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Tuesday, May 17, 2005

but enough about everyone else--let's talk about ME

When I was at home in March, my mother's friend was teasing me about how thin I am. Ha ha ha, I said, as I always do when people talk about my weight, you've obviously never met my children! And then my mother told this story:

When we moved to Albuquerque--how old were you? she asked me.

Almost four, I said, and Johnny was two.

That first year we lived here, she said, I lost a lot of weight. The doctor ran all kinds of tests because he was concerned about how thin I was. He didn't find anything. I remember saying to him, in thirty years I'll be in here complaining about how much weight I've gained!

That was all. But I was struck by the story because in the past couple of years, since Charlie's first birthday, I have also lost a lot of weight. I was the thinest early last spring; Leslie described me one day as 'waiflike', which was funny as that's not a word I would ever use to describe myself. I'm less waifish now, but still much thinner than before I had either of my children, which of course sounds so wonderful.

Except for this: what keeps me thin is the huge rock of stress sitting in the pit of my stomach. What keeps me thin is the constant feeling that I'm not doing everything I should be doing, that I'm not doing any of this well, that I'm constantly on the verge of failure. I am not trying to be thin (unlike all those years in my teens and twenties, when my whole life was organized around my weight or clothing sizes). I like to joke that my children are so energetic because they suck all of my energy away, but it's not such a joke. Recently I've begun to feel like I have literally lost part of myself in this enterprise, that parenting has taken away something essential. I read about the identity crisis of women who left rewarding careers to stay home with children--one day you're an attorney or doctor or engineer or whatever and the next you have no paycheck and no consistent adult conversation--but I'm not sure that's it for me. At least, not entirely. I am worn down by the mind-numbing repetition of life with small children, at the same time that I am almost constantly overwhelmed by problems bigger than my experience. I am trying to potty train one child at the same time that I am trying to understand the other child's complicated and quirky behavior. It's exhausting.

I know I am not the only one who feels this way, but I am truly startled--still--by how hard this is. After both the boys were born, I had no postpartum depression, not even the 'baby blues.' But now, five years on, I am worn out. I feel like I have almost entirely lost sight of the person I was before my uterus expanded to 400 times its normal size. And what makes me the saddest is that I am certain that if I could find that person again, she would be so much better at this mommy thing than I am.

I've said before that I am not sure what I want this web site to be. I am not really interested in either detailing the minutia of my day (although I have done that recently) or baring my soul (ditto), but I am beginning to think that doing both may help me to find that other person. The one who is not so waifish, and not so stressed out.

2 Comments:

Blogger bubandpie said...

I think one thing that makes staying at home so difficult is that it requires really superhuman amounts of self-discipline. There's no boss, no external structure of rewards and punishments - just a gradual slide into chaos if you don't keep up. I'm a person who thrives on that sense of completion when I complete something, so it's hard to be constantly confronted with my lack of self-discipline.

6/14/2006 02:38:00 PM  
Blogger bubandpie said...

P.S. If you ever find these comments, I hope you don't feel like I'm stalking you! But when I read a post as thoughtful and articulate as this one and see no comments on it, I can't resist.

6/14/2006 02:39:00 PM  

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