I then proceeded home. Within twenty minutes of being home, Noel kicked me in the face while I was changing her diaper, I burned the candied walnuts for dinner, and Juliet became hysterical when her sister buried her under a mountain of blankets. I definitely did not have my game on.
I don't work a lot - about 10 hours a week. But it's just enough to let me know what if feels like to have people appreciate your work. Noel appreciates my work as only a 2-year-old can. She says "no" to the dinner I cooked, runs away from the outfits I pick out, and screams at the top of her lungs at the store when I attempt to put her in the shopping cart. I don't feel a whole lot of appreciation, and I wonder if this one of the reasons why being a mom is difficult. (Just one reason, mind you).
This feeling continued on Sunday, which was Mother's Day. As hard as I tried, we arrived at Church at 9:11 a.m., exactly 20 seconds after the sacrament. Juliet had no interest in sitting still for any meeting, and Noel was only momentarily sedated by licking on a sucker. We played "Finding Nemo" on the DVD player the entire drive to Grandma Joy's house, because we just couldn't sing another round of "Itsy-Bitsy Spider".
Several hours later, I was changing Noel into her pajamas. While changing her diaper, she kicked me in the face; I responded by swatting her bum. I'm pretty sure everyone in the house heard me say, "Dang it, Noel - hold still!" Or maybe that was yell. Either way, I definitely did not have my game on. At that exact moment, my sister came in to say, "Happy Mother's Day, Brooke!"
It was a lovely moment, and I bemoaned that I had been sucked into my 2-year-old's emotions. How does this happen, I wondered? I wondered it during the hour-drive home, and each day since.
Being a mom means that I'm in the game all the time - sometimes my game is on, sometimes it's not. Sometimes we have a great morning of games and storytime, followed by a crummy afternoon where neither girl wants to eat yogurt, strawberries, or any of the other 20 items that I pull out of the fridge for snacktime. Sometimes they eat spaghetti, sometimes they throw it on the floor. Sometimes they sleep through the night, sometimes we are all awake at 3:00 a.m., and I just want to cry from sleep-deprivation. And sometimes the kids warm my heart so much I forget all the hard moments.
Until the next one happens.
So next year when Mother's Day rolls around, I'm going to prep myself that if I don't have my game on for this special day, it's okay. Because within an hour of getting kicked in the face by my 2-year old, she'll shower me with kisses, say "Thanks Mommy", and that's more important than feeling like I've got my game on.
2 comments:
What a great summary of motherhood - it is being in the game all the time. We moms don't have the luxury of sitting on the bench to catch our breath - and sometimes that means having a crummy inning (or two).
Hopefully, in the end, the good moments outweigh the bad... :)
Amen to this sista! The other day Sam kept splashing me in the face with water during his bath. I asked him nicely not to do it the first time, raised my voice and got serious about it the second time, and then immediately after the third time (it was pretty much an un-controlable reflex), I splashed a huge splash of water right back in his face. Definitely not my most shining partenting moment (and don't worry, this isn't my normal form of discipline), but at the time it felt sooo good! You should have seen the look of shock on his face. I bet you can tell what kind of day that day had been. This post reminded me exactly of that :) I think you sum parenting up beautifully in this post! Thanks for making me feel normal!
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