Archive for parenitng

Jan
11

Back from the brink

Posted by: madcow | Comments (16)

I’ve always been about being open and honest in relation to parenting; the highs and lows, the horror that it can sometimes be, the hysterical laughter and all the other stuff that goes with it. This is a particularly hard post for me to write, because I know I’m making myself vulnerable, and I have to acknowledge what happened.

Which is something I believe is not happening often enough, and the realities of parenting are squished down so much so as to provide this false facade of what it’s really about. I can’t sit comfortably, believing in what I believe in, without sharing and without being honest.

I want to add, this is my story, and I’m sharing it because I strongly believe we need to be more honest, and more open about our experiences and stop the crap that we’re led to believe parenting is. I’m not after sympathy, and, no doubt, I’ll also receive some criticism, judgement and non-experienced (in this scenario) dogooders having a go at me.

I’m not after sympathy.

I do believe we all need to acknowledge those times we have pulled ourselves back from the brink.

This particular week has been a hard one. I’ve had a lot on, had to make some hard decisions, have had lots of exciting things happening and promises to fullfil. It’s been extremely hot, the kids all had high temps and nasty coughs, my time has been restricted and I got very, very tired and sick myself.

I commenced a slow spiral downwards, in which the only thing keeping me going was positive self-talk, a skill I have invested a lot in, and is a little more complex than just “postive self-talk”. It has been a hard battle, particularly as I got more and more tired, and more and more brain befuddled due to a chest infection. My ability to make decisions declined, to the point where I could see the kids behaving in ways we all know aren’t appropriate, yet I couldn’t for the life of me think what to do to stop it, nor function effectively enough to do anything about it. Simply put, I couldn’t remember how to deal with it.

That, and I didn’t have the energy to do so, to carry out what was necessary, my brain synapses weren’t function enough to connect the “do this” with the actual doing of it.

I was at the end of my tether, desperate for a break, the ‘wise words’ of every expert telling me what to do, with no real idea of my situation, or ability to do anything at that time. I literally couldn’t put everything I knew into practice.

At my wits end, the baby decided a tanty was in order. Not one to be cuddled, attempting to “settle” him requires several strong male nurses and a sedative. Holding him and rubbing his back is not an option. He kicks, he screams, he pushes away, he pinches face bits, he hits to get you away from him. He literally does not like being held. It’s not anything – it’s just him. Not personal, not a behavioural issue. Just him. And pick up any book on how to calm a crying baby, and none will talk to you about babies like this. Or, rather, they give the impression that when a baby is upset, it’s really nothing but a bit of calm cuddling, rubbing and soothing that will fix it.

None doing. And it’s really hard not to take it personally, and to not feel like you’re the shittest mother in the world when you can’t calm your own crying baby – worse when he pushes you away as he’s screaming. Particularly when you’re at close to your lowest point.

Put him on the floor and he throws himself, usuall banging a head or various other body part.

And this particular day,  at this particular moment, he did it all. In my state, I admit, I derived a small amount of (guilty) pleasure at his banging his head on the floor mid tanty. Almost a “ha! now you know how I feel!” kind of pleasure.

And then I moved to the brink, tempted to help him bang his head on the floor as I attempted to lift him for a cuddle and he threw himself back. Tempted I was to hurt him as he had hurt me, both physically and emotionally.

Tempted I was to remove myself from him and hurt myself physically as I much as I was hurting emotionally.

These are not thoughts I have, as a rule. Generally, I’m a caring person, and quite capable of removing myself, logically and reasonably, from a situation that is causing me stress. Under normal circumstances, I would feel the stress, gently place the baby in his cot, and walk away until my anger had passed. Actually, under normal circumstances, I usually wouldn’t let situations like this anger me.

So, there I was … on the brink.

For those of you who have been there, you’ll appreciate what a scary place it can be. I have actually been on a worse brink than this one – but this one was pretty scary.

You’ll also appreciate the amazing effort and strength it can take to come back from it.

Sitting on the bedroom floor, with a wet, screaming, kicking, fighting baby, partially wrapped in a towel, no help and no support with me at that moment, and on The Brink, from somewhere I summoned up the strength to just … STOP.

I managed to hold tightly, but not so tight as to hurt, to utter soothing tones and to gently pat a tiny naked bottom whilst clasping flailing legs under my elbow. I managed to do this for I don’t know how long, when he eventually fell asleep.

And in writing this, it sounds so simple, so easy to do. Just ‘snap out of it’. It requires an immense amount of strength of character.

I wanted to share this, because there are women out there experiencing the same who are condemning themselves for it, feeling like they are bad mother’s for it, and feeling … just awful.

I wanted to share to let them know they’re not alone, they are not bad mothers and that they, too, have an awesome strength about themselves that they’re probably not even aware of.

Mostly, I wanted to share for all those out there that have been there, and not know the strength they have, who have felt so bad about themselves and their actions and their thoughts that they have not been able to step back from the brink.

You are all amazing. You are all strong. And mostly, you are not alone and you are most definitely not bad.

Jun
06

This is how we change the world

Posted by: madcow | Comments (0)

Came across this on Pink Heels and thought it appropriate following my post re Breastfeeding in Public.

This is how we change the world …

Say hello
Say thank you
Say goodbye

Say it to friends and family
Say it to people you pass on the street
Always say it with a smile on your face

Pass it on …

(And in light of my post – say it to women you see breastfeeding (or bottlefeeding) in public, and say it to those who look at you or comment to you when you are feeding in public :D )

Categories : Reality Parenting
Comments (0)
May
25

Kids Suck the Fun Out of You

Posted by: madcow | Comments (5)

Watching my kids playing at a playground yesterday – while I got to pull the billy cart up the hill, after they had all the joy of racing it down – carefree, uninhibited and having a great time, it occurred to me that I was once like that.

Carefree, uninhibited – even more so after a couple of drinks, which I think is how I ened up with kids in the first place – and having a great time. I even swore that I’d be one of those mums who had fun with their kids, jumping into piles of leaves, rolling down hills, jumping in puddles and climbing trees.

Sadly, it’s not how real life is:

Rolling down hillls hurts. You bang your hip and it leaves a nasty bruise. This doesn’t happen when you are younger than 9. Once you hit thirty forget it. And don’t try it after a couple of glasses of wine, because that just makes you throw up.

Jumping into leaves; well there is quite likely crawly, bitey things in there. I’m, personally, not going anywhere there might be crawly, bitey things. No way!

I can’t even live through my kids; my heart stops and I can’t breath when I watch my kids kick their way through leaf lakes. I fear sharp things that will poke them, drawing blood, and the spider that will kill the allergic 6 year old.

Puddles leave your feet cold and wet and uncomfortable, not to mention the extra, unnecesasry washing you have to do.

My body, whose shape has changed significantly over the last few years, no longer provides me with the graceful balance I once had, walking along brick fences and leaping, gazelle like, from gate post to gate post. Richter scales have recorded my efforts. And the neighbours just tutt. Watching the kids, and my heart is in my mouth. And the neighbours still tutt, at the bad, careless and irresponsible mother who lets her kids walk along fences.

Camping in the backyard is just offering yourself up to the mosquitos. And, surely, if you let the kids do it they’ll be abducted or a tree will fall on them or the cat will sleep on their face and they’ll die!

As for climbing trees, depsite the daily lifting and hugging of my children, which one would assume would increase one’s strength as the children’s weight increased, it appears to do the reverse in mother’s. They can lift their kids with ease in times of need, but attempt to lift your own body weight to haul yourself a foot of the ground and you’re in trouble. Besides, you seriously doubt whether the branches will hold you. Even the ones a good foot or more thick.

And the biggest fun killer; all you can think of is the size of your bum whilst you’re trying to hoist yourself up there, and how many people are witnessing you make a spectacle of yourself.

Categories : Reality Parenting
Comments (5)

With the recent article, featuring yours truly, in last Sunday’s Age I recieved numerous emails and noted discussion on various social wesbites, forums and the like.

Amongst the “thank you” emails and other, I was diagnosed with an “attachment disorder” – formally of course, based entirely on the readers interpretation of the article - and concern that I’d missed the experience of breastfeeding.

(Where the hell did that come from? Because I subscribe to the method of Controlled Crying? Can I not do both??!!)

Anyhoo, it was then that I noticed something very disturbing and incredibly upsetting.

You see, I don’t work in extremes. I work in ‘mainstream’ (for want of a better word), what the majority do, the average, the usual.

The accusations regarding my controlled crying (CC) beliefs were founded on the extreme, fanatical and, I believe, potentially harmful versions of CC that have been doing the rounds for years. The original having be misinterpreted, misconstrued, and altered to become something that most of us CCers don’t subscribe to.

The disturbing, upsetting thing is that, in my various forays into discussions of various groups (in this case alternative parenting advocates) I noted that “research” (incredibly biased), videos, documents and other images were doing the rounds within the groups.

Disturbing, emotional images that demonstrate only the extreme cases of the parenting style in question.

In the hands of experts and those in the know, this is useful information to have. My concern is that, in the hands of the “followers”, those who passionately follow a particular style, but have no formal experience or education in supporting Mums, this is a damaging practice. It does nothing but reinforce (extreme) stereotypes and generalisations, causing the extreme behaviours to appear to be the norm, perpetuating the divides between Mums who subscribe to parenting styles.

Thus, when I say I subscribe to CC, I’m condemned, attacked and vilified. And I don’t know why. Or didn’t, until I saw what was going on.

Now I understand the passionate comments, which are, sadly, founded on behaviours that are outside the norm.

This isn’t just the alternative parenting subscribers, baby-wearers, co-sleepers, exacerbating the divide either.

I’ve seen the responses my baby-wearing friends (yes, I do have friends who wear their babies. In fact, I went out for lunch with one yesterday) have received after media airings of alternative parenting.

The abuse and comments they receive, the emails doing the rounds about how ‘damaging’ it is, and the videos and images depicting those behaviours at the extreme other end of the scale.

I wonder at the pereceived need to participate in such activity. Is it a case of “if I put down others, I’ll feel better about what I do”? Sometimes, it smacks of that.

Are people doing it to justify their own behaviours and convince themselves?

Do Mums feel as though they are being attacked, and therefore defend to the hilt, using the most damaging and emotive weapons they have?

Whatever the reason, if there even is a reason, it does nothing to support Mums. It adds to the pressures and feelings of inadequacy that many Mums feel. Confusion, feelings of failure and stress increase, and the great divide gets bigger, more passionate and more and more damaging.

Sadly, I think parenting practices are becoming like religion and politics – don’t discuss them over dinner!

Even more sadly, we are losing substantial support from those around us who could support us, because the minds of Mums (and Dads) are being warped by controversial practices being made public, and the gentler, practical, doable and average practices are becoming invisible.

Categories : Reality Parenting
Comments (10)