Tag Archives: writer’s block

Modern Love letter

 I don’t have a love poem or a sultry story to share, I thought. So I should skip it. Don’t post something without vigor. Without the blissed out flavor of Holidays past. Don’t tell the world about how you forgot Valentine’s Day cards for the kids and spaced out completely about Valentine’s Day parties. 

This is what perimenopause looks like

The day slogged on, a horrible day filled with pointless doctor visits and rain at the grocery store, where while inside I managed to accost a man buying Mother’s Milk tea and corn syrup to put in the baby’s formula. Oh, I wouldn’t do that, I said while dispensing totally unsolicited advice. Like a boss an ass. One more interaction that seals it for me that I hate leaving my house. The people out there, I can’t take it.

Embraced. Sheltered.

It hit me while I wandered the store tossing ingredients for enchiladas into the cart: I’m doing this for him. I am here, even though he would and usually does take on this chore, because I need to do at least one thing today that tells him I love him. I know. So old married couple, right? It’s not that. The thing is that since I’ve been getting sicker when we’d hoped I’d get better, he does everything. The playing, the lunches, the homework. He does them and I don’t know how he feels about it because part of what we do is pick our battles carefully. For a while I thought we were this way because we didn’t like each other’s company, but now I begin to see that all the overlooking of quirks, faults, sick days, socks on the floor, dumb purchases-these are all expressions of deep love. I look at something that makes me angry and I slowly roll around to this thought: “nothing that happened here was designed to hurt you. We are not a couple who uses pet peeves or passive aggressive actions to hurt one another. Glasses on the nightstand are what they are and nothing more. Laundry in the dryer is just laundry to fold. A period of silence after work isn’t aimed at you. Maybe it’s not about you at all.”

I spent the day hating myself and what I’ve become as a person and a partner and a mother. There are just so many days like this. A little scrap of conversation here-a new TV show marathon there- that’s my fuel sometimes for days. He still wants to be with me. He cares.

He holds me together

What they don’t tell caretakers of the ill is that they’ll never be allowed to have a real problem again. I wish I could tell you how long and how often I dwell on this, turning the guilt over in my mind for hours. 

This holiday is so stupid. So commercial. So much fair weather love. I wonder...could it also be the New Year’s Eve of our love? A time for resolution?

Here is what I know: when you give another person any part of yourself purely out of love, be it actions, words, skin: the internal reward is an opening of a closed up flower. A dim light in an icy window. I wish I could remember this feeling all day, every day. There is so much strength in giving.

Whenever I feel the least loved, what chases that feeling away is stretching to the end of what I know, and giving love freely.

I don’t know why he is so good to me. This is not the trip he signed up for. Sometimes it hurts even to share dreams with each other, given our situation. Sometimes I think he might leave me, and I would accept it. I think back on how we were and want those things for him again.

But we are partners and I love him. I want to be better.

He watched Breaking Dawn with me. I mean, what more can someone ask of their mate?

 This new brand of depression, packaged with what they’re calling perimenopause, is cruel and hopeless. I often sense that nothing will ever be right again, and I notice that my family is slipping away. I don’t know how to fight to get them back. I just, every day, wake up and try to pick a few things that will make them happy, in hopes that little by little they’ll see that I am so very much trying to be here, even as I burrow under the covers for another day of research and budgeting.

I am loved. I am grateful for that. And apologetic, deeply sorry, for the love I haven’t been able to give. I promise to do better.

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And nothing ever gets actually written

I keep composing these eloquent and interesting essays, about motherhood and sleep deprivation and dating and squirrels and the holidays. But it all happens either as I’m falling asleep or while I’m laying in bed in the morning not ready to get up yet, and by the time I get here to write, I simply don’t have the time. Such is the path of – well, all of us, I suppose.

While I was doing my 30 minutes walking for 50 steps/running for 50 steps today with the baby in the stroller which has no turning front wheel and has thus become my newest excuse not to work out, I attempted to recall what I ever did before I did THIS every day. It occurs to me that although I do love being home, I hate the work that being home requires of me. I’d almost prefer to get a job to pay a housekeeper and a nanny, at least a few days a week.

Why is it that people who don’t feel cut out for full time motherhood still feel such a strong instinct to reproduce? Does anyone, really, feel cut out for motherhood on a full time basis? I know, I know. People have been doing this for a hundred thousand years, this is what mothers did 50 years ago, blah, blah blah. But that was back when there was a village to help. And 3:30 cocktails, cigarrettes, kindergarten to look forward to, and amphetamines being handed out like candy.

It’s a different place now, the mother’s world. I am defnitely not cut out for this isolation, this 100% focus for 10 hours on one other person who can’t talk back to me and who doesn’t know how serious it is when Mommy can’t, truly just CANNOT, get out of bed. I am not cut out to do serious, heavy-duty, saty-at-home-mom style housework. I don’t care that I have help with housework and that usually, someone else cooks dinner. It’s not happening like that because I’m relaxing at night, taking a load off. The reason I can’t cook dinner because when M gets home, that’s when I sit down to actually work, which, while it doesn’t bring in much actual money, is the only thing that makes me feel intelligent and adult, these days. I should quit, I really should. I have no leisure time because of this imitation job I’ve been clinging to. But the alternative, the leisure time spent reading Woman’s Day and Good Housekeeping during my 15 minute breaks from FLY-ing my household into perfection-I don’t think I could survive it. I hang onto this excuse, this one last reason not to immerse myself into the SAHM life, because I am terrified of what a miserable failure I will be. I need a reason for the mess and the disorganization and the whole days the baby goes drinking bottles of milk instead of eating her organic and perfectly nutritionally balanced meals. I need to be able to say “well, shit, who has time to get out of ththeir pajamas, to work out, to eat, for god’s sake, when all I do all day long is the baby, and all I do all night long is work? how much can one person do?”

And then I try, really hard, not to think about all the mothers out there who are showing me with flair and panache just how much one person can do, going to work at a 9-5 every day (I still think they’re lucky) and coming home to fold lanudry and pull out their perfectly planned dinner menu while carrying the baby on one hip and cheering their soccer player on with their free hand. They are villages contained in one body, and almost every day of my life I wish I could be one.

But then some days it’s so fun to lay around in bed all day and I remind myself that the more you wear the same pair of PJ’s the less laundry you have to do, and the less you leave the house the more gas you can save, and so what if the baby never wears clothes. That means there are always clean ones, and we’re saving water and laundry detergent.

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