no doubt seen quite a bit of research on what exactly happens during your customers’ monthly visits from Aunt Flo. Therefore, you must know about the bloating, puffiness, and cramping we endure, and about our intense mood swings, crying jags, and out-of-control behavior. You surely realize it’s a tough time for most women. In fact, only last week, my friend Jennifer fought the violent urge to shove her boyfriend’s testicles into a George Foreman Grill just because he told her he thought Grey’s Anatomy was written by drunken chimps. Crazy! The point is, sir, you of all people must realize that America is just crawling with homicidal maniacs in capri pants. This brings me to the reason for my letter.
Last month, while in the throes of cramping so painful I wanted to reach inside my body and yank out my uterus, I opened an Always maxi pad, and there, printed on the adhesive backing, were these words: “Have a Happy Period.”
Are you fucking kidding me?
What I mean is, does any part of your tiny middle-manager brain really think happiness- actual smiling, laughing happiness is possible during a menstrual period? Did anything mentioned above sound the least bit pleasurable? Well, did it, James? FYI, unless you’re some kind of sick S&M freak girl, there will never be anything “happy” about a day in which you have to jack yourself up on Motrin and Kahlza and lock yourself in your house just so you don’t march down to the local Walgreens armed with a hunting rifle and a sketchy plan to end your life in a blaze of glory. For the love of God, pull your head out, man. If you just have to slap a moronic message on a maxi pad, wouldn’t it make more sense to say something that’s actually pertinent, like “Put down the Hammer” or “Vehicular Manslaughter Is Wrong”? Or are you just picking on us?
Sir, please inform your accounting department that, effective immediately, there will be an $8 drop in monthly profits, for I have chosen to take my maxi-pad business elsewhere. And though I will certainly miss your Flexi-Wings, I will not for one minute miss your brand of condescending bullshit. And that’s a promise I will keep.
Always.
Best,
Wendi Aarons
Austin, TX

http://www.scribd.com/doc/14124/Maximadness

Fear Me

I’m failing miserably at being intimidating.

Last night my son talked of all the places on earth he wanted to visit some day and one was “where the gypsies live.”

All this child knows of “gypsies” is it’s where he will be sold when he is naughty.

And he’s so afraid, he wants to visit. I’ve been selling him to the gypsies a LOT lately.
I don’t necessarily subscribe to fear parenting. I don’t want my children shaking and peeing themselves when they’ve colored on the walls, but there is something to be said for knowing Mom will beat your ass if you back talk. What I can not seem to figure out, however, is how to make them fear me without giving them something to really fear.

Confused yet? Yeah…me too.

I remember my dad always threatening the belt. He never used it, of course, but so help me if he cracked it once I was stopped dead in my tracks. I don’t have a belt. I don’t even have a stick, and I’m pretty sure my kids already know I won’t hit them. Smart little shits seem to know it so well, they use it against me…

I don’t think they are running all over me. I just don’t want to have to make good on that sale-how much could I get for a blue eyed, blonde boy? I would think that would at least pay off the house.

Because we must

Not one of us is a stable mother. Wife. Friend.

Not one.

There are days I want to run away. There are days I don’t want leave home.

There are days I want to chuck my Paxil in the pool and just see what will come.

The weight gain can’t be worth it.

There are also days, like today, when I find myself blogging at 430am. I just finished a very long night with a friend who, like me, is not a stable wife or mother.

We are NOT our mothers, yet we are not perfect. We are NOT crazy, yet we are certainly not sane.

We are also NOT alone.

I have found myself detached lately. From friends, family, my husband, my children, my life. Nothing severe…but enough to make me take notice. I will not continue life this way. I will not fear owning up to my problems. Owning up to my crazy gene. Fine. Its there. It can make me powerful and it can make me weak. It can make me successful and it has nearly destroyed everything.
Some of us are kidding ourselves. Some of us are medicating ourselves. Some of us are self treating and some of us are destroying our lives.

In support of those mothers around us who need to ask for help…talk to your friends today. Talk to you sisters. Talk to you aunts. Talk to your daughters. Be woman and help a woman today. Encourage her to seek help. Send her your support to NOT BE AFRAID.

I’m going to call today. Encourage the women you love to do the same. They need you.

Arrival

Dear Kaiser, love of my life, father of my children,

First of all, know that we have arrived in the great Metropolis that is Detroit, Michigan and we are safe. We are now nestled in PJ’s and slippers, sipping tea and dozing off.

Before I fall fast asleep while the children you gave me play with their relatives, know this:

I am never flying across the country with these spawns of Satan ever. again.

You may want to call Spirit Airlines and make sure we have seats for our return flight, as I am pretty sure we are not welcome on their fleet of airplanes ever. again.

You may also want to call any and all convents and or boarding schools for your darling daughter. I believe it might be necessary we ship her somewhere better able to handle M&M grenades and shrieks they could use in Iraq to torture the enemy. Also check with local talent agencies, as I have no doubt she will be a fine actress. She can go from shrieking and crying as though someone was beating her, to coyly smiling at a stranger in a heartbeat.

As for you son, we may need to find him a very good psychologist, because he now has narcolepsy, which he is apparently using as a defense mechanism to block out the horror show that is mother and daughter.

I hope your time at home, in peace, is quiet and rewarding.

All my love,

The Queen

p.s. The Transportation Security Agency and Federal Bureau of Investigations might call to have a word with you. Tell Frank I said “thanks for the donut” and please let Jim know we’ll return his gun and badge just as soon as we can.