Help a DC Area Family & Fun Give-Away Day: It’s Two-fer Tuesday

I am pretty sure all my blogging energy drained out of me after Listen To Your Mother on Sunday. So while I mull about my Mother’s Day post for later this week…I offer you Two-fer Tuesday. That’s right – a double-whammy chance to help a DC area family in need AND a chance to win something fabulous for yourself and your family courtesy of Madame Tussauds DC. You know I don’t do give-aways very often here but this was one I couldn’t resist (usually I can’t resist cupcakes).

It's really anyone's guess what I was doing here at Madame Tussauds DC. Photo Credit: Mr. WM

First – let’s focus on others. Earlier this year, I had the pleasure of interviewing local mom and stylist extraordinaire, Rachel Strisik, on how to keep ourselves organized in the New Year. If you’ve long since forgotten your baby new year promises of organization and control, you can brush up on her tips here. This month, Rachel partnered with 1-800-Got Junk? and the ever-fabulous Container Store to help a deserving family in our community. Here’s what Rachel is looking for:

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We at Rachel and Company are looking for a deserving family in the community. We would like to give back to the DC- area community by helping a family get organized. We want to give back to the community by helping a family who is going through a crisis, in the middle of a difficult time due to illness or deployment or just needs a little help to get a head start on the next step in their life. Do you know a family who has shown true selflessness and has been a great member of the community? A mom looking to pick back up a hobby? A family that needs an organized family room to be able to spend more time together?

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You must nominate this deserving family by FRIDAY at NOON. You can nominate them by filling out the form online or by emailing: bgetorganizeddc@1800gotjunk.com

Once a family is selected,1-800-GOT-JUNK? will remove clutter from the family’s home and donate it to a local charity. Next, Rachel and her team of organizers will come in and create an organized space using products donated from The Container Store. Doesn’t this sound dreamy?? What mom doesn’t want more home organization for Mother’s Day? The organization will take place May 22-24, so it’s coming up quick! So please, put on your thinking caps and nominate that deserving family before Friday and please – spread the word to anyone else you know who might have someone to nominate!

Now – what can I offer VOUS for just yourself?

At Madame Tussauds. Me and my sister having an inappropriate moment. Photo Credit: Fritz Photography & Georgetown Catering

Earlier this fall, my sister invited moi and my friends to a party at Madame Tussauds DC and it was fantastic. We might have inappropriately touched George Clooney. We might have dirty danced with JLo. Anything is possible but we were there after hours. I can’t give you a chance to grope celebrities because this is a family-friendly blog, people, but when Madame Tussauds contacted me about giving away four VIP tickets to one of my beloved blog readers – I totally jumped at the chance.

Is it because I think you want to touch Johnny Depp and Tom Cruise?

Apparently my husband wanted to take Marion's picture instead of a President's at Madame Tussauds.

Or is it because I think you want to give your kids a chance to pose for pics with all 44 President, sit in the Oval Office, pose behind the press secretary’s podium and walk through American history?

You decide.

Either way, we had a ton of fun at Madame Tussauds that evening and I am eager to head back with my girls. Also, for this weekend only, Madame Tussauds is offering a special deal for you special Moms out there:

“Who says Mother’s Day can only be celebrated on Sunday?  The Presidents Gallery by Madame Tussauds is celebratingMother’s Day all weekend long and letting all moms go free May 12 and 13 with the purchase of any regular price admission ticket.  This is the perfect opportunity to meet our newest figure and the “mother” of the Girl Scouts, Juliette Gordon Low! Use promo code V580 or mention “mother’s day” at our admissions counter.”

How to win one ticket good for admission for 4 people to give-away? You ask?

“Like” moi on Facebook and post a message there that you are entering in this give-away. So simple.  My girls love the thrill of picking the winner’s name and I’ll post the winner on WM FB page on Friday evening!

Disclosure: Madame Tussauds gifted me a ticket for my family of 4 to enter admission free. My opinions here are my own.

Listen To Your Mother: Occupy Parents

Yesterday we packed the house and practically sold out the first ever Listen To Your Mother DC show. It was remarkable. Fourteen local writers had the audience laughing and sometimes, crying, for 90 minutes. I was so honored to be a part of the debut show and humbled by the packed house. We even started late because of the line out front to get into the theatre. One of the things I really liked about the show was it was generational – it powerfully opened with a piece by a grandmother who reminded us all that we are mother warriors.  After the show, it was a pleasure to stop and talk with people who enjoyed our show and to hear more about why they enjoyed it. My conclusion – sometimes we all need a break from the kids to sit together and remember that we aren’t alone.  Final thing – sometimes I feel like I am writing in a black hole – I just put it out there into cyberspace and there it goes – but reading in front of an audience and hearing their reaction – now I see why people love performing! What a thrill!!

Because I was pretty busy all weekend and had no time for blogging, instead today, here’s the piece I read yesterday, which was something I wrote on this blog and posted back in December. I call it Occupy Parents: Oppression by Toddler.

This fall it hit me – I am the 99%. There are no protestors out front, no camp, no drum circles, no one is fighting for my rights. I am oppressed, mistreated.  Yet I do nothing. I suffer from Stockholm Syndrome.

I sympathize with my oppressor. I’m incapable of leaving the very person holding me captive. True, I’ve plotted my escape; Richard Branson’s Caribbean home, pre-fire of course, tops the list.  But no one can help.  Because they are captives too. This is upside down world where the 99 percent and the 1 percent live together simultaneously in harmony and in chaos.

I recognize the others when I am out during the day, it’s the only time of day I am typically released. I see their blood-shot, tired eyes and like myself, I see them traveling around town with their captors. It is rare to see a 99%er at night. We aren’t let out easily and truthfully, our eyes struggle to readjust in the darkness.

The working conditions of my oppressor are technically listed as a form of torture under the Geneva Convention. I googled it. She operates with the most criminally insane device: the unpredictable, the unknown. Could the day start at 3am? 4am?  I don’t know. I start to believe that 5am would be a gift. And it’s not just when she wakes up, it’s her erratic behavior once she wakes up.

But I am not weak. I am not helpless. I know the 99 percent need to rise above. And in this twisted reality, the 99 percent are the ones who hold the keys to the front door, the car, the bank account, we know how to work the remote control.  We provide the food and shelter to the one percenters. And yet we do not leave.

Ultimately, the question is simple: Why does a toddler abruptly go from sleeping through the night and waking after 6:30 to suddenly waking daily at 4:18 or 5:02 and then refusing to go back to sleep? And as anyone knows who has lived through this, an awake 3-year-old is an entirely different beast from a baby who wakes in the middle of the night for one simple reason:  a baby can’t march into your room, flip on the overhead lights, pull off your covers and shout “MOMMY WAKE UP!”

If they could, none of us would have them. Ever.

And that’s the catch, the rules change without warning under these working conditions.  I was ambushed.

This bunny alarm clock didn't do squat for moi

In my house, the upheaval began on a crisp fall day. And commenced what has turned out to be four consecutive months of torture. Though the question seems simple: why wake so early for no reason, unfortunately the answer remains deeply complex. The motivations of the one percent offer little understanding to us 99
percenters, though it is studied and evaluated in grave detail.
We wracked our sleep-deprived brains. Was it moving her to a big bed? Did she have to pee? Was she hungry? Is it her eczema? Wait wait, I know! Let’s buy
a bunny alarm clock
that teaches her to stay in bed until the bunny wakes! Can an inanimate bunny teach this child something that I can’t? I
will pay anything if it is a magical bunny that can lure a toddler back to sleep. And when you are so tired, you start to believe it could happen.

How about taking away story time until she sleeps longer? How about no songs before bed? Maybe punishment will work because she loves those things.  And
punishment can feel so good because it gives the false feeling of power. To the powerless.

But wait – don’t the “experts” say to reward good behavior.

Confusion is part of the torture.

So how about promising her candy if she stays in her room until the bunny wakes up? Will sugar only incentivize the already cruel tactics of this small dictator?
Do we negotiate with terrorists?

Doubt is part of the torture.

The truth is the 99 percent will negotiate and bribe with total disregard for future repercussions if it means sleeping until the sun comes up. Recall: we
believe in the possible power of a bunny alarm clock.

You can drive yourself INSANE trying to trouble shoot and problem solve with a child who has the attention span of a gnat and an ability to ignore your
direct questions more skillfully  than Newt Gingrich Except these kids don’t lie. They just don’t offer you any hint or help.

And then, one day, for me, it just ended. After four months of mind-numbing exhaustion, she just began sleeping until 6am. Back to wracking my brain for answers that will never come: Was it getting a bedtime snack? Was it going potty at 11pm? We will never know. But I am left with only the emotional scars and the fear of this: will it start again without warning or explanation?  In the end, that bunny clock remains useless.

I offer you this tale as a warning and with sympathy, in case you, too, suffer from Stockholm Syndrome.

We are the 99% and so far – Occupy Parents is kicking my ass.

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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?

Life with a 3-year-old: Welcome to the Year of the Rat

Much has been documented about life with a three-year-old. Personally, I’ve written about how the only conceivable answer to why I don’t leave for 365 days  is that I suffer from Stockholm Syndrome because what else can rationally explain living life under the cruel regime of a small and unpredictable dictator?

Other times, I marvel over her still-chubby arms and dread the day she has an actual wrist instead of a Michelin Man arm. The charm of hearing her pronounce her S’s with her tongue creating a sweet lisp noise as it presses against her front teeth and she waxes on about her love for “Sphider Man,” could make anyone forget the insane breakdown that just happened 2.3 seconds prior or is about to erupt in 12 seconds.

But it isn’t until you are into toddlerhood that you realize something else: They are rats.

No no. Not snitches. In my house, that’s the older one.

The human species at three exhibits many characteristics shared only by the rat. I know this because I am a world renown scientist. C’est vrai. Oh. And a human behavior specialist. And an early childhood educator.

Or I’m just super good at sounding like one.

What do I mean, you ask, all aghast that I’m telling you that your kid is cousins with that rat you’re trying to trap out back?

Remember these scenes?

The Bubonic Plague

Why no..you probably weren’t in England in the Middle Ages as the Bubonic Plague swept across Europe. HOWEVER life with a 3-year-old means life with constant disease. They are nothing if not incubators and spreaders of all sorts of nasty illnesses. Look closely at that poor sad couple slumped down in the foreground. It’s totally you – probably like 3 weeks ago.

You know you’ve lived with a three-year-old when at least one holiday has been spent vomiting the entire time. We’ve been lucky enough to have two of those. The first time, our gift to my entire family on Christmas eve was the highly contagious norovirus.

Merry Christmas family! We brought the rat! We offer you a quick way to drop 5 pounds before New Year’s Eve.

#You’reWelcome. No need to send a Thank You note this year. Really, I insist.

This past year, we were quarantined to our own separate table over Thanksgiving dinner because the day started with puking again. Naturally.

Next year’s invite might read: You’re invited, leave the rats out back. And please wear your HAZMAT suit the entire time so as to keep your inevitable disease contained:

Pass the gravy, not whatver disease your kid is inevitably harboring right now. Happy Holidays.

Come to think of it, that suit might come in handy beyond the holidays. How about all those times the apparently “potty trained” 3-year-old craps their pants? My favorite is when she pees her pants while we’re standing in the bathroom.

Really?

You really didn’t know 1 second ago when I brought you in here, that you had to use the facilities?

#WhyGodWhy

Not long ago, I learned that some idiot parents at a preschool called the Department of Health on the preschool and complained it wasn’t clean enough because their kid was getting sick all the time. This story is endlessly amusing to me. Had these ahole parents never once ever come across a 3-year-old in their life until they had one?? Or better yet, were they the jerks who assumed every other parent did something wrong, like I don’t know, bathe their kid in illness, and continuously forget to wash their grubby little hands, because why else would that kid be sick so much?

#Idiots

So what other characteristics do 3-year-olds share with rats?

Hoarding and thieving things to retrieve for their nest. Specifically the hoarding of a totally random assortment of teeny tiny small plastic toys, that rotate in favorability and importance with no clear warning or obvious reasoning. My favorite part of this hoarding characteristic, which includes carefully guarding said items and squirreling them away in their room and random bags, is keeping track of these 2 inch items.

Because you know, they never get lost. Exhibit A: the world’s smallest rhino and the world’s happiest blue plastic bunny. I rue the day they entered my life.

How quickly can I make these guys disappear?

When the tiny toy flavor of the week leaves the rat’s nest, it is the adult human who bears sole responsibility for keeping an eye on said toy and ensuring its safe return to the nest. This agreement is not even a verbal agreement. Consider it part of the mind-reading terms you agreed too upon birthing this child, after hosting it in your uterus for 10 long months. If you defy the terms of this agreement because your brain dare crowd with other more pressing thoughts, the wrath of the rat will wreak havoc on your life. David beat Goliath. This is the modern day tale. During the year of the rat, the rat-human child will inevitably wear you down; you will find yourself scouring a park, the playroom, the bedroom, the laundry machine, anywhere you can deseperately think you might relocate the world’s smallest lost toy, as fear ricochets through your body. Your blood turns cold in ancitipation of the epic meltdown that awaits you in the very near future.

#NotAgain

As for the thievery part of this phase of life, my best advice is, if a 3-year-old has entered your home, pat them down before leaving because odds are they’ve located more of the world’s smallest  plastic toys and carefully placed them somewhere on their person or in the backpack of “treasures” they insisted on bringing to the outing.

Desperate times call for desperate measures in the year of rat. As a well regarded scientist myself, even moi can’t shed any light on why the small rat-human favors small toys and hoarding them in this third year of life.

You will never win.

Accept it for what it is.

Am I missing any of the rat-like characteristics of the 3-year-old? Chime in.

In the mean time, if you’ve got a rat living in your home, my best advice: Dust off your hazmat suit, prepare to ruin a few holidays, hunt down some magnifying glasses and don’t forget to take your vitamins.

For more survival tips on the Year of the Rat, and general hilarity, be sure to “Like” the Wired Momma Facebook page.