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Knocked Up

Hippos and Elephants

On Mother's Day, I reflected on what six months of motherhood has meant for me.  All of the beautiful things that come along with being a mama are here - the warmth of holding a baby, the heart's expansion while watching my son sleep, the joy of seeing him smile.  We all know these things are nice, they're the best things in our lives, and all that good stuff.  I could write a recyling bin full of florid, rhyming greeting cards about these things, and, since I'm betting you're on the giving or receiving end of some of those cards, I'm not going to go in to all that loveliness.   I love being a mother, and I love my son.  It's the collateral damage of motherhood I don't like.

 

Something seems to have happened to my ability to recall the correct word.  I handed Axel a purple stuffed toy yesterday and said, "Look, baby, it's your hippo!  Isn't that a fun hippo?"  The toy isn't even a mammal.  It's a crustacean.  It's a little stuffed crab.  This happens all the time - when I'm talking to Axel, in meetings at work when I've asked questions the answers of which are written in paragrap three of the written materials in front of me and aren't the question that I really meant to ask, while on the phone with friends when I stutter or say "See you soon" to people who live halfway across the country who I won't see anytime soon.  I pull up the wrong word and don't even realize how wrong it is until someone gives me a look that says, "Ummm, are you okay?"  Yes, I'm okay.  I'm just a mother.  I'm teaching someone all about language, and I can't talk myself.  Axel's going to go in to kindergarten calling elephants donkeys and cats giraffes. 

 

Mixed in with my new weaknesses when it comes to the spoken English language is an inability to focus.  Halfway through a conversation with my husband, I realize I have no idea what he's talking about - and I've been responding in a coherent manner for ten minutes. Top Chef will be on and I'll be alone, sitting on the couch, and I couldn't tell you why they're hacking at a fish that looks like it's a mutated creature  from a nuclear waste-infested lake.  All this while Axel's not even awake.  When he is and I'm with him, it's even worse.  It's not that my mind can no longer shift gears between things.  It's that my mind is trying to run in five different gears at once and failing at all of them.  There's no quiet space left inside my head.  Every inch is full of reminders to call the preschool down the street about waiting lists, set up a meeting at work, finally get the dog in to the groomer, hook myself up to the breast pump in twenty minutes, pay the phone bill, send an overdue reply to a friend's email. 

 

And, of course, there are the permanent spit-up stains on my clothes, mashed yam in not just my son's hair but my own, the body that's a mushy version of itself pre-baby, the dried boogers that are on my sleeve and perched on the tip of Axel's nose like those of a rare, especially snotty unicorn.   Oh, motherhood.  It changes you.  It shakes up your life and stains your wardrobe.  It makes you confuse  hulking land animals and small, clawed sea creatures.   And it gives you the chance to get to to know your baby, and fall more deeply in love with him each day. 

 

Happy Mother's Day to you and yours!

  


Comments

 

AmyinMotown said:

Awww, happy Mother's Day on your very first one! I still think its a Hallmark holiday, but it's awfully nice to be a mom today.

May 11, 2008 10:21 PM
 

knockedup said:

I think it's a Hallmark holiday, too, but I like anything that provides an excuse to have a big meal with family, whether it be a Mother's Day brunch or a wintertime meal ending in pie.  And I'm also far more of a sap now that I'm a mother - maybe this new cheesiness is hormonal.  

May 11, 2008 11:02 PM
 

regandbabe said:

I think the cheesiness is just allowed more now...we just celebrated the babes first birthday and I still can't function as a coherent human in terms of language..and on TOp Chef they were filleting monkfish.

May 11, 2008 11:25 PM
 

amanda said:

I love this post! All true at my house too. I don't care if they are Hallmark holidays, I love stuff like Valentine's Day and Mother's Day and Father's Day - I'm a sucker for it all. Your brain may function a bit better when you are finally getting some real sleep - I remember last summer, right after I had my daughter, I tried to get into the series "Damages" - and while I could tell that it was interesting and good, I could not follow the plot at all. Thus my current addiction to The Hills. Sigh. Happy (belated) Mother's Day!

May 12, 2008 6:51 AM
 

MidLifeMama said:

I spent the first three months of Cooper's life watching every episode of CSI: Miami because that was the level of discourse and complication my brain could take. I am BARELY recovered now, although I have gotten over watching what is arguably the worst of the CSI's. It gets better, but slooooooowly. Your brain, not the show. The fog does lift, just in time for dealing with puberty I expect.

May 12, 2008 10:26 AM
 

Laura said:

Ahh. I used to pride myself on my multi-tasking abilities. I used to be able to scan a website, review projects for a client and answer my phone all at the same time with ease. I just finished reading your article (actually, I meant to say post) and realized that I was sitting at my desk with absolutely no thoughts in my head and I had no idea how long I had been sitting there staring into space.

May 12, 2008 11:35 AM
 

LauraLaura said:

Brain damage or not, you can still write a damned funny pots....I mean post.

May 12, 2008 12:37 PM
 

Melissa said:

This is so true.  I spent most of my life making fun of my mom for forgetting stuff.  I never realized my sisters and I were the ones that made her like that in the first place!  It gets a little better when you stop breastfeeding, but I'm still awfully distracted most of the time.  And I can't drive as well as I used to either.  I've hit a lot of curbs lately...  

May 12, 2008 1:42 PM
 

ewokmama said:

No kidding!

May 12, 2008 4:44 PM
 

Sofia said:

Wow, this really hit close to home. My baby is five months old, and I am pretty spacey still. I do blame the lack of sleep, but it doesn't help you look smarter to have something to blame! I actually went into motherhood with a little bit of charming ditz in me, but I think I've crossed a line to being inconveniently ditzy now. I can't wait for it to go away!

May 12, 2008 4:51 PM
 

Adrienne said:

I totally forgot about a 7:30 meeting this morning that I requested we reschedule to that time.  After weeks of putting it off, I'm biting the bullet and heading to Banana Republic for work pants smaller than my preggo pants, but bigger than my "real" size.  I'm still riding out the extra 500 breastfeeding calories to justify my dessert habit.  Mateo is only 4 months old, and I hope every Mother's Day is as awesome as my first. Happy Mommy's Day!

May 12, 2008 9:09 PM
 

Ashley said:

Oz, I feel your pain. The other day I was preparing my morning cup of coffee, looked down and realized I had poured my coffee into a baby bottle! What is happening to us?!

May 13, 2008 9:27 AM
 

Brynne said:

I'm due in 2 weeks and I have recently had several odd word substitutions-- I asked my aunt if she wanted any light bulbs in her water... while holding an ice cube tray. And the other day, I asked my husband to hand me an envelope... while gesturing toward the napkin dispenser at a restaurant.

Yikes.

May 13, 2008 8:58 PM

in

About the Blogger

Oz Spies

Oz Spies in Denver

Oz Spies lives in Denver, Colorado with her husband, a firefighter; their son, Axel; and a slightly obese dog and cat. She has a MFA in Creative Writing from Colorado State University.

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