advice · daughters · healthcare · motherhood · preschoolers

Psychobabble (from the Momplex Blog archives)

This won’t be pretty. There will be blood, lots of it. Your hair is going to fall out in big clumps in the drain. You might become chronically anemic. It will be expensive, of course. And you’ll never sleep well again. Get yourself a good chiropractor and therapist. Vomiting is a given. So is diarrhea.


No, it’s not cancer, ma’am. It’s parenthood.

I make no apologies about being the one who made the call to the psychotherapist for my preschooler. Yes, I’m the one responsible for the hour we spent today in the tiny office with the soft chairs and the pretty dollhouse with the multiracial dolls wearing clothes that I could only presume covered anatomically correct bodies. I’m the one who decided it was time.

“I’m going to show you a sliding scale,” the doctor says to my tensed up child. “The top of the scale is the most scared you could ever possibly be, and the bottom of the scale is not scared at all. You move the slide to answer my questions. Ready?”

My daughter nods, clutching Cake and Frosting, her stuffed cats that happen to be wearing gorgeous Barbie gowns, a Mary Kay pink-daisy keychain, and various tacky scarves. I mean, they’re wearing the trash basically. I realize after we arrive that the therapist is taking in the whole scene of my daughter and me, and these annoyingly accessorized cats give a total irrelevant and false message about who we are.

“Okay,” the doctor continues. “What if I say the word shot. How does that make you feel?”

My daughter moves the slider up about midway and clenches her teeth. The doctor can’t tell, but there are tears being held back. Cake and Frosting are damn near being suffocated.

“What if you were to get a shot? How would that be for you?” she continues.

My daughter shoves the slider to the very top, making sure it can’t go any farther than where she’s pushed it.

“Okay. What if I were to just put a shot on the chair over here?”

My daughter moves the slider down just a smidge. It stays there for the remainder of the questions: What if we put a shot without a needle over there? What if I asked you to give Cake a shot? What if, what if, what if.

I explain about the wasp sting three years ago, how my daughter has come to associate it with shots. I don’t know why. Who knows why kids think as they do? I explain about the screaming when she sees a hypodermic needle, even in cartoons. I explain about the doctor’s kit that my daughter obsessed over for more than a year, how we didn’t realize for that long that she and her friend were giving each other pretend shots where — well, where they shouldn’t have been putting things.

“In their private parts?” asks the doctor, instructively.

“Yes, in their vaginas or thereabout,” I respond, instructively. “So, we realized my daughter had been trying all that time to work something out. I’d told her at some point, when she asked about it, that shots are usually given in the arm, leg, or butt. I didn’t realize that the meaning of butt wasn’t entirely clear to her at the time. To her, butt was the whole vicinity of the crack, front to back. So, basically we’re dealing with a fear rooted in a misunderstanding from when she was two, one that had her thinking shots feel like a wasp sting, and possibly in the vagina. That’s what’s up.”

“Aaaaaahhh,” says the doc. But she doesn’t really say it like that. I just think I hear her thinking it like that.

I like her actually. I like how funny she is, how she explains shots are given usually in muscles and then proceeds to demonstrate how the butt is a big muscle. I’d already explained this to my daughter, of course, but the doctor does it better. “When I squeeze it, I go up,” she says, rising a little off her swivel chair. “When I let go, I go down.” I’m in stitches, to be honest. She’s going to be great.

But then she asks my daughter this question: “Does your mom worry a lot? Is she a worrying person?” It makes my skin feel too tight. I’m not a worrying type. I don’t think I am at least. I’m careful, yes, and conscientious and protective, but not at therapeutic levels. I’m proud when my daughter says I’m not a worrier.

When the doctor asks whether my daughter sees me cry a lot, I laugh. This one doesn’t make me nervous. It’s part of our life. My daughter has seen me cry quite a bit, particularly when my husband was deployed. So, I’m amazed at the answer. “One time, when she was pregnant,” she says, “in the bathroom after she threw up.” (I’ve got a bipolar-spectrum disorder, people. My husband was gone for 15 months out of my daughter’s five years on Earth. Her apparent forgetfulness assuages.)

“Is she playful?” the doctor continues. She’s totally drilling. My daughter smiles and nods. “Does she hug you a lot?” WTF? I feel like I’m headed for the gallows for some reason. It’s like watching my daughter on stand at court, being questioned about the kind of parent I am. What face am I supposed to be making during this interrogation? Can I hold my daughter’s hand, or will that be perceived as manipulation here?

“You know what she does?” my daughter says with a burst of laughter. “She gives me a hug and says, ‘Let’s see if we can become one!’ And then she squeezes me really, really tightly, but then when we come apart, she says, ‘Awww, we’re still two.'”

I’m kind of proud watching her burst out of her shell with such a show, maybe even blushing. Don’t you know how it is? How you question whether you’re doing an okay job every day of your parenting life? How good it feels to get some affirmation that the good stuff is sticking? But then I see the doctor’s expression, and it’s not good.

“Mom,” she says to me, prescriptively. “She needs to be her own person.”

Here’s where you can picture a balloon deflating, a leaping gazelle being shot in the neck, or a space shuttle exploding just after liftoff.

You know what? I call bullshit. I’ve lost hair over this kid. I’ve bandaged her blood and cleaned up her vomit. I’ve lost sleep when she stole it. I’ve lost friends and time, too. But I’ve never been a smother mother. A let’s-become-one hug to make her laugh is not a metaphor for our relationship. It’s me trying to kill time between playing plastic horses. It’s lighthearted fun.

“She is her own person,” I say, refraining somehow from gesturing at my daughter’s ensemble, a garish swimsuit-fabric pink dress with gold detailing that would have done Mrs. Roper proud, paired with turquoise-and-gold argyle tights and broken green Crocs. “She just so happens to be a person afraid of shots.”

daughters · general mockery · humor · mood issues · preschoolers

Tickle Me Emo (from the Momplex Blog archives)

When my daughter was a toddler, a dad once joked to me at a Musikgarten class that he could picture her as a teenager: dressed entirely in black and writing angry poetry in a corner somewhere. As she sulked in a beanbag away from the glee-fest of triangle-banging among the other children, I laughed and told him that I presumed his son, whose list of allergies rivals the tax code in length, would be living out his teenage years in a plastic bubble. But I filed the guy’s comment in my brain somewhere between “Things to Worry About” and “Things to Really Worry About.”

These days, my daughter rages against wearing black, fearful she’ll be mocked by other children. Everything’s about pink and gold and sparkly and rainbows and unicorns with her. But she’s still got this worrisome little emo edge, one that makes Musikgarten Dad’s comment seem just a little foreboding. She’s definitely not like the kids I see on Crayola products. Ever noticed what happy little dumplings they are? It makes the hair stand up on the back of my neck, how they always appear to be discovering life on Mars:

Yeah, that’s not how my girl rolls. At all. During her five short years on this earth, we’ve often wondered whether it’s just her or just her age that makes her so intermittently broody. I mean, do all five-year-old girls sit at the breakfast table quietly singing made-up songs in modal tones, with lyrics like, “Everything in the world is my fault, mmm, hmmn, hmmmn, hmmmm, and all I do is clean, mmmn, hmnn, hmmn”? Do all kids her age look in the mirror and say they think they’re ugly? that they hate their hair? Granted, she’ll pepper in plenty of days when she can’t stop talking about how fancy she looks and how she’s going to be the most beautiful child at school that day, but still. Is my 5-year-old girl a little bit emo, are all 5-year-old girls a little bit emo, or are all emo’s essentially 5-year-old girls trapped in teenager’s bodies?

Mm? Hmn? What do you think?

© 2009 JLF

babies · daughters · manipulation · military life · motherhood · sleep

Not Enough Mom to Go Around (from the Momplex Blog archives)

From the Momplex Archives:

My better half (and I really mean that) has been gone for almost three weeks, working on getting a bunch of soldiers ready for deployment. He’s in the National Guard, and what’s normally a two-week annual training in the summer turned into a three-week annual training in December. I miss all heck out of him, and not just because he makes a mean meatloaf and thinks I’m cute. It’s just been such a juggling act trying to take care of a restless 4-month-old and a 5-year-old who’s still trying to figure out how to share Mom. I was right to have dreaded this training for all the months leading up to it. During his absence, I have had at least one veritable nervous breakdown. Tonight I thought about having another but then decided I could instead just bust out the Redi-Whip and eat all the fruit in the house with whipped cream on it. Ah, self-medication.

The thing that’s eating at me is what I heard my daughter saying over the monitor as she was getting ready for bed in her room. Well, it actually started a bit before that, when she came home from the neighbor’s house to the sound of her baby brother crying (again) at bedtime (again) over his monitor (again). First, she sort of retreated to a corner behind the Christmas gifts. I am sure this is because I get so short with everyone when the baby’s crying. She didn’t want to deal with That Version of Mom. But as all kids her age seem to do, she also just couldn’t seem to resist the temptation to poke the rattlesnake with a stick. “Mom,” she said. “I have to tell you that I’m always hungry right now.” Ye Olde Bedtime Procrastination trick. So original.

“Sorry for you,” I said. “But we don’t eat at bedtime, and it’s time for bed.” I told her to get going upstairs and get ready for bed, and she snapped something snotty back at me. I think it was “FINE” or “WHATEVER” or something equally ‘tweenish. At any rate, it cost her a piece of our usual bedtime routine.

“No book tonight,” I answered. She knows this means she’s crossing the line. She turned on the ball of her foot, nose up in the air, and started stomping theatrically away from me. “No story either,” I then added. “You need to change your attitude before you lose songs.”

Yes, I know: We have an elaborate bedtime routine. It consists of all sorts of rituals that must occur in exactly the same order each night. Potty. Toothbrushing. Flossing. Mouthwashing. Jammies. Book. Prayers. Spoken-word improv performance by Mom or Dad. Songs. It seems like a lot, but it does the trick for us, and I totally enjoy that quality time we get together at the end of the day. Parents out there, I know you’re feeling me on this one, right?

Anyway, as she was upstairs putting on her jammies, I heard her say that she wishes she had a different mom. That she doesn’t get any time with her mom, “not one speck.” She started whimpering, “I love my baby brother! He just gets all of her time. I will go away and never see her again, and she won’t even miss me!” Poke a butter knife in your heart and turn it five times to get the full effect of how this made me feel. Because I totally miss my time alone with my daughter. I miss having quality time with her at all. Particularly with my husband gone, she has gotten the bottom of the barrel in that department. It flat out sucks.

When I went upstairs, I asked her if I’d correctly heard her say she didn’t want me to be her mom anymore. She said, “Yup” and when I nodded, she said, “But I was saying it because I feel like you don’t have time for me anymore. I feel like you’re always taking care of the baby, and I don’t even have a mom anymore.” I pointed out that we always had good time together at bedtime, and she retorted, “Yeah, but that’s the only good time I really get with you.” She’s right. Her eyes were full of held-back tears, which started spilling down her nose as she tried to raise her quivering chin in a show of fortitude. What could I do, but scoop her close in my arms and hold her tightly in the bed.

“I’m sorry,” I said. “It must feel terrible to feel like that. You are so important to me, and I’m sorry that this hard time is going on for so long.” Words don’t go very far with a kid her age, though. I know I have to carve out better time for her. I know that my world needs to quit revolving around the baby’s sleeping skills, or lack thereof. Which makes me all that much more obsessed with getting him to sleep better. For the love of all that’s holy, can this baby please learn to nap alone?

It’s amazing, how my daughter asked me today to explain what “below zero” means as well as asked me who made God. These are high-minded questions for a kid her age, and they bend my brain into a pretzel. As complicated and layered as she can be, nothing she says or asks fazes me quite as much as this recurring theme of Not Enough Time with Mom. How the hell did Mrs. Walton do it? Pleeeaaaze, Mr. Walton, come home!