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illustration by Maurice Sendak
What I didn't know about, back when I was single and making
all kinds of pronouncements about how things would be with my kid, if I ever even had a kid, was the insidious
affect of a toddler's screaming on a parent's stamina and self-esteem.
I watched badly behaved kids of all ages in the restaurant
where I waited tables, and at the end of those shifts, sitting around with my
girlfriends (who were also childless and mostly unmarried) we would swap tales, and pass judgment on the nightmares we had witnessed: Kids who threw fits and food. Kids who
interrupted, or didn't bother to respond when asked a question. Kids who didn't
say please or thank you. Kids who demanded their parents' attention.
And so on. Then there were the parents…they
seemed so weak, so spineless, so pathetic. Why didn't they insist their kids
behave, or get them the hell out of public view?
I'll tell you what, I might've been heard saying, my kid
would not behave that way! I had a powerful certainty of what I would be
willing and unwilling to tolerate as a parent, and of what my expectations
would be of my child. I had a clear vision of how I would deal with my child in
plain, unequivocal and undeniable terms. My kid would be polite, reasonable,
and in control.
Nineteen months in, a time I've heard other parents describe as "blissful," I am reduced to hoping for these things. Right
now, as surprised as you might be to hear this, things are not going as I had planned.
At the beginning of 2012, I told myself I would start getting real
in this blog. I would stop making Sam look like a hero all the time, because he's not (not all the time). And I would
stop all the dreamy-mom stuff, because it's not all dreamy. And I would get down to the business of exposing
this whole challenging situation for the mess that it sometimes is…So, here are a few illustrative snapshots (I apologize in advance if you read only for the dreamy-mom stuff...come back soon and I'll tell you about Quinn's first haircut)...for now, back to business; here goes:
- Quinn knows how to say cock-a-doodle-doo, but she brazenly refuses to say please.
- One day in the grocery store, one of the cashiers came around the corner of the aisle and saw Quinn standing in the back of the cart, gripping the metal sides, thrashing back and forth and screaming at the top of her lungs. The cashier, with a genuinely friendly smile, said this to Quinn: "I thought that was you! I recognized your voice."
- Another day I picked Quinn up at daycare and Beth, one of the daycare providers, said "Quinn had a bit of a meltdown today…I asked her not to sit on the steps because I didn't want someone to open the door and hit her…she was so mad…it lasted so long…" Beth owns the daycare…she takes care of many children…yet she was impressed by the intensity and duration of my kid's fit.
- Quinn threw a fit one morning that was so intense that she threw up all over herself.
- When Quinn throws fits, sometimes Sam does too.
- 12:30 p.m. is one of my two favorite times of the day*: that's when I drop Quinn off at daycare.
- One day last week I was in town a bit early for the daycare pick-up. As I imagined Quinn's inevitable temper tantrum in the entryway as I tried to get her shoes on, and then I imagined the wrestling match trying to get her into her car seat, I started to feel desperate; my pulse raced. I drove past the turn for the daycare, and pulled into the parking lot of the movie theater and just sat in my car taking deep breaths so as not to have to pick her up any sooner than absolutely necessary. (Full disclosure: I actually made a call to my friend Erin to beg her to meet me for beer, but she couldn't.)
- We have two dogs. They never leave our yard. They spend most of the time lying on our front porch. Recently, one of the neighbors from the other end of the road, half a mile away, drove by our house. He saw me in the yard, with Moses, our black dog. He stopped and said, "Oh! This is your dog. He's been lying on my front porch a lot lately."
Lately, the wheels have been coming off the bus. So much so
that when people ask me how I'm doing, I forgo politeness and I actually tell
them, because I'm desperate for advice..."Things are not awesome," I will tell
people eagerly. "My kid isn't nice. Actually, she's a monster! I don't even
think I like her…she's so willful…and so stubborn." At this point in any given conversation, lots of
people smile those "knowing" smiles…"I wonder where she got it
from?" they'll chuckle, pretending as if they're really asking.
Sure, sure, I'm stubborn and a bit determined, but it's not
just me. Sam has most people fooled because in public he's so composed. But try
arguing with him sometime—it lasts for days. (I hear Beth's voice echoing in my ears, "…it lasted so long…she was so mad…")
One time Sam and I were driving home from a party. We were
fighting. A couple of miles before our house, I stopped the car and told Sam to
get out. "Get out? I'm not getting out!" It was December; I don't
think he had a jacket on. "Oh yes you are! Get out of my car." He got
out on the side of our dark dirt road miles from home. I drove the rest of the
way feeling victorious. "Ha! I showed him," I thought. But when I pulled
into our driveway alone, I came to my senses…what am I doing? I turned around
and drove back down the hill to pick him up. He was nowhere to be found.
Eventually, after searching for half an hour or so, I realized he didn't want to be found and I went home to bed. The
next morning I found him sleeping peacefully in the basement. He had hidden in
the woods whenever he saw the headlights. Sam, needless to say, is
also pretty willful.
So, Quinn has it from both sides. And, if my math is right,
that makes her twice as strong as either one of us.
If you've already had your kid(s) and they are grown and not
in jail, you might not have had these troubles, or you might not remember them.
If you haven't had a kid, you might think I'm pathetic for
being so easily cowed…I scoffed at people like me too, before I knew…
What I know now is that Quinn screams a lot of the time.
When she can't do something, or communicate something, or have something…she
screams. And I don't actually care whether she's happy or not in these moments,
but I do care about my own sanity, and at this point I can't handle too many
more of the screaming fits because they suck.
My point is this: all those times I saw parents and kids
behaving badly, I didn't really know how bad it could be. Inevitably there was
some other much-worse behavior that parents were trying to prevent. Sometimes, if
Quinn and I are in the grocery store, I give her what she's screaming for just
because I'm so embarrassed, and tired, and I give it to her in spite of the
fact that I know it will just keep happening if I keep letting her win.
But we're at a turning point here, I can sense it. I'm done
being embarrassed. I'm sorry to my friends in the grocery store. I'm sorry to
my friends who might still call me on the phone. I'm sorry to everyone I know, but from now
on, when Quinn throws a fit, I'm not going to rush to silence her, even though
I will feel bad that you have to witness it.
I'm bigger than she is for god's sake! And I am determined
to repossess my expectations and some basic self respect. But as I attempt to
do so, I will do so without the burden of my former self-righteousness…I really
had no idea what I was talking about...but, many of you knew that already, didn't you.
They are formidable despite their size. Q is no longer for Queen.
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| thanks for the photo Corey |
*For the record, my other favorite time of the day, on
most days, is 5:15 pm when I pick Quinn up from daycare and she runs over to
me, climbs into my arms and immediately turns to wave to everyone else she's
leaving behind, "Bye bye!" she yells…as if to say, See you
later, Suckers! I'm outa here!


2 comments:
Kerry:
I love your honesty and someday Quinn will too. Parenting is hard! (And everybody else is an expert). Ask me sometime about the Tic Tac incident.
Thanks for sharing your great writing. Emily has quite an adventure ahead.
Lyndon
Thank you for sharing my friend and putting into words the path that we as parents have to travel down - though sometimes we'd rather jump into the ditch and gorge ourselves on a fancy bottle of wine...xoxo
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