Monthly Archives: December 2015

Confessions of a Facebook Failure FLASHBACK: Warning Labels

CONFESSIONS OF A FACEBOOK FAILURE FLASHBACK: Year 3 Day 15

Bringing back an old post for your punchlines.

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My home will never, ever be featured in Homes and Gardens…unless, of course they were in need of a dramatic before shot or some sort of warning label. Our home is cluttered with hand-me-downs and thrift store finds and, I can assure you, that any aesthetic accomplishments are purely accidental. In all honesty, we have chosen a path in life that would never allow for the kind of beauty you’d find on a cover. We just can’t afford it. But, with equally genuine transparency, that is just how I like it. You see, while our old, questionably hygienic furniture, that should have been replaced a decade ago is surely not worthy of capturing on film, it is the perfect breeding ground for capturing moments, memories, and all of those other beauties of life that get pushed out when “beauty” is pushed in. I am grateful because when my kiddos bounce on our bed or do back flips on the couch, I don’t have to worry about “ruining the (fill in the blank…everything we own is old and deprecate)”, and in doing so ruining their moments that will become the memories that will be worth remembering one day. I am grateful for their tradition of making mountains of pillows in preparation for braving leaps from our bed. Grateful for the teamwork involved in their mischief and the rare moments without rivalry that come from letting them entertain themselves with potentially disastrous consequences. Grateful for our already disastrous life that is the perfect foundation for allowing in the chaos that brings the laughter and makes our home, a home. So truly, genuinely, absolutely, I am grateful for our hot mess family, and our hot mess children, and our hot mess home, because the beauty of our life is so much clearer when posed against it all. But please…just give me a 15 minute warning before you come-a-knockin’ so I can hide the chaos in the closet, wipe off the visible dirt, throw a blanket over the stains, and pretend that none of this madness is true. And if you surprise me in your hunt for a cover shot and I tell you that you just “caught me at a bad time,” know that I am lying. We will never, ever be your cover shot. We will always be the warning label. It is up to you to decide what that warning is. WARNING: “If you don’t pick up the pillow pile, you might end up looking like this” or WARNING: “If you keep picking up the pillow pile, you might miss the moments that feel just like this.” I think our choice is aesthetically evident.

Confessions of a Facebook Failure: Performance Piece

CONFESSIONS OF A FACEBOOK FAILURE: Year 3 Day 10

The littlest beasts coerced me into beaching my watermelon onto the concrete for an absolutely crucial chalk art creation. Admittedly, the lying down part wasn’t half bad. Unfortunately, there was the getting up part that posed a bit of a problem. Especially as the little beasts abandoned me for another crucial piece of work…in the house…leaving me alone…beached…belly up…on the cement…with night quickly approaching…and concerned onlookers whispering frantically about the lonely pregnant lady sleeping on the sidewalk.

I apologize to all of my (once) friendly neighbors and (once) innocent commuters on Willow and Lakewood, at dusk yesterday. After attempting the seesaw rock and roll and the world’s saddest attempt at a sit-up, I determined that the only way out of the scene was the sideways scoot, which may have resulted in an unfortunate flashing of things that are not in the spirit of the holidays, to a crowded main street of victims and perhaps a huddled mass of terrified small children (although none of them my own, as they had long since abandoned me).

12366223_10156326476110500_7447632775619813050_nThe good news is this incredible chalk masterpiece was worth all of the pain of my performance art piece. Just check out my accessorized Frankenstein head and massive leg growths! Owww!

I bet you missed that performance piece now!

 

If you can relate, please LIKE, or SHARE, or FOLLOW, or read some more.

Help me avoid the morning-after-writer’s-remorse that wells from the paranoia of my signature self-shaming, by giving me your virtual nod and smile, and I will promise to divulge deeper despairs in days to come.

Confessions of a Facebook Failure: The Mouse Monster

CONFESSIONS OF A FACEBOOK FAILURE: Year 3 Day 14

Wait for the second verse…

So, what’s the confession?

I’m often told she is my mini-me…

…and I am dang proud of it!

I wish I could be half of this kid when I finally decide to grow up.

If you can relate, please LIKE, or SHARE, or FOLLOW, or read some more.

Help me avoid the morning-after-writer’s-remorse that wells from the paranoia of my signature self-shaming, by giving me your virtual nod and smile, and I will promise to divulge deeper despairs in days to come

Confessions of a Facebook Failure: Weight Limit

CONFESSIONS OF A FACEBOOK FAILURE: Year 3 Day 13

My obstetrician told me not to hold anything over 20 pounds.

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Oops!

He must have forgotten that for the past 7 years, I’ve never held LESS than 20 pounds.

If you can relate, please LIKE, or SHARE, or FOLLOW, or read some more.

Help me avoid the morning-after-writer’s-remorse that wells from the paranoia of my signature self-shaming, by giving me your virtual nod and smile, and I will promise to divulge deeper despairs in days to come.

Confessions of a Facebook Failure: Let’s Get Down

CONFESSIONS OF A FACEBOOK FAILURE: Year 3 Day 11

Concerned commenters see me sitting on the concrete with a pile of little people balancing and bouncing on my belly and often share their sympathy on how hard it must be to handle, sympathetically stating, “Are you sure you should be getting down on the ground like that?”

So, I simply share that getting down has never been the struggle. It is the getting up part that poses a problem, with the wavering balance of the watermelon belly, while batting away the little leeches. So I have learned to be strategic. Let me explain…

The other day my husband saw me kicking the clutter of kid’s crap across the floor into a growing heap of randomness, and then proceeding onto another abandoned puzzle piece or pair of pajamas that had been littered by my littles, to claim as my fantasy futbol to kick towards the growing landfill goal. So he flashed me that look that says, “I want to ask what the heck you are doing, but I am afraid if I do, I might have to help, so…” So I put him out of his misery and explained my ingenious innovation. You see , every time I’m burdened to bend down I have the pleasant experience of having to hold my breath and grunt like a man, as I shove a baby into my lungs. So, as not to concede to laziness and leave the litter to consume us all, I have manufactured a method of maneuvering the mess into a single soccer-kicked pile,  so I only need to perform the watermelon roller coaster once. Laziness averted. Lungs spared.

So he pauses (where he should have stopped) and states with a smile, “Isn’t it funny how you say you are avoiding being lazy, by describing yourself in the laziest scenario imaginable.”

So I pause. Then stare. Then growl. And finally his sanity returns as he confesses, “I guess, maybe, I shouldn’t have said that to a pregnant woman.” You think?

Sorry ladies. He’s taken.

If you can relate, please LIKE, or SHARE, or FOLLOW, or read some more.

Help me avoid the morning-after-writer’s-remorse that wells from the paranoia of my signature self-shaming, by giving me your virtual nod and smile, and I will promise to divulge deeper despairs in days to come

Confessions of a Facebook Failure Flashback: Expert Opinions

Confessions of a Facebook Failure FLASHBACK: Year 2 Day 12

I am drowning in grading a flood of finals! But the Type A (alright…A-) in me has a need to adhere to my once-a-day-post commitment. So I am cheating with some favorite flashbacks from years past. Here is one…

I just survived a Level 5, Red Alarm, Off-the-Chart, monumental meltdown in the middle of Target. I’m not saying I deserve a Purple Heart people, but I sure wouldn’t mind a smile.

Here is the scenario, we HAVE to go shopping. Believe it or not, a trip to a sweets and treats crack house with my 3 rabid addicts, pre-nap, in a busy breeding ground for judgmental eyes, is NOT my idea of meditation, or even entertainment. But we soldier mamas battle on, in our humble quest for yogurt and apple sauce, and some indulgences (sad, but accurate word choice here) for Daddy’s lavish birthday.

So when the first battle over choice of briefs for a paternal present ensued, I was armed and ready with wise words and redirection. We even survived the chocolate aisle in a pursuit for some dark bites to be bowed, by strategically sharing the berry basket for a forbidden pre-purchase distraction. But with only moments to spare before the bomb was ignited, my battle plans were foiled when we were surprise attacked by every mama warrior’s biggest enemy, the casual acquaintance mama, WITHOUT her kids. I immediately went on high alert, hiding the open box of blueberries, and attempting to hide the drooling, snarling beasts I had pouring out of every crack of my cart, to no avail. What could have been a battle just death-defying, but successful(?) enough to be brag worthy, was immediately turned into a fragmented mess beyond repair. That momentary loss of mama-focus, that temporary lapse in superhuman intention…They smelled the fear. My fear. My insecurity. My need to please the stranger, with a portrait of motherhood that is simply…not.

And that was it. Crying. No, not crying….wailing. Kicking. No, not kicking, lashing. Screaming. No, not screaming. Howling.

Here we were. 2 items from the checkout line, basket full, and this.

Thank goodness for the experts roaming the aisles of Target, the apparent researchers and celebrated theorists in the field of parenting that have humbled themselves to the frozen food section of a discount store for their mid-afternoon sessions.

The first appeared with some amazing insight that was clearly filled with the wisdom of behavioral science. She spoke directly to the convulsing mass attached to my still walking leg, as she sang, “Ooooooh (note the intentional extra o’s)! Poor baby.” Apparently, it was obvious that I had fastened him to my fumbling feet as some sort of torture technique for my own amusement. I was surely to blame for his misery. “Do you want some candy,” pulling some lint covered M and Ms from her therapist’s coat. I politely smiled at the well-intentioned, visiting early childhoood expert, and declined the offer. The whole, rewarding meltdown behavior, while declining a reinforcer for the self-controlled siblings/infusing sugar into a tired toddler/candy from strangers/questionable sanitation, was sweet and temporarily tempting, but I decided to battle on sugar-free, against expert advice.

Of course, the frenzy continued. 12:30, pre-lunch, pre-nap, distracted mama, denied candy from a stranger, toddlers in Target. Surprising? For some reason it seemed to surprise the next developmental psychologist I encountered. A male (Not necessarily noted for sexist intentions. Just noted). Leaning in with a sweet smile, he shared, “I’d slap him so hard across that screaming mouth, he would never try that again,” followed by a subtle wink to assert his gentle spirit. Why thank you kind sir. Thank you. Your wisdom is well-rooted in the research of Maslow, among others, and should be featured prominently in the pages of Psychology Today. I can imagine it now, Publicly Face-Slapping Children: A Lost Science by Random Childless Single. I politely smiled and thanked him for the free session, and moved ahead, adhering to even the wildest of Social Services standards, all the way to check out.

There I met my final, friendly foe of the fit, the most subtle and common variety of floating experts among the super market circuit. Leaning in, the loving, yet long little-one-less mama, reminiscing on a tumultuous-less time in her memory, that may likely be more Hallmark than history, sweetly whispered, “You poor thing. The one and only time my son through a tantrum in a store, I turned right around and just left. He never had another one again.” Looking at my basket full of bread and butter basics and a few pathetic little presents to be bought with their own pennies, I considered her well-meant wisdom. So all I have to do is starve my hungry, over-stimulated, over-tired, toddler and deny his unknowing father of his Target brand birthday presents, and he will NEVER have another tantrum again? And the other two, calm children (who have somehow survived me all of these years, without transforming into complete savages) will be completely accepting of this no food, no purchasing their hand-picked presents for their daddy with their piggy bank pennies clause, bathing in the gratitude of leaving their good intentions behind, only to watch me battle their flailing brother into a seemingly shrinking car seat, who has now somehow developed superhuman strength and a flexibility known only by Gumby, allowing him to wiggle through my choke hold with repeated success? I weigh my options, smile politely, and opt to gingerly move the now primitive sounding monkey surgically attached to my leg to the finish line.

It is just then that I realize I had chosen the perfect lane for my perils. A natural observation lab for these all-knowing onlookers. Really? Today, of all days, you need to card me, a 35-going-on-70-year-old looking-mother of 3, buying Goldfish crackers and gray-covering hair dye. Really? You need to call over the manager to make sure you are charging me correctly for the bananas? Really? Charge me for the organic. Heck, charge me for the Gluten-Free, Dairy-Free, Ten-x-the-Price-Free, whatever. Please, just let me escape this looking glass. So when she began to oh-so-sweetly, meticulously fold the underwear, assuring symmetrical creases, deaf to the serenade of screeches surrounding her, I smiled politely and bagged my own briefs, subtly sharing the surprising news that I was actually in a bit of a hurry. Please note that the innocent check-out lady likely had no suspicion of the fire she had ignited with her OCD-inspired good intentions. I was completely civilized in my state of panicked humiliation.

And as we left the bright lights of price checks and the chaos of crashing carts, and I allowed myself the first few seconds to breathe since the battle began, much to my surprise, the beast released HIMSELF. He didn’t need a chocolate (although I might admit to have had moments of soothing my savages with sugar) or a public beating (although I might admit to the evil death stare with eyes of equivalent intentions) or a subtle starvation (although I might admit to missed meals, disguised by the dusty bag of Cheerios I found in the back of the cupboard). He didn’t even need to be picked up to please the voiceless stranger who I am quite sure just wanted him to stop by any means necessary. (I am so sincerely sorry silent stranger. If my shame could be measured in apologies, we would surely be even.) He needed quiet. He needed calm. He needed the natural consequence packaged up in patience. He needed me. I’m his expert. We’re their experts mamas.

And as my two year old terror (at times) still shaking from the severity of the scene independently murmured, “I sorry Mama. I love you Mama. I want you Mama. I wait next time Mama. I sorry,” without a prompt coated in sugar or a slap of submission, a real researcher willing to ask questions, camouflaged with a coat of offspring herself, approached me with this, “Oh my goodness! He is so sweet. How did you get him to do that?” To which I replied, “I didn’t. He did. I just survived the battle here,” and changed the mood of our whole little world with some much-needed laughter. And then she knighted me with this, “I totally understand. Good job mama!” I smiled. Not politely this time, but in relief and sincere gratitude for her compassionate session.

She saw through the horrific scene, to see a two year old having a typical tantrum at Target, and a family who weathered the storm and somehow survived as a solid unit, and reminded me of that success. Sometimes I forget how little they are and yet how big their feelings are. They seem so monstrously big and their feelings seem so insignificantly small, when you are in it. Thank you fellow mama warrior for not sharing your stories of success at that exact moment, but sharing with me the compassion of transparency. Thank you from the deepest parts of mommyhood, for understanding.

Obviously, I am not an expert. Obviously! But I am a researcher. And I have researched the experts, and teach about the experts (to unsuspecting students who think I know what I am doing), and, more importantly, I’m out here in my own minefields, enough to know that regardless of what you do, toddlers are hard-wired for tantrums. This will not be our last tragic scene. I foresee a clear future of callouses earned from many, many sequels. And I am equally certain that we can navigate our way through these momentary insanities in different ways, with different views, and we will all survive unscathed, as long as it is all peppered in love. I am not the expert, but I’m the closest thing they’ve got. My children are simply the experiment of a mad scientist mama trying my best to “research” my way out of an epic explosion. You’ll have to check back in a few decades and see if we all made it out alive. I only hope that in future sessions, the well-intentioned experts, might swap their sessions for support. Smile at THAT mama at the check out stand. Help her get those groceries and go, or empower her with the magic of, “I understand.” And while I am aware that such wisdom wishers share their stories peppered in that same love that we all have for our tiny beasts (except for maybe that guy with the backhand), please-oh-please, unless you really are an expert in the field, please save your wisdom for your paid sessions.

If you can relate, please LIKE, or SHARE, or FOLLOW, or read some more.

Help me avoid the morning-after-writer’s-remorse that wells from the paranoia of my signature self-shaming, by giving me your virtual nod and smile, and I will promise to divulge deeper despairs in days to come.

Confessions of a Facebook Failure FLASHBACK: Episodes

Confessions of a Facebook Failure FLASHBACK: Year 2 Day 9

I am drowning in grading a flood of finals! But the Type A (alright…A-) in me has a need to adhere to my once-a-day-post commitment. So I am cheating with some favorite flashbacks from years past. Here is one…

spent the afternoon at the library (and I patted myself on the back for my parenting plus).

The newest reader was so overwhelmed with the allure of the words that she couldn’t wait until we got home to dive into the pages (and I praised myself for the obvious inheritance of a love of literacy).

I spied, as she opened an anthology of imaginary worlds and touched the pages as if they were gold (and I imagined for a moment that I was in a world with nothing to blog about).

And then…

“Mommy, I am going to read every single episode of this show.”

And suddenly, I was reminded of reality, and my evident need for this ever growing avalanche of humility I call my life, as apparently without them…well, I would have nothing to write about…

and maybe I would be left to read more to my children…

and then I’d have nothing to write about.

Pride is a cyclical sin in the world of a writer.

Confessions of a Facebook Failure: Last Trimester Lies

CONFESSIONS OF A FACEBOOK FAILURE: Year 3 Day 8

Sometimes I lie about being pregnant. I highly recommend the practice. It goes something like this:

Step 1: Wait! Wait it out as long as you can, but at least until your last trimester. You’ll only get the nerve up to do it once, and you want to make it count. My favorite performance to date was 3 days post butterfly release date.

Step 2: Play up the waddle, poke out the watermelon, and wait for an unsuspecting stranger to go in for the highly questionable, uninvited belly rub.

Step 3: When you get a bite (i.e. “Sooooo…how far along are you?”), remain silent, as if in shock and stare blankly for an entire minute. Wait until the discomfort is somehow audible. Bonus points if you can manage a jaw drop.

Step 4: Avoid outward dishonesty (that would be unethical, of course), but emphatically state, “Excuse me!?!” Nothing else.

Step 5: Waddle away. The art of gestational deception has been achieved.

Now before you pass judgement, know that this is not what you think. It is not about finding joy in evil in a moment in your life when the only remaining bliss comes from the sweet, sweet combination of sweat pants, soap operas, and sitting. No, instead I see the practice as sort of a public service announcement for all of the other times folks thought it was a good idea to ask the chunky mother of multiples with a Bjorn strapped to both sides, “Sooooo….how far along are you” …when you weren’t! Unless something is thrashing out of my gut, like a scene out of “Alien”, try slowing down on the small talk, Stranger. That permanent pooch might just be the battle scars of babies birthed long, long ago.

See, I am teaching a valuable lesson to the public that perhaps assumptions and strangers and the checkout line of Walmart are not the wisest of combinations…

…and perhaps finding just a bit of humor in the humorless time of sleepless nights, bowling ball bellies, and an ever-shrinking bladder. Come on…let me have that much.

2 years ago today, I decided to switch out my selfies for shame, in an attempt to change the face of this fiction. So in the spirit of giving, I am gifting y’all once again with a daily dose of self-esteem, in knowing that no matter how bad it gets, mine is probably way worse. I hope you enjoy diving into my daily, dirty little secrets this December.

If you can relate, please LIKE, or SHARE, or FOLLOW, or read some more.

Help me avoid the morning-after-writer’s-remorse that wells from the paranoia of my signature self-shaming, by giving me your virtual nod and smile, and I will promise to divulge deeper despairs in days to come.

 

Confessions of a Facebook Failure: It’s a…

CONFESSIONS OF A FACEBOOK FAILURE: Year 3 Day 7

Team Blue? Team Pink? The results are in! It’s a…

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BOY!!!

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I think the bitty butterfly is a bit happy about the balancing news.

But as the eldest rationalized, “Mommy is still older than Daddy and the girls are still older than the boys. So the girls STILL WIN!”DSC_0059

 

Confessions of a Facebook Failure: Slow Down

CONFESSIONS OF A FACEBOOK FAILURE: Year 3 Day 6

Butterfly: “What does the yellow one mean?”

Herder: “Yellow, what?

Butterfly: “Red stop. Green go.”

(Apparently growing up in a world with Text-ish as the primary language has even influenced the 3-year old, with his omission of what once seemed necessary verbs in the art of communication. Luckily, having spent years immersed in the pre-verbal world of two year olds, I am already well versed in this un-evolved vernacular, and have found it to be a smooth transition into the comprehension of the tiniest butterflies and teenagers, alike. 

Herder: Having also lost the ability to speak intelligently, I obnoxiously sing my response with the obligatory traffic light song, “Red means stop. Green means go. Yellow means WAIT, even when you’re late.”

Butterfly: “WAIT? But when you and Daddy see a yellow light you go faster? Is that because you’re always late and you don’t know how to follow the rules?”

2 years ago today, I decided to switch out my selfies for shame, in an attempt to change the face of this fiction. So in the spirit of giving, I am gifting y’all once again with a daily dose of self-esteem, in knowing that no matter how bad it gets, mine is probably way worse. I hope you enjoy diving into my daily, dirty little secrets this December.

If you can relate, please LIKE, or SHARE, or FOLLOW, or read some more.

Help me avoid the morning-after-writer’s-remorse that wells from the paranoia of my signature self-shaming, by giving me your virtual nod and smile, and I will promise to divulge deeper despairs in days to come.

Now, back to today’s sinful spoils…

 

Confessions of a Facebook Failure: Evidence

CONFESSIONS OF A FACEBOOK FAILURE: Year 3 Day 4

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Please finish this sentence for me:

The clothes I sent my children to school in today are evidence that…


 

 

 

 

2 years ago today, I decided to switch out my selfies for shame, in an attempt to change the face of this fiction. So in the spirit of giving, I am gifting y’all once again with a daily dose of self-esteem, in knowing that no matter how bad it gets, mine is probably way worse. I hope you enjoy diving into my daily, dirty little secrets this December.

Now, back to today’s sinful spoils…

I have already confessed that the butterflies dress themselves.

As I have often been accused of the offenses of exaggeration or questionable elaboration, I decided to provide a visual defense. Here is my evidence. I try my efforts at persuasion. Obviously, I failed. I often do. Alright…I always do.

Note: Please disregard the color coordinated eldest, in a weather appropriate combination. She was born the organized, presentable black sheep of the family, who the hubs and I refer to as “the only responsible parent.” Poor kid. It must be hard raising up all 5 of us.

So my question for you is, what else are these exhibits evidence of?

Defeat?

A fashion gene (or lack there of)?

Cojones?

This is your chance to herd my butterflies. Add your answer in the comments section. Seriously! Do it! Like, right now.

Help me muzzle my own mommy meltdown, by sharing some solid one-liners on my behalf in the comments section.

Please finish this sentence for me:

The clothes I sent my children to school in today are evidence that…

If you can relate, please LIKE, or SHARE, or FOLLOW, or read some more.

Help me avoid the morning-after-writer’s-remorse that wells from the paranoia of my signature self-shaming, by giving me your virtual nod and smile, and I will promise to divulge deeper despairs in days to come.

 

CONFESSIONS OF A FACEBOOK FAILURE: Showers

CONFESSIONS OF A FACEBOOK FAILURE: Year 3 Day 3

Sometimes I am perplexed by my butterflies inexplicable social awkwardness and oddities. And then I am reminded of their genetics…and their role model…and I am overwhelmed by a tidal wave of guilt. Sorry, kids. My  mom-to-mom schoolyard socializations model, well…

Casual Acquaintance: “So, did you have a shower?”

Me: “Oh no! No. Is it that obvious? Do I smell or something? It was a really crazy morning and a really long night and I’m surprised I even managed to get clothes on, but I tried to camouflage the greasy hair with a fancier side bun than usual, see (pointing to greasy, twisted ponytail), but I guess it didn’t work, but I wore a necklace, see (pointing to Target brand, tarnished “gold” dangles), and nobody would take the time to wear a necklace if they hadn’t showered, and since I didn’t shower, I thought if I wore a necklace, everyone would just assume I’d showered, and…”

Casual Acquaintance: (empathetically euthanizing the rabid conversation) “No. I meant did you have a BABY shower…since you’re pregnant and everything. But…um…”

Casual Acquaintance awkwardly flashes a half-smile/half-saucer eyed signal, representing far more fear than forgiveness…and slowly backs aways from the conversation (and the apparent smell), as if she had just discovered she was in the midst of a wild, dangerous beast. 

Me: Oh. Cool. Yeah. I’ll let you know if I have that shower. Um…I mean that baby shower…

FORMER Casual Acquaintance, now safely positioned with a Pinterest Parent Peer a playground away, has already briskly escaped. ________________________________________________________________________________

2 years ago today, I decided to switch out my selfies for shame, in an attempt to change the face of this fiction. So in the spirit of giving, I am gifting y’all once again with a daily dose of self-esteem, in knowing that no matter how bad it gets, mine is probably way worse. I hope you enjoy diving into my daily, dirty little secrets this December.

 

If you can relate, please LIKE, or SHARE, or FOLLOW, or read some more.

Help me avoid the morning-after-writer’s-remorse that wells from the paranoia of my signature self-shaming, by giving me your virtual nod and smile, and I will promise to divulge deeper despairs in days to come.

Now, back to today’s sinful spoils…

CONFESSIONS OF A FACEBOOK FAILURE FLASHBACK: Year 2 Day 2

Day 2: I lied to the little, old lady at church. Rather, the smile that I used to mask the mania may have allowed for assumptions, implying a lie. So I lied to the little, old lady at church. Time for my confessional…

A year ago yesterday, I decided to switch out my selfies for shame, in an attempt to change the face of this fiction. So in the spirit of giving, I am gifting y’all once again with a daily dose of self-esteem, in knowing that no matter how bad it gets, mine is probably way worse. I hope you enjoy diving into my daily, dirty little secrets this December.

Now, back to today’s sinful spoils…

My darlings dress themselves most days. Not as an intentional means of nurturing independence. Not as a thoughtful decision to spark self-esteem. No, while I embrace the academia that supports my fashion negligence, the sad, mad parade of stripes and dots and costume box finds are actually just the result of my white flag, times-up, defeat. I admit it.

So when the little, old lady at church came upon us, baring compliments for my kiddo’s creative ensembles and praising my parenting in allowing my littles to look the part of independence, I smiled. Her assumptions of this audacity in oddity having sprung from my little beasts was correct…

…or would have been on any other day.

But this morning, THIS morning, the dress-up disaster was intentional, and all my own. In an effort to try on the concept of being on time, I had dared to lay out their looks the night before, while they were unconscious and unable to argue with my genius. In an attempt to connect with the cool kids (rather, the cool kids’ “-rents”), I had thoughtfully fashioned my trendy toddlers with the edgiest in Osh Kosh…

…or so I thought. This was my sad, mad attempt to “make it work.”

I guess it wasn’t working.
I guess I broke it.

So instead of admitting to my fashion failure like a sane person, I smiled at the little, old church lady, silently blaming my beasts for the bad fashion I’d bullied them into.

No more. Effort and I just don’t seem to match. I am dressing myself up in my white flag for good, and letting the little ones clothe themselves in independence and self-esteem instead.

And in the spirit of my long dead Grateful 365 Project, I have decided to switch my shame to celebration, in an attempt to laugh and learn and embrace the ugly.

Grateful 365 Day 126: Waving the white flag.

If you can relate, please LIKE, or SHARE, or FOLLOW, or read some more.

Help me avoid the morning-after-writer’s-remorse that wells from the paranoia of my signature self-shaming, by giving me your virtual nod and smile, and I will promise to divulge deeper despairs in days to come.

Confessions of a Facebook Failure Year 3 Day 2: The Hulk

CONFESSIONS OF A FACEBOOK FAILURE: Year 3 Day 2

“Mommy, sometimes I feel sad when you act like the Hulk, just cuz I wake you up cuz I love you.”

“Thank you for sharing your feelings, Pumpkin. I am so sorry I made you feel sad.”

Unspoken rebuttal: Kid…sometimes I second guess the sanity behind my promotion of social/emotional language in my sadistic little truth-sayers…especially at 6am.


2 years ago today, I decided to switch out my selfies for shame, in an attempt to change the face of this fiction. So in the spirit of giving, I am gifting y’all once again with a daily dose of self-esteem, in knowing that no matter how bad it gets, mine is probably way worse. I hope you enjoy diving into my daily, dirty little secrets this December.

Now, back to today’s sinful spoils…

12 AM: Crawl into bed.

1 AM: Watermelon dances on the bladder and I am awoken for a reluctant waddle to the pot.

2 AM: Midnight Monster #2 abruptly enters the inside of my ear cavity, interrupting the magical mystery of R.E. (never quite get to the M.) sleep with “Mama! MAMA! I had a nightmare and…” I mimic her interruption with, “Pillow Pile, Honey. Go snuggle in the Pillow Pile.” This formally named household staple being a now constant stack of couch pillows that line the edge of the king we refuse to fully surrender, both to soothe their 4 am fears, while simultaneously soothing our parenting egos over admitting total domination by the tiny room rebellers. But on this night the monster’s dreams centered around floor dwelling spiders, and for equal parts empathy and exhaustion, I welcomed the rebel into the king.

3 AM: Watermelon dances on the bladder and I am awoken for a reluctant waddle to the pot.

4 AM: I awake to something on my head. Oh. It is a 3 year old…on my head. When did Midnight Monster #3 get invited in to the forbidden king? Oh. And what is that in my ribs? Just the horizontally spread octopus I surrendered to at 2 AM. Ugh! Do I wake the rebels, remove them from the king, and risk a 4 AM rise and shine? Heck no! So I crawl onto the Pillow Pile, THEIR Pillow Pile, and toss and turn the dancing watermelon to a potentially painless position on the floor, in hopes of slumber.

5 AM: Watermelon dances on the bladder and I am awoken for a reluctant waddle to the pot. I now realize that, at 7 months pregnant, the potentially painless position on the floor, has actually produced much pain, and not much slumber, but I crawl back under the covers and cry myself back to the mythical world of R.E……( no M., again).

6 AM: Midnight Monster #2 is attempting to “whisper” at a volume that could damage the drums, with a proximity that is now ensuring it. “Mommy. MOMMY! Is it time to wake up now. Mommy. MOMMY!” I surrender again and send her out into the light, as I pull the cover over my throbbing head.

6:02 AM Midnight Monster #2 returns to awake Midnight Monster #3 with a handful of melted chocolate from HIS advent calendar, because she “wanted to be sweet” and get it out for him.

6:03 AM Screams of terror emerge from Midnight Monster #3 as he realizes the sacred moment of opening that daily flap on his cardboard box of Trader Joe’s holiday treats has been forever stolen by his sister. In a tornado of terror, the chocolate is smeared across the king, as the Pillow Pile is destroyed in a tiny, but terrible tumble of sibling rage, and both monsters end up on my head…again.

6:04 AM “The Hulk” emerges from her Pillow Pile! And yes, I believe this mama qualified for this monstrous metaphor in this moment, as I managed to reach an octave not intended for human ears.

6:05 AM “Mommy, sometimes I feel sad when you act like the Hulk, just cuz I wake you up cuz I love you.”

“Thank you for sharing your feelings, Pumpkin. I am so sorry I made you feel sad.”

Unspoken rebuttal: Kid…sometimes I second guess the sanity behind my promotion of social/emotional language in my sadistic little truth-sayers…especially at 6am.

If you can relate, please LIKE, or SHARE, or FOLLOW, or read some more.

Help me avoid the morning-after-writer’s-remorse that wells from the paranoia of my signature self-shaming, by giving me your virtual nod and smile, and I will promise to divulge deeper despairs in days to come.

Confessions of a Facebook Failure Year 3 Day 1: Crap

CONFESSIONS OF A FACEBOOK FAILURE: Year 3

Day 1: Perhaps, the only thing warring for the title of worse than sending your kid off into the world with crap in their panties, is sending them off without their panties, and the world discovering your crap.


2 years ago today, I decided to switch out my selfies for shame, in an attempt to change the face of this fiction. So in the spirit of giving, I am gifting y’all once again with a daily dose of self-esteem, in knowing that no matter how bad it gets, mine is probably way worse. I hope you enjoy diving into my daily, dirty little secrets this December.

Now, back to today’s sinful spoils…

So our mornings are a synonym for madness, with too much, too many, ending in an inevitable, predictable, repetitive chorus of “too late” to my un-herdable, unhearing little butterflies. So, in the spirit of independence and the truth of desperation of my morning mayhem, we have long ago established a checklist of (theoretically) mandatory “Morning Jobs”, a visual schedule of responsibilities for my wild ones, established for my own, selfish seven am survival, that I like to costume up as an autonomy-buidling gift to my little people. In other words, take care of your crap kids so Mama can toss together some go-gurts and granola bars to-go (a.k.a healthful, heartfelt breakfast), pocket some lipgloss and liner for the stoplights (a.k.a. self-care), and herd the whole mass of butterflies into the minivan without injury or incident (a.k.a. magic). I pretend the resulting mini-wardrobe wows (think camouflage cargo paired with plaid) are establishing style and self-esteem, and that their badges of go-gurt stains and granola crumbs are simply evidence of successful sustenance. The truth is, this brand of “the basics” is simply our best. That’s it. Not a minute more to give. Typically, this is a brand I have worn that has worked…until last week.

When I picked up the littlest from his school, there was a sudden discovery of the downfalls of do-it-yourself dependency and the potential pitfalls in promoting absolute autonomy in pint-sized planners without the luxury of well-developed prefrontal cortexes. After the obligatory sharing of the sweetest of stories from the school day, his teacher concluded with a “friendly reminder to make sure we bring him with underwear tomorrow”. Puzzled and petrified, my mind went to the inner-dialogue of “What? Did he have an accident? Oh no! It has been ages since he had an accident. What happened? What does this mean? Is he already acting out in rebellion to the scene-stealing sibling in utero? Is he…” Unfortunately, as it often does, my entire inner-dialogue escaped my loud mouth, and was politely interrupted just prior to complete humiliation, when his caregiver clarified, “No. If you could please just bring him IN his underwear.” (Insert awkward pause as I try to infer the implications of this comment.) “He came to school commando today.”

Crap! Thank goodness the only crap that had to be dealt with that day was figurative, because I could not deal with anything messier than that moment.

I smiled and made a mental note to add underwear to the list of mythical, morning must dos.

 

If you can relate, please LIKE, or SHARE, or FOLLOW, or read some more.

Help me avoid the morning-after-writer’s-remorse that wells from the paranoia of my signature self-shaming, by giving me your virtual nod and smile, and I will promise to divulge deeper despairs in days to come.

 

CONFESSIONS OF A FACEBOOK FAILURE (FLASHBACK)

CONFESSIONS OF A FACEBOOK FAILURE: Year 2

Day 1: My kid ate a candy cane for dinner. A year old candy cane. Alright, I think it was older than he is. And I didn’t even try to stop him.

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A year ago today, I decided to switch out my selfies for shame, in an attempt to change the face of this fiction. So in the spirit of giving, I am gifting y’all once again with a daily dose of self-esteem, in knowing that no matter how bad it gets, mine is probably way worse. I hope you enjoy diving into my daily, dirty little secrets this December.

Now, back to today’s sinful spoils…

So we dove into the Christmas boxes today to try to soothe the savage beasts with a temporary whine suppressant of novelty. The beauty of limitations in long term memory when you have lived less than a lollipop, is there is no need for “new” in novelty. So, I thought the manufactured memories would buy me some time, and dared to dive into the fantasy of dinner fixin’ without the music of “Mama, Mama” mixed into the mania. But then I noticed the wrapper (okay, wrappers), which I first assumed were our poor man’s menagerie of recycling bin, packing pretends (too cheap to invest in the indulgence of bubble wrap for our breakables).

I was wrong.

And when I could no longer avoid witnessing the consumption of the calcified cane, I must admit that my first reaction was not disgust…

…but delight in the epiphany that I had finally found a silencer, wrapped in cellophane, that would allow me an entire minute to myself.

So I decided not to break the silence.

And in the spirit of my long dead Grateful 365 Project, I have decided to switch my shame to celebration, in an attempt to laugh and learn and embrace the ugly.

Grateful 365 Day 125: Silence. Sticky, sickening, unsanitary silence. I’ll take it.

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CONFESSIONS OF A FACEBOOK FAILURE (FLASHBACK)

Day 1-My 17 month old knows how to say the words lollipop and french fry…and not because he is a baby genius, but from sheer mass practice.

I am totally starting a FB revolution and I invite yall to join me. So in a similar fashion to November messages of Thanksgiving, during the month of December, in the spirit of giving, my gift to you will be one reason, each day why you can feel better about your own adventures in parenting, as you delight in my epic failures. Let me explain. While I am admittedly a FB addict, I can also testify that it is not always a healthy addiction, especially as a mama in the trenches of parenting. I’ve read the studies on FB-driven mommy depression and I’ve experienced my own FB envy while reading about your eco-friendly home gardens, planted and nurtured by your gentle wee ones, as they all desperately, although politely, fight over your fresh-picked kale and sprouts. Well, I didn’t grow my own veggies (no time), or even buy organic (no money), or heck…even feed my children anything without the word “snack” in the title today. I admit it. Still, I’ve also been the one who put up the picture of my sweet little angels all snuggling with smiles, secretly having deleted the 37 other pictures of them with their fingers up their noses, showing off their underwear, while tackling each other. The truth is FB families are a bit of a lie. Come on…admit it. And while their is nothing wrong with sharing our celebrations and putting our best foot forward, I thought it might be fun to practice a comical version of humility this month, so we can all celebrate the real parenting success…surviving another day with our little monsters and laughing about it. My theory has always been that if you aren’t exhausted and humbled at the end of each day, you are probably not parenting that well anyways. So, let’s liberate each other and share those deleted family shots and one-liners your kids said, that both humiliated and humored you. Or just read mine and find joy in the comedy I call my life. Enjoy!

If you can relate, please LIKE, or SHARE, or FOLLOW, or read some more.

Help me avoid the morning-after-writer’s-remorse that wells from the paranoia of my signature self-shaming, by giving me your virtual nod and smile, and I will promise to divulge deeper despairs in days to come.