Category Archives: Motherhood

Hynie Mouth: Another Evil Plot to Destroy Moms

“Mommy, your mouth smells like hynie,” noted my 3-year-old as she slumbered over my face and settled into bed between me and my husband bright and early one day.

“I heard that when kids sleep until 7am, their mommy’s mouth smells like sunshine and roses,” I grumpily shot back.

The sarcasm lost on her as she fretted over how quickly we could wake up and turn on Jake & The Neverland Pirates.

Little did I know that she was right. My mouth actually was worse than hynie mouth – my tooth was rotting and bacteria were invading my gums. It had been percolating for god knows how long. Why? You ask.

BECAUSE I ALWAYS HAVE TO CANCEL DOCTORS APPOINTMENTS.

After months of doing the calendar dance with the receptionist, I begin to wonder if my children have late night meetings, with flashlights, hovered over the calendar, whispering together, colluding over how best to sabotage my next doctors appointment.

If I busted out my night vision goggles and snuck upstairs one night, I’d no doubt stumble into this scene: Around 2am, huddled together under a blanket, with the three-year-old dutifully wearing a watch – you know – because she can tell time and should be trusted to report it with accuracy. In hushed tones, she glances at her watch and remarks: “It is 65:23, time to get started. Let’s review the minutes covering our last few successful efforts to thwart mom’s efforts to go to the doctors. What’s next on our list?”

Beaming with pride over her own genius, the oldest is heard bellowing – because she’s completely incapable of a hushed quiet indoor voice ever “Mommy promised to go on my field trip next, that’s what’s going to make her reschedule her next dental appointment!” and just  like that evil laughter and high fives erupts across their innocent bedroom. Evil plot to destroy my health meeting now adjourned.  Mission inevitably accomplished again. I retreat back to sleep, defeated again.

This guy and his buddies loved my mouth

Meanwhile the Mucinex germs we see dancing around in commercials are cheering loudest of all. They’re settled quite cozily into tooth #30 wreaking havoc in my mouth like my children do to my planned doctors visits.

The irony here is this – should one of my children need to get to a doctor – we are there in a hot second. Yet somehow I just can’t seem to get myself there. True, I am never in a rush to get weighed – but setting that aside – any kind of routine visit is pretty much the last thing on my list.

As we approach Mother’s Day – I’m wondering if that isn’t the gift we should be giving to ourselves. Schedule – and KEEP – your damn doctors appointments. I don’t say any of this to sound like a martyr. It’s just reality. Sick kids, field trips, unexpected work trips, shit happens and you have to cancel a doctor’s appointment. Or in my case, I was doing a decent job of going to the dentist for routine cleanings but I fell short on one key area – needing a crown (oh – and flossing).

Reason #1: It cost a lot of money.

Reason #2: The appointment was going to take a lot of time. Who has the time?

Reason #3: I  had no pain.

Reason #4: My X-Rays were all fine.

Reason #5: What’s the rush?

Remember those Mucinex germs doing the samba in my mouth at night as my children colluded against moi?

Apparently that was the rush because since getting fitted for a temporary crown 2.5 weeks ago, I ended up shuttling between two different dentists almost every day for two weeks, most of the visits were unexpected emergency/pain related reasons – and I could pretty much open a side shop of killer pain meds based on the “hot tooth” explosion that happened to moi.

I sarcastically went into a root canal wondering if it was going to be worse than child-birth.

After two weeks of trauma – at least child-birth doesn’t last two weeks is all I can say.

So this year for mother’s day, while I agree that you are this:

All WM should totally own this. Photo Credit: Society6.com

I also think the gift we should all give ourselves is scheduled doctors appointments that we actually show up for. Don’t reschedule them. Don’t avoid it. Don’t fall for the excuses. Let the husband handle the sick kid or the field trip that day. Just go to the damn doctor.

Happy Mother’s Day!

Oh, and for Mother’s Day, give yourself the gift of moi, on Facebook. Your future self totally thanks you.

Perfection, Martyrs & Mothers: What Does It Mean for the Kiddos?

Perfect Mom?

Lately, I’ve marveled over the attention motherhood is receiving in the mainstream media.  Was it first the shock of the Tiger Mom? Then the tome on french parenting perfection? Then came the Vogue shocker about putting 7-year-olds on a diet, then came Hilary Rosen’s gaffe reigniting the “mommy wars?”
It seems every Sunday, in particular, I eagerly open my New York Times (yes, I read the PAPER version of it and delight in every minute of it) and much of the Sunday Style section is devoted to parenting articles. Really, they are about motherhood, but I simply can’t stand the word “mothering” and “parenting” fits the tense better. Seriously  – does anyone actually use the word “mothering?”
“I had such a difficult day mothering today”
Vomit.
Then today, the NYT rolled out Room for Debate “Motherhood vs. Feminism” in their opinion section. I almost fell off my chair. Here’s the slogan of this new section: Has women’s obsession with being the perfect mother destroyed feminism?
Then I rolled my eyes.
Not just once.
Again.
And then wait, again. See, I can do this because I minored in Women’s Studies.
Then I wondered this: are they getting desperate for web site traffic over there at the NYT?
So let’s break it down: are YOU obsessed with being the perfect mother? Or are you just trying to get through the day, keep the peace, pay the bills, make sure the dirty laundry isn’t taking over your house and raise good human beings who follow the law (I, apparently, am failing in that department because my 3-year-old might officially be a petty thief).
I was, on the whole, pretty disappointed that what this new page is really about is attachment parenting versus what – non-attachment parenting? What is the opposite of attachment parenting called “Those of us who sleep without our children so we can actually sleep or have sex on the off-chance we want too?”
Or are we considered people who aren’t attached to  our kids if we don’t practice attachment parenting? Am I a non-attached parent?
And why is the NYT opinion page dedicating an entire section to discussing whether this form of parenting reinforces or undermines women? Isn’t that the real question?
Oh wait – my other real question was this – who the hell is really obsessed with becoming a perfect mother?? What does that mean? Does that mean you only exclusively breastfeed for a year? And your baby sleeps next to you or you run to him the second he cries because god forbid he ever experience sadness and you use only cloth diapers and you make only his or her organic food?
Is that what it means?
Does the husband help in this process? Cause isn’t he part of the equation too? Or is that where the question about feminism is meant to come in?
But then I have more questions – if by doing all of these things, it tells the world and your child that you are the perfect parent – then what is it that you expect from the child? Mothers who spend their days trying to be perfect – do they also expect perfection from the children?
Because if you are expecting and striving for perfection in your own self, are you willing to accept what you view as anything BUT perfection from your children?? This is what I wonder when I read all about these women who so desperately are striving for mothering perfection. Actually, what I really wonder is – do all these women actually exist? Personally, I just don’t know women who are striving for perfection. I know women who laugh at bad days, joke about parenting failures and also give their kids formula. For what it’s worth,  I actually couldn’t care less if you breastfed your kid for an entire year and am yawning if you’re telling anyone about it. I also couldn’t care less if you hated nursing and gave your kid formula from the second he was born. I don’t think what you do with your boob has anything to do with how good of a mother you are or aren’t.
So I suppose I really am curious to know: does this quest for parenting perfection exist beyond the mind of the media to generate web site traffic? And if these women do, in fact, exist – do they allow for imperfections in their children? Can you tolerate imperfection in others if you seek it so intensely for yourself?
Please – speak up – I am genuinely very very curious!!!  I honestly read this stuff and think the media makes it all up.
Here’s what I’m shooting for chez moi:

That's about right. Photo Credit: Someecards

Weigh in on the Wired Momma Facebook page if you don’t want to weigh in here. Are American mothers really obsessed with perfection?

Don’t miss Listen To Your Mother DC

On Sunday May 6 from 2-3:30pm – there is no where else you’d rather be than sitting in the audience of the Synetic Theater in Arlington – enjoying the fabulous debut of Listen To Your Mother DC. Trust moi!

So what is Listen To Your Mother?

It’s a live show featuring local authors. It was started 2 years ago by Ann Imig in Madison, WI and based on her success, she is debuting the show in 12 different cities nationwide. The show gives a microphone to Mothers Day. But it does more than that because it’s not just for mothers, it’s for parents, aunts, uncles, cousins – it’s for anyone who has loved a child.

I auditioned for the show in February and was so proud to be selected as one of the DC cast members. Last month, we all gathered together and heard each others pieces for the first and only time until May 6. I was blown away. I left that evening in awe of the talent in DC, the talent that you don’t hear or see in mainstream media every day but is still there. Each writer has a unique voice and a great story. Some will make you cry. A lot. I don’t even really love emotions and let me tell you, I couldn’t help myself. Some will make you laugh. A lot. Some will make you tear up and then laugh. It’s a great balance. It’s 90 minutes on a Sunday afternoon where you can just relax and let 1 local women entertain you – give yourself a break on Sunday afternoon – let yourself be entertained and enjoy yourself.

I hear we are on track to sell out the 400 person theater, so don’t waste any time and purchase your tickets pronto. And a final last pimping of it out, catch my interview today on the show’s site!

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I Hated Breastfeeding

What's wrong with a bottle? Nada.

Busy week – so I bring you an old post I wrote back in 2008 shortly after I had my second baby:

How’s this for an honest true mom confession? I really hated breastfeeding. A lot.
The subject of breastfeeding is one rife with confusion and powerful feelings for me.  I truly believe that every new mom I know was riddled with insecurities over breastfeeding and that was evidenced by this question we all posed to each other: “Did you nurse and for how long?”

What that question really means is this: Am I a bad mother if I hate it?  or Am I a bad mother if I stop?

So you hope the other person responds with feelings similar to yours on nursing and better yet, ended up stopping breastfeeding BEFORE you did. This way you can quell your fears and stop the guilt because you nursed for longer and their baby seems fine, therefore yours will be fine.

I don’t mean this as a mommy wars issue – I never found it to be a competitive one or snarky one or reason to bad mouth someone for being a bad mom. I found it to be nothing but naked guilt and confusion amongst mothers quizzing each other for their own personal reasons.

There is so much pressure to breastfeed and so much talk in the media about how breast is best for baby and there is so little talk about what it means for the mom. Somewhere along the way, it’s like everyone forgot about her. She became a mom, therefore what is best for her doesn’t matter because only the child matters.

Where along the way did we forget that formula doesn’t kill babies?

Where along the way is the discussion that to exclusively breastfeed means the mother is held prisoner to the VERY frequent feeding needs of the baby 24 hours a day. Where along the way have you ever heard someone waxing poetic about how newborns need to eat every 3 hours (if you’re lucky) and how it takes an hour for a feed, therefore the mom is at the beckon call of the baby every 2 hours for at least the first 6 weeks?

And during those same 6 weeks, the mom is recovering from the very difficult toll a pregnancy and then a delivery takes on a body – this is not something that should be brushed aside.

When does anyone talk about that on the Today Show?

Because again, formula doesn’t kill babies.

So I approached breastfeeding very differently with baby number 2. First of all – even though I was tempted SO MANY TIMES because I felt myself teetering on the edge of guilt, I REFUSED to ask any of my friends how long they nursed for and when they gave it up and why.

I REFUSED.

I’m sure I knew the answers because I asked them first time around or they’ve done it since, but frankly I couldn’t remember and guess what – IT WAS IRRELEVANT.

Forcing myself to follow that rule was very liberating and empowering because it forced me to stay focused on making a decision that I thought was best for my sanity, not just my new baby.

I also went into it just knowing me – knowing me as a mom, knowing the needs of my older child and how to keep my sanity. Part of keeping my sanity and therefore my ability to still be a good mom to my older child, meant sleep – which meant that I wasn’t going to be the only person feeding the new baby 24/7. So right out of the gates, I only nursed her three times a day during times when I knew the older daughter would be at school or sleeping – therefore I could focus on baby. This also gave me freedom to move about my day and not have to worry about whipping out a boob in public – something I am not comfortable with.

Also I am a believer in sharing of duties – and why in the hell should or would I be the only person getting up in the middle of the night to feed the baby?  Yes, going to work is hard, but so is staying home with two kids – therefore we both needed sleep, therefore we took turns on splitting the middle of the night feeds. I’m not the gal who lives in a house with a husband slumbering away while I’m up. No sirree. NO way. NO how.

So back to nursing.  On Christmas Eve, I came down with mastitis – and if you’ve ever had it – you know it is a miserable, horrible thing to deal with when you have a three week old.  Combine that with a lack of sleep and an excited toddler up at 5am on Christmas morning and you think throwing yourself off the roof of a house is a good idea. Merry F*ing Christmas, was how I felt.

As soon as I learned I had mastitis and not the flu, I stopped nursing completely and just pumped. And I was very OK with that decision.

By 13 weeks, I’d hurt my back and the Excedrin I needed meant I couldn’t give her the breastmilk and guess what – the Excedrin won out over the pumping – and I stopped.

Truthfully, I was really proud of making it 13 weeks even though she never really had my milk exclusively.

My point in all of this – the whole experience was a lot less stressful because I worked very hard to TUNE OUT all the white noise around me about breastfeeding and I refused to allow myself to quiz others to assuage my own insecurities.  We’ve got some kind of crazy cultural obsession with perfection in motherhood that begins with the breast – and I really think it creates a lot of unnecessary stress and confusion for an already tired and hormonal mom.

So I read the new article about nursing in the Atlantic Monthly with great interest. Of all the things Hanna Rosin says, she really struck a chord with me when she points out that everyone talks about how breastfeeding is free – but that assumes they believe the mom’s time is worth nothing.

AMEN. Just reading that made me feel better, particularly because the high price tag on formula is always a subject in our house, I just never considered it that way. Which is so dumb because one of the first things I did when justifying the expense of a cleaning lady was point out the high value of my time and why it should not and would not be spent on cleaning. So maybe we don’t make the same argument with breastfeeding because it is about feeding our child vs. scrubbing a toilet – but again – why is it a different argument? Is our time free?

Here’s a link to the Rosin piece….it’s definitely a good read:
http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200904/case-against-breastfeeding

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Go forth and do what works for you kittens, and tune out the rest, is how I feel about it all.