OH THERE ARE SO MANY TIMES I HAVE BEEN A CRAP MOM THIS SUMMER. HOW TO COUNT THEM??? Well, erm, here are the top 5:
1. Yelling at Jack when he crashed his bike and showed up bleeding. The TL;DR here is that one unfortunate side effect of my summer class is that swim lessons are hard to manage. Minnie can’t do the morning lessons because I am teaching. But the night lessons are hard to swing because Dorothy has dance pick ups around the same time,. We have done our best to carpool, but it’s hard to find kids with the same schedule because of private lessons, etc. SO. At least one night a week, I need Jack or Harry (or sometimes both of them) to help me either watch Minnie before/during her lesson or right after. The other day, I texted Jack between eleventy billion trips down the water slide and asked him to hurry it up already and meet me at the pool so I could get Dorothy. He replied that he was eating and would leave soon, eve though he was supposed to show at 4:30 AT THE VERY LATEST, and it was already after 4:15. We did the slide twice more (ugh you guys—- I love it but am also thinking about the future when she is large enough to stay feet-first on the slide and not get flipped around by the water that whooshes down it and also strong enough to swim with the slide pool current), and I checked Life360 to find HE WAS STILL AT HOME. I called him (while standing up to my thighs in the shallow end because I am classy AF) and said he needed to get to the pool in literally 4 minutes (possible on a bike but maybe not the most fun) and that I was counting on him! We did the slide two more times (heading into serious FML territory) when he FINALLY burst onto the pool deck 4 minutes late. I handed Minnie off (we actually CLIMBED DOWN the water slide stairs instead of sliding down one more time) and stalked away when he was all wait a second, Mom. I need to get a bandaid. I was like that’s your problem, man, here’s your sister— she wants to go on the slide right now. THEN I NOTICED HE WAS BLEEDING from the elbows and knees, and you guys! I barely clocked it— I just said YOUR TODDLER like a pilot ceding control of a plane and left to run home, heat up Dorothy’s buttered noodles, grab Coop fresh from a diving carpool drop, and get Dorothy from jazz tech class. It wasn’t until I got back to the pool a the very end of lessons and prepared to set up a snack shack picnic that I even asked him how he was. Because I am terrible. He had to put the chain back on his bike, even— it was an actual crash. I’m the worst.
2. Freaking OUT because Coop won’t eat home food. Cooper LOVES fast food. And junk food. And any food not from home (except school lunch food because that would be too easy). It’s really hard for Ben and me to keep him fed and also stay out of the drive thru line. His Little League all star team was playing for their summer series last week at districts, and Ben and I made Cooper a meal to eat between diving and baseball because the plan was for Harry to pick him up at diving and take him to his game one night when Be was on-campus, and I was tied up with swim and dance. We asked him the night before what he wanted, and he said he’d eat a bagel, a Zbar, a couple of applesauce pouches (gross, but the only portable fruit he’s into), and some chicken strips cold with honey BBQ sauce. He also packs snacks in his dive bag to eat between dry land and actual diving, so we assumed this would hold him over until he got home around 7 and could eat whatever he wanted. Ben made the chicken strips the night before so Coop could eat some for a snack, and we asked a million times if they were OK or if he wanted something else. He said they were good and he likes them cold, etc. We are really touchy about packed food because sometimes he will decide he doesn’t actually want it because he doesn’t feel hungry but then he is actually very hungry, and his blood sugar crashes, and he ends up crying on the boards or behind the plate and THERE IS NO CRYING IN BASEBALL, etc. WELL. His team won the game, and Coop had 2 great hits, but he begged Harry to take him to a chicken place on the way home. Harry settled for ice cream and didn’t call and ask us to order it ahead but did complain about the price and the distractions in the car from the most persistent pestering passenger. (Which completely freaked me out because a 77-year-old woman was killed in a crash on the very highway they were driving on just the previous week— minutes after Dorothy ad I drove past that every same spot, so the distracted teenage driving thing was already on my mind) And then I opened his lunch box to clean it out AND HIS FREAKING FOOD WAS UNTOUCHED. That was the last straw for me. I let him charge lunch at the pool, so he had already eaten a garbage not-home meal! I asked him every possible way if his food was OK before I packed it. And Harry ended up NOT GOLFING that afternoon because he realized he’d have to run home and get Coop’s dinner after golf and before pick up. I could not handle the sight of untouched chicken strips and still full applesauce and an unbitten bagel, etc etc etc. I cried. OVER CHICKEN STRIPS. I might have PMS (but who is to say because my cycle is bananas—I might just be this unhinged forever). I guess I need to realize that fast food might be better than conflict food and structure things accordingly? Probably telling Cooper that he can no longer do any activities over the dinner hour ever again because he has to be home to eat is… not the answer. (But yes, I did say that).
There are so many tough moments in motherhood. So many. But I can guarantee your kids will remember all the time you spent with them making cookies and watching movies and sliding down waterslides. You are such a great mom, Sarah, and I know you know that but it's so hard to believe it at our core some days.
ReplyDeleteI am completely over cooking and eating this summer. I honestly wish we could all subsist on shredded cardboard from here on out, but I have the distinct impression that wouldn't go over particularly well.
Also, your dresses are AMAZING. Like...all of them!
thanks friend :)
DeleteLOLLLLL shredded cardboard really does sound appealing some days Elisabeth!!
DeleteOh, I love that dress up or dress down dress so much. The green dress is so cute and is a great colorful fun wardrobe piece.
ReplyDeleteThe AC situation, yikes!
I cringe when I think of all the times I lost my marbles with the kids over WHAT? Next to nothing, that's what. It is hard to juggle all the things and when things go off the rails after ALL THE PLANNING, well, I've been there. My kids do a pretty decent imitation of me and it is good to look back and laugh.
I'd be so ticked off at Cooper too. I think I'd take the rest of the fam out for fast food three times a week and have him wait until we got home to eat something ridiculously healthy. Pestering a teen driver? No siree. I'd have no patience with that.
Poor Jack, crashing his bike. Ouch. I don't think I'd have done the slide. I'd have been standing near the exit, tapping my foot, waiting for the babysitting kid to show up.
From where I sit, these are all small, very forgivable stressed-out mom moments. (the spilling your coffee during the talk did make me chuckle. Lad wanted NOTHING to do with me at his college orientation, and that was tough).
yes-- distracting the driver is a major no-go
DeleteI got such a sense of the Jenga that is pickup and drop off for you. Good on Harry and Jack for being such helpers...
ReplyDeleteI've been in that place with the full lunchbox too--would it help to have Cooper pack his own meals? And then he could have fastfood if he wanted to, with the caveat being he's eaten the packed food first? You didn't ask for ideas, but this worked for me in the past, and I thought I'd share.
Love the rotation your vintage (over ten years old at least, right?) dresses are getting!
totally vintage! he usually just own't pack the food and I will forget that I asked him to and then he loses his shit because his blood sugar is so low-- it's been a whole Thing.
DeleteWhat I am taking from this whole thing is that you really like your house to be cool! We have AC but we have it set at 24C which is...75F. I like AC to take the edge off but I don't like cold blowing air. But it's funny, maybe this is a Canada vs US thing, every place I have ever gone in the US is the same as you in terms of AC! The hotter the place the colder the AC, it seems. I don't know why I am focusing on that tiny point, but I sure hope you get it fixed because heat+humidity with no AC is a nightmare, particularly for us ladies of a certain age.
ReplyDeleteUgh ugh ugh I would also cry about the food thing.
I love a cold house, especially as hot flashes ramp up.
DeleteWe recently (lololol - it's been three years) had our HVAC replaced and now it just does an okay job. It did a better job before, but they were both old units and the HVAC people were freaking out enough that we eventually just gave in and bought new ones. The HVAC fellow told us that our house is so big (lolololol - humblebrag at living in the middle of nowhere in the Midwest) that it should actually be zoned and have multiple units to be fully effective. *sigh* That would involved structural changes to the house, so no thank you, HVAC fellow.
ReplyDeleteOur house is too big for one a/c. But! When we built it, the upstairs was spec, and we finished the basement with the builder. They told us at the time that we should have 2 and zone them, but we were just OVER spending money.
DeleteThis is Lisa. 67 is so cold!! How are you not freezing?? We keep our house at 68 in the winter and set our AC around 75-77 during the summer. But I get cold so easily. Phil bumped it down to 74 when the power came back on to cool things down and I needed a blanket by the end of the day. Ha.
ReplyDeleteI have lost it so much with my kids. I hate when my yelling mom voice comes out but the kids really know how to push me to my limits. I guess they get to see what it looks like to err and repair.
err and repair! very Dr. Becky-- love it.
DeleteAs far as the bike accident goes--I mean, yes, we all want to be kind saintly mothers but it also seems like Jack is old enough to understand responsibility, and people getting stressed, and I'm assuming he crashed cause he was running late? What I mean to say is that I think its OK sometimes for our kids to see that their behaviors negatively impact other people and learn to regulate themselves accordingly. If I'm late for an important meeting and my boss is snippy at me, I don't think she is a bad boss, I think 'oops, I shouldn't be late to important meetings, I inconvenienced someone else'.
ReplyDeleteAnd as far as food, I don't have any great ideas except that I really do believe in Ellyn Satter's division of responsibility. And moderation. My kids get fast food sometimes cause I like it too but NO WAY do they get to hunger strike/skip their home food and weasel their way to fast food on the regular. So, I support you setting limits, whatever those look like, around food. Its not mean and totally reasonable to expect your kid to eat normal foods most of the time.
I want to come live in your house! I could NEVER get my AC to 67 here- well, maybe in the middle of the night. We put it at 68 at night, and I'm still too warm (but I can't get my family on board with putting it any lower.) During the day we set it to 75, but in the heat of the afternoon it's struggling to get below 77-78. We've had the whole system fixed, replaced, etc but I guess it just can't keep up with the Florida heat. Ugh.
ReplyDeleteOh yes. I know that feeling of opening the lunchbox and seeing the ENTIRE lunch I so carefully packed still there at the end of the day. In your case, it sounds like it's more than just frustration and the wasted food, because Coop really needs to eat. I have no words of wisdom here... there's no great solution.
If Jack had left home on time he wouldn't have been rushing and crashed his bike (just sayin...) Glad he's okay!
It's like living in a fridge-- come on over :)
DeleteI have a very restrictive and selective eater and just wanted to let you know that it’s okay to cry over chicken strips. I cried over mine refusing to eat home-cooked grilled chicken with the “wrong” char pattern on it.
ReplyDeleteIT IS SO HARD!
DeleteWhy is it easier to track the things we fail at than the things we do well? I challenge you to a post documenting your winning moments!
ReplyDeleteI'll give it a shot...
DeleteThe not eating the lunches I woke up early to make and bought special ingredients for ( in our case, burritos, the only thing he says the teenager will eat for lunch) also drives me bananas. I’ve found week-old burritos in the teenager’s backpack multiple times and cried at the sight. It can make things feel so futile.
ReplyDeleteI love your blog! Thank you for it - it’s a gift.
YES! The futility and wasted time!
Deletethis is so relatable!! The ER! I bet she felt awful.
ReplyDeleteLOL! If these are the mom fails that you take note of I'm a literal sociopath. You're doing great <3.
ReplyDeleteSarah, we would get along PERFECTLY based on our AC temperatures. I keep my AC at 68 at night and then 72 during the day to help with electric costs, but if I could have it at 68 all day, I would be a happy camper!
ReplyDeleteI always love these glimpses into motherhood. It's not easy! And I know you've helped a lot of mothers feel less alone. <3
My youngest OMG is such a picky eater, it's infuriating. I told him that humans can live without food for five days (idk?) so if he doesn't want what I made, he doesn't have to eat. tears ensued, bad mom, yada, yada. Nope, not a restaurant.
ReplyDeleteI get into the loops, too, Sarah. Not about momming, because well, no one to mom. But about everything else. And once the dominos start to go? I Cannot Do Anything Right. At least in my perfectionist, type A brain. So I get it - even though I don't *really* get it in the context of being a mom. You're doing an amazing job, although I am concerned that you will all turn into popsicles with a/c at 68 omg, seriously? If I ever come to your house I will wear layers. And fleece. All over. LOL.
ReplyDelete