Thursday, June 30, 2011

I’m kind of an imposter.

Shortly after M was born, I knew I was going to have about 6 months maternity leave to be home with him, so I decided I should build myself a support system of other moms in the area. As much as I love my “online friends,” I don’t have many friends IRL that have kids, and the ones that do live almost an hour away.
I joined a local meet up group for moms via Meetup.com. I paid the small fee and wrote the obligatory introductory paragraph about myself and how I couldn’t wait to meet everyone.

Except I never did.

Every time I’d look at the event calendar, I think, “Ohhh, that’s not a good place to take a newborn to” or “Oh, that’s reeeally early in the morning” or some other lame excuse I concocted in my head. Some of my reasons were legit, but more times than not, I was just too intimidated to go. I eventually gave up and dropped out when it became clear I was never going to go to anything before returning to work.

See, I’m not the typical mommy you see at the park. I’ve hung on to some (OK, maybe quite a bit) of the cynicism that pregnancy loss and infertility engraved on my heart. I swore I’d never be one of those annoying moms I loathed that had nothing better to do than talk about their kid’s bowel movements and see little Junior’s annoying antics as “so cute!!”

Now that I’m on the other side, I get it. I get why moms think THEIR kid is THE cutest, and why some people have the urge to put every new milestone on blast via every possible social networking medium. There’s something amazing and hilarious and interesting and totally awe-inspiring about raising a child that makes you want to shout from the rooftops…especially when your road to parenthood was not exactly paved with sunshine.

Having said that, I like to think I’m still at least a little bit of the same person I was before I had a baby. I still don’t think ALL kids are cute. I get annoyed by people who let their children treat a restaurant like a playground. I know that not everyone cares that my baby is [this.close] to walking or talking or doing long division or whatever.

And on top of all that, I’m a working mom. (Gasp, I know.) So no, I don’t spend all day/everyday with my child, even though most days I really want to.

A couple weeks ago, my work went to a summer schedule where everyone works four 10-hour days in exchange for Fridays off. I made a decision that I really want to make these Fridays fabulous. I don’t want them to feel like just another vacation day or holiday, where I sleep in and scuffle around the house all day in my pajamas with my hair looking like a rat has taken up residency in it. I want to get up early (but not too early) and enjoy a lovely cup of coffee in my own kitchen (instead of in my car on the mad dash to work) while M eats breakfast that I made from scratch. I want to get out in the sunshine and take M to the park, or the zoo, or the bookstore, or to lunch with a friend--and all on A WEEKDAY MORNING, OMG OMG. I want to live the life of a SAHM.

Anyway, that play group I mentioned. I joined it again. I figured that M is older now, and more mobile and social and portable. And I know it would probably be good for me to finally have a few “mom friends,” even though that term makes my gag reflex twitch a little.

So last Friday I got us out the door and to a splash park to meet some new people. After a few (OK, several) minutes of wandering around the crowded park trying to remember what some of the women and/or their kids from this effin playgroup look like, someone came up to me and said, “Are you Courtney? I’m Kerrie! And is this M?? He’s adorable! We’re so happy you’re here!”

So I’m thinking:
A. Woah, this chick did her homework.
B. What was I thinking coming here?
C. I’m so not cut out for this.

But I said:“Thank you! We’re so excited to be here. And how old is your little one?” Smile. Nod. Smile.

Here we are at the park. I'm doing the awkward "I don't know anyone so I'll just sit here and eavesdrop on your convo" thing and M is obviously thinking how he'd rather nurse than splash around in some lame ass fountains.

As the morning went on, I met probably 10 other moms whose names I forgot five seconds after they told me, and twice as many kids. Just as I’m starting to feel comfortable, one mom says how she almost didn’t come.

“You know how it is…the house is a mess; the kids won’t pick up their toys. I told Hudson that if he didn’t clean up, we were NOT going to the splash park. Well he didn’t do it but then MOMMY just NEEDED to get out of the house by then. My husband says I need to follow through when I tell the boys something like that, but he doesn’t know how it is!! HE’S not home with them all day! He gets to go to work all day and talk to adults and check his email and go out to LUNCH for crying out loud. He doesn’t GET IT.”

All the moms nodded their heads in agreement. Except me…I pretended to rummage in the diaper bag for sunscreen.

Then later, a mom was explaining how they moved to the area from an expensive metropolitan city so she could stay home with the kids because “that’s what is most important” and “they’re only little once.”

That’s when I realized that I was a total poser. I was like that girl who calls a friend on three-way just to see what they’d say about her when they didn’t know she was on the line. After all, I was at the park with my son at 11:00 in the morning on a Friday. Everyone assumed I was a SAHM. It’s not that it never occurred to me that there probably wouldn’t be any other working moms in the group. I figured there’d be one teacher on summer break, or someone with a flexible schedule, or at least a part-timer, but I knew that they might all be SAHMs.

So I was totally caught off guard when I suddenly felt very, very different. And not in a good way. I felt like a total fake. Like every word out of my mouth had been a lie because I never disclosed who I really was—a working mom. I’m not someone who can skip off to the bookstore for story time on a Wednesday. I can’t watch your kid last minute while you go run an errand. And, sitting among those women at that moment, that made me feel embarrassed and awkward and guilty. And kinda sad, because it had been a great morning…and it was so great that knowing that it was a limited time gig made the whole day sorta depressing.

I had seen the other side, and it looked good. And I couldn’t have it, at least not now.

When I left the park, everyone said how great it was to meet me, and that they were looking forward to next time. I smiled and said, “Me too!” knowing it was a lie, because unless my boss will let me have the afternoon off for the library’s puppet show, then that’s probably not going to happen.

I firmly believe that every family should do what works for them, whether that means one parent at home caring for the kids or both at work outside the home. There is no one size fits all solution, and every family’s needs, lifestyle, financial obligations, and preferences should be taken into account. I don’t think either SAHMs or WMs should be made to feel guilty or ‘less than’ for the choices they make, as long as their families are healthy, happy and prospering.
But on that day, I couldn’t help but feel like a guilty outsider.

…An outsider who just paid a year’s worth of dues to be an inferior member of the Superior Moms Club. Fabulous.

Friday, June 3, 2011

Well, hello there.

I have two things to tell you.

1. I'm not dead. Well, not as of this writing.

It has occurred to me that if you were a follower (either officially or not) of my now-defunct former blog, Tales of the Late Twenties, you may think that I died in childbirth, as my last post was nearly 10 months ago when I was 37+ weeks pregnant. But nope--I'm still kicking. And I have a perfectly healthy, wonderfully mischievous little boy who will be 10 months old next week.

I meant to update the blog. I meant to write at LEAST one disgustingly detailed birth story, post an obscene amount of pics of The Boy (yes, it's an official title), and do weekly survey-style posts about my growing babe, chronicling all his milestones and stages and phases.

Speaking of things I meant to do, I also meant to have a natural, drug-free birth. I hired a doula, took classes, became a creepy lurker on the Natural Birth board, and even switched OBs and hospitals at 34 weeks in pursuit of the natural experience I wanted. Around 32 weeks I found out The Boy was laying sideways so I went to a chiropractor trained in a special method that encourages babies to move into a head-down position, and it worked! "Beautiful, life-changing natural birth, here I come!" I thought, marveling in my new found hippiness.

I. Was. Ready.

Except, not. At 38w1d my water unexpectedly broke at 11:00 p.m. after a long day at work (the day before I was to train my interim replacement, BTW). My doula didn't answer my dozens of phone calls (our plan was to labor at home with her as long as possible) and DH and I basically freaked. We jumped in the car and went to the hospital. We didn't have a backup "what to do in case the doula doesn't answer" plan.

When I got to the hospital I was almost immediately put on Pitocin. Long story short, I labored on the Pit without any pain meds for 24+ hours. When I got checked and was only dilated to a 5, they suggested an epi to help relax the cervix enough to finish dilating and allow me to get enough relief from my contractions, which were coming hard and fast every one to two minutes, to rest up for actually birthing the baby.

I was exhausted and worried and hysterical...and reluctantly agreed. About nine hours later I was at a 10. I pushed hard for 2.5 hours, but DS was facing sunnyside up with only the tip of his head in the birth canal and wouldn't budge. I ultimately had an unplanned c-section after 42+ hours of labor.

When we got home from spending six days in the hospital from start to finish, I was still in a bit of shock that my pregnancy was over and that it had ended in the way it did. I knew that after going through what we did to get our take-home baby I should just be happy that he had arrived safely. But the baby blues hit me hard, and I was Googling PPD on, like, day 2 at home. I couldn't bring myself to put my birth story into words, even though I knew that the details were slipping from my memory every day that I put off doing it. Weeks passed, then months, and everything became blurry around the edges. Bottom line: I had an easy pregnancy, a rough labor and birth, and then a high-needs newborn, and the blog did not survive.

So let's fast forward to now, at least for the time being. Which brings me to the second thing I need to tell you.

2. I turned 30 yesterday.

And as such, I can't very well continue writing a blog called Tales of the Late Twenties, now can I? That would just be false advertising. I suppose I really wasn't thinking ahead when I named the original blog that at 27.5 years old. But I honestly didn't expect to keep up with it this long. I'm also purposely naming this new blog after the next decade so that I can hopefully jinx myself into creating an interesting, successful blog that lasts until I'm 40. :)

So, without further adieu...may I present Mason, born August 12, 2010, 7 pounds and 4 ounces of everything I ever wanted, personified: