Archives for February 2015

Guest Post By The Real Sarah C. - My Monkey, My Circus

My Monkey, My Circus

She is my daughter. My charge and my responsibility. I get to make the calls, decide the treatment, and set the course of action. She is my monkey. This my my circus. And I haven’t the slightest clue how to conduct the show.

There are a lot of things that they don’t tell you about being a parent.

That there is just about the most common thing you hear, ironically. So common as to be a cliché. I mean, with all of the parenting books, websites, blogs, random strangers giving you advice, friends and family imparting parenting wisdom — how could there possibly remain something that they don’t tell you?

I think I know the answer: they don’t tell you because they don’t want it to be true. The truth of the matter being that parenting comes with a big, heaping dose of shame.

Shame for different reasons, though. Maybe because you didn’t breastfeed, or because you use those awful, eco-disaster disposable diapers. Shame because you do (or don’t) ascribe to a parenting philosophy, like “the gentle parenting method” or “the Montessori approach”. People will give you stink-eye for just about anything: how you make your child’s food, where you buy your child’s food, organic versus mass-produced versus vegan, home-care versus day-care, TV versus no TV, et cetera.

The worst shame, the most taboo, is the shame of wanting a break. That is most common, most stigmatized, and most under-rug-swept dirty little secret that parents can harbor. Sometimes we are simply and completely maxed out.

Doesn’t seem that the world has a great deal of compassion for us poor bastards. There’s no chapter in any parenting book that I have ever picked up that gives you tools for how to keep on keepin’ on when you’re just about ready to throw your hands up in the air, say “fuck it!”, and let the little bastard have their third cookie if it will just shut him up. There are no online support group for parents to talk, openly and without censorship, about how they just don’t enjoy parenting some of the time. We judge the hell out of those people, saying things like, “Well, you were the one who chose to have them! It’s not the kid’s fault — she’s only a baby!” and “Didn’t you realize what you were getting into? Parenting isn’t easy, after all.” “What on earth are you bitching about? Isn’t not that hard.”

But the thing is that yes, it really is that hard. Even though I knew what I was signing up for, even though I even anticipated a colicky, unmanageable child much worse than the one I eventually got, there was no way I could possibly have been prepared enough. And while I understand that M is a small child who lacks the ability to control her actions, she is sometimes a tiny, tyrannical sociopath, and the truth is it gets to me.

I can’t help it. I love my daughter absolutely and completely. I have never, would never, consider a life without her. Being a mother has been a gift unlike any I have ever known. That being said, I would like very much to be able to take a short break from motherhood, in order to reacquaint myself with, well, my self.

There are things I used to do for myself that I simply haven’t the time or money to do anymore. Parenthood has robbed me of my ability to self-care. I can’t tell my daughter that her screaming is giving me an anxiety attack. I can’t explain to her that I have been feeling very depressed and low-energy, so I need to return to bed for a day. I never expected that my feelings could be hurt so swiftly by her capriciousness, that her subtle refusal to give hugs and kisses would stir my feelings of inadequacy and low self-esteem.

I was prepared be tired. I knew there would be tantrums. But I never fully appreciated how sleeping in two days a week was integral to maintaining my sanity. I never understood how much I needed those quiet, isolated hours spent underneath the duvet in my darkened room. It didn’t occur to me that once I started caring for my daughter, and seeing to her every need, that I would no longer be able to care for my own, or that my emotions could be so closely correlated to hers.

It feels somewhat trite to muse over all the things I don’t like about being a parent. As I said, it’s an amazing gift, and one that I jealously anticipated. My husband and I are already planning Baby #2 (A second one! My god!) because we have always known we wanted to have a nuclear family. I am also acutely aware that there are many, many people unable to have the family that they dream of, which throws my words into rather harsh light. Still, it is my truth, and the unspoken truth of many: our love is boundless and unconditional, but our patience is not. The fact of the matter is that we are only human, and repeated trials by a demanding two-foot-tall bully will deplete our mental stores. It can’t be helped. Sometimes, the ringleader of the circus needs to leave the monkeys to their devices and exit the tent.

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Sarah C. is the Content Manager for Stigma Fighters Deaf where real people who are deaf or hard of hearing share their stories about living with mental illness. She lives with her husband and daughter in sunny Hawaii. You can read more from her on her blog http://therealsarahc.com/ Mahalo, Sarah!

Dear Allie

There was a trend of creating and posting open letters to people. But we don’t play by the rules, right Allie? Fuck rules. So I am writing you a fucking letter and just calling it a letter, because I love you and it’s on the Internet.

Dear Allie,

I wanted to write you this letter to show you what you mean to me. It is hard to encapsulate how grateful I am for you in my life, but I will try. Let’s start there with the word try.

You are someone who takes action. You don’t “try” you DO. You get it done.

When I came to you with the Stigma Fighters Anthology, a series of essays about real people living with mental illness, you had a plan and you made that book happen. You knew what to do and you did it.

That is one of the many things that I love about you.

Here’s more…

You are fiercely loyal to your friends and would do anything to protect them. I admire that about you. You are a strong ass woman and nobody fucks with you.

Something that amuses me is that we can’t remember how we decided to work together on Stigma Fighters. It just naturally flowed. It happened. You were the Vice President and I was the CEO and even more than that, you became my best friend. I cannot imagine life without you and I don’t want to.

You are hard working, brilliant, a fucking amazing writer, sweet, hilariously funny to the point where I pee on myself when I talk to you, and you are my friend through and through.

You enrich my life. You make me want to be a better person and more than that, you show me how to be one. You guide me down the right path. You gently show me my flaws and help me to realize how to work on them.

Allie, you are amazing. You have taught me so much and I cannot imagine my life without you and I don’t want to.

yay

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You are an incredible human being.

I love you.

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The Assholes Are Spreading

Once upon a time I wrote a post called 3-Year-Olds are Assholes. It went viral on Huff Post Parents with over 380,000 shares on Facebook. Then I wrote a book under the same title, which Booktrope agreed to publish. It has illustrations by the amazing talented Shari Ryan.

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After 3-Year-Olds are Assholes went viral, the award-winning author of Broken Pieces, Rachel Thompson, whom I adore, reached out to me with an idea. “Sarah, I want to write an article called Authors are Assholes. What do you think?” She said she would link back to 3-Year-Olds Are Assholes in the post.

What I thought was, that is a fucking genius idea!

“Go for it!’ I said.

So she went for it and it was hilarious! The Huffington Post published Authors Are Assholes and it went on to win a social media award.

Gabe Howard, my good friend and mental health advocate, asked me if he could write an article called “Mental Illness is An Asshole.”

Again, I thought: genius idea. Do it, Gabe. And he did it. It was amazing and Mental Illness is An Asshole got published by Elephant Journal.

Mia Fox, a friend of Rachel’s reached out to me with another asshole idea. She wanted to write an article called “Dogs Are Assholes.” Well of course I thought this was a great idea. I had her guest post on OS/NS Mom with it.

The truth is, everyone is an asshole sometimes. I am glad the idea of calling people and thing assholes is spreading. The assholes are spreading. I embrace this generation of assholes and I welcome you to categorize something in your life as an asshole if it gives you a sense of catharsis.

I’m a Writer, Not a Mom Blogger

I’m not a mom blogger, mommy blogger, mom of blogs, blog of moms or anything with blog and mom in the title. Initially, when I began writing Old School/New School Mom, I identified (by default) with the category of people who also wrote online about their children. But, in the end, I started writing my thoughts and feelings about topics other than parenting on here.

The truth is I hate labels, unless they say “chocolate.”

I don’t do amazing crafting activities with my kids. We paint with watercolors sometimes. My daughter is hilarious and plays dress up with my Brooklyn Industries and Mod Cloth clothes.

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Sometimes we stand on our heads for fun.

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I’m not a traditional parent. I’m fun and weird and eccentric. I make cookies at 9 o’clock at night for no reason other than the fact that the kids want cookies and I’m okay with that.

Sometimes, my kids eat pizza for breakfast on Saturdays. They are loved.

I’m not a parenting expert, I’m just a person. More than that, I’m a writer, a lover of words, a humanitarian, eater of sea salt caramel gelato with dark chocolate chunks and a mother who loves her children more than she can begin to express.

This space is a conglomeration of my words about a variety of topics including but not limited to parenting. I’m a passionate person who uses writing as a form of therapy.

As one of my best friends Jessica said once “I told my blog because it listens to me unconditionally.”

So welcome to my world. Enjoy the ride. It’s bumpy and you’ll see giraffes eating hamburgers on the side of the road. I’ll leave you with this: I may shock you, but I can guarantee you won’t be bored.

Peace, love, and chocolate.

-Fader

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