Dear Non-Parent,
I have a confession to make. I'm jealous of you. I just read your Facebook update about how you just woke up from an uninterrupted night of sleep to go to Starbucks and the grocery store (alone) to prepare for the dinner you're having for all of your (also childless) friends tonight at your immaculately decorated and clean home. Congratulations. Are you enjoying your life right now? I sure am as I live vicariously through it.
I love my life. Love it. Love it so much that sometimes I worry people will catch my (slightly insane) grin as I marvel silently over the happiness that is my day-to-day existence.
And?
I'm exhausted. I am the sole entertainer and provider (okay, I have a great partner, but sometimes he goes on trips and leaves me alone and seeing as this is my blog, I am inclined to focus on the negative, obviously) for a very picky and opinionated and loud and spirited and ENERGETIC three year old monster. I love him so much it frigging hurts and so I am willing to withstand a great deal of discomfort in order to make sure his little face never stops smiling. (It often does, but not for lack of trying.)
So, pardon me while I sit here jealously, purposely not "Like"ing or even liking your status because I am pouting because I want to have an adult conversation over slowly prepared food (not made in a microwave) and relish in the beauty of nothingness that unfolds itself in front of me. No one is going to ask you to change their wet sheets in the middle of the night. No one is going to require your assistance in bathing them. No one is going to demand you make them a frozen waffle at 5:30 am only to leave it abandoned on a plate in a mess of sticky syrup that you and you alone will be responsible for cleaning up (or, God help me, my house is going to smell like maple syrup for the next 6 months.) Tomorrow you are likely going to meander over a long boozy brunch after you have completed another full night of sleep and at no point in your journey will you be required to drive a minivan that smells like a foot.
It makes me a bit resentful. It makes me want to hide your posts so that I won't long for those days which seemed to pass me by so quickly before I really got a chance to enjoy them. It makes me want to read only mommy blogs so that I can feast my eyes and say, "Yes. YES. Now HERE is a woman who gets it" and scroll past your newsfeed without the sense of regret I am currently feeling.
All this to say?
It's okay that you get a little bored with the 365 pictures I posted chronologically of my son last year. It's okay that from time to time you unsubscribe from my posts, complain about me to your friends, and roll your eyes when you see that I've written (YET ANOTHER) post about breast feeding. Just so you know, I swore I wouldn't be like this before I had kids. And look who's talking now.
So, judge me for the claims I make ("No one has ever been this tired before"), the stances I take ("I refuse to mess with my kid's vaccination schedule"), the opinions I hold dear ("I have the cutest child in the history of the world and if you mess with me I will throw his tricycle at you.") I don't blame you. I would have judged me too when I was sitting in your seat.
I'm exactly who I thought I would never be. I'm kind of okay with it, too.
And I bet sometimes you think about clicking the "de-friend" button on Facebook because you just don't feel like reading another status about the amazing new thing my kid is doing. That's okay. Sometimes I want to de-friend you too when I hear about the amazing new vacation you're planning. So we're even, okay? No hard feelings.
I discipline in a different way than I ever thought I would. I post more pictures of my child on the Internet than photos that existed in the 25+ years of life I lived before him. I clean up puke and deal with tears and allow things I thought I would never stand for (dammit.)
I don't make my kid share if it isn't worth the fight. I let him watch TV for more than the 1 recommend hour per week. He wears t-shirts with licensed characters and leaves toys in places other than the toy box.
If I knew me now, I wouldn't recognize me.
So, dear non-parent friend, I don't know if you plan to have children now or ever or anytime soon, but before you do - pour yourself another glass of wine, immerse yourself in that adult conversation, turn up the volume on your favorite Pandora station for a bit (who is there to disturb?) and just really freaking enjoy it.
Because someday you're going to have baby poop in your hair and you're going to be reading Facebook because you're too tired to get up and clean it out, and you're going to see one of my posts about my frigging awesome kid (with the caveat that I'm exhausted from a day of playing with said awesome kid) and you're going to say, "Yes. YES. Now here is a woman who GETS IT."
And you're going to click "Like" on that status. And so the cycle will repeat.
And I promise, I won't ever say "I told you so."
Love,
New Mom on the Blog
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
When I was young I knew everything...
See also:
brunches i don't eat,
childless,
enjoying life,
facebook,
kids,
letters,
life,
new mom,
non parents,
nothing,
parties i don't have,
rambling,
status,
stream,
vacations i don't take,
wine i don't drink
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