Friday 11 January 2013

You think YOU had it tough...?


Well that’s just marvellous.  The motherhood at its finest, I must say.  Actually not just the motherhood, but what I guess is usually referred to as “the sisterhood”, you know, women supporting each other, looking out for each other, empathising and generally being “good eggs” as far as each other are concerned.  As someone who believes in the saying “if you can’t say anything nice don’t say anything at all” (to a fault, probably) I have been pretty staggered over the past few days at just how thoughtless people can be in what they say.  Maybe there is an argument – no doubt imported from the US of A where everyone is encouraged to be frank with each other – that it is better to speak your mind, anything else is bad for ones’ self and dishonest vis a vis the person you are speaking to.  But surely this does not mean dispensing with any kind of filter, the little voice that says “hang on, maybe now isn’t the time/ this isn’t the way to say it/ I’d better just shut the fuck up”?

Picture the scene earlier this week:  gorgeous afternoon at the local park (always a bit tricky as I have a child that goes one way – at speed, on a scooter – and a dog that goes the other, made more tricky by my blooming bump and consequent  breathlessness/ inability to move anywhere faster than at walking pace) and a nice chat to another mum of 2 about dogs, age gaps between kids etc, who then starts telling me how awful she found it going from one child to two.  Now I truly am all for women being honest about the trials of motherhood instead of presenting a glossy Stepford sheen of perfection, but surely it is thoughtless at best to launch into a tirade about how hard the transition from 1 to 2 children is when speaking with a woman you know to be (very) pregnant with their second child? 

Ironically what I find to be happening at the moment is not so much a competition to be the most immaculate parent with angelic children who all slept through from 6 weeks and are a guaranteed delight at every mealtime, but a competition to be having the hardest time of it.  To every “oh we had a bit of a rough Christmas, Rosie was really ill poor thing”, you’ll get “oooo I know what you mean.  Both of mine were in A&E, then I got ill but still had to cater single-handedly for our entire extended family of 16 with nothing but a packet of crisps and half a cocktail sausage to feed them on.”  We seem to have lost the ability to recog nise when we stop being supportive of each other and start on one-upmanship.  And frankly when you are already struggling and feeling a bit low, the one thing guaranteed to make you feel like throwing in the towel is being made to feel that actually you have it easy and have nothing to complain about – at least you got 3 hours sleep last night, mine were up ALL night and ALL day...you get the idea. 

It reminds me of that Boots advert that was on TV last year – the two mums meet on the street comparing snotty noses and Christmas lists of Things To Do.  All very amusing – yes, we nodded sagely with a wry grin on our faces as we recognised the female ability to soldier on and Get Things Done – but part of me thought “Which one came away from that feeling smug that she actually had it worse?”.

 I don’t know whether it is a habit we have slipped into as a misguided way of trying to engender a feeling of solidarity, but maybe sometimes all people need as a sympathetic ear and a big piece of cake.  Unless of course that cake was made while you had your arm in a sling, having made Sunday lunch for 8 while the children both had tonsillitis and your husband was working all weekend...

PS as if by magic, and perfectly illustrating my rant above, on checking my Facebook account a friend had responded to my general “grrrr” about the day by telling me how much harder hers had been.   I can only imagine I was meant to compare myself unfavourably with this Superwoman and count my blessings....
 

Friday 4 January 2013

Hope Over Experience


So, 2013.  I thought I’d be so pleased to see the back of 2012 which was, without doubt, the hardest year I have ever had in my life so far.  NYE itself was hard, though: by bidding farewell to the year that mum died, it felt like I was saying goodbye to her a little bit more.  With the anniversary of her death around the corner, I know that the difficult first milestones aren’t over and, again, while I can’t wait to get through them I know that each one will mark a step further away from mum.  We are expecting our second baby this year and I know this too will lead to so many conflicting emotions: it will be hard to bear at times but I’m determined that this will mark a new positive start, a better time for our family after several years of uphill battles.

I have to send my thanks to Kate (kateonthinice) for her comment on my last post which I am sorry to say I didn’t reply to properly.  It meant a great deal to me to have someone tell me to give myself a break, to step back and see what I am dealing with at the moment and give myself permission not to try and take on yet more pressure and “things to do”.  I think the fact that it meant so much led to me not knowing how to respond: that is something I need to work on.  I’ve never been very good at accepting help from people, or trusting that when people say lovely or supportive things that they actually mean them.  It probably comes from several instances of being sucked in by fair weather friends, and if nothing else mum’s illness showed me very clearly those who felt our friendship was important enough to overcome the British discomfort with talking about difficult subjects, and those who disappeared like the proverbial rats up a drain as soon as the going got a bit tough.

New Year’s resolutions seem a bit trite against this background.  So much has changed fundamentally that setting resolutions would feel like scratching the surface.  I have made a few, which I hope will lead me back to myself, though, and seeing as they should be enjoyable “tasks” there are no excuses!  But I guess if I don’t stick to them perhaps they aren’t pastimes I enjoy as much as I think I do...which is all part of the learning process.  So, every week I want to have completed one of each of the following:

1.       a new blog post (I know, I know – my poor track record doesn’t exactly instil confidence but there’s nothing like the triumph of hope over experience);

2.       a short story exercise;

3.       a watercolour portrait/ life drawing; and

4.       baking – ideally something new but anything is good.
Not so much as resolution as an ongoing challenge, is trying to acknowledge and accept that there are things in life (people, situations) that will not change, and that all I can do is to change my attitude to those things.  Did I say challenge?  Make that a lifetime’s work! But one well worth embarking upon.  Wish me luck!