Knocked Up

Working Girl

When do you stop thinking about what you want to be when you grow up?  When I was eleven, I was going to be president.  Specifically, the president of the United States of America, not the president of the International French Fries Dipped in a Hot Fudge Sundae Fan Club.   I even had my running mate lined up.  I'm not sure when I decided that politics was not for me - maybe around the time I realized that politicians have to speak in public a lot and a career in politics is thus an unwise choice for someone who would rather dig out her appendix with a ballpoint pen than talk in front of a large crowd.   Other career ambitions I let go: drummer (I only played for a few months), Rockette (too short), first female quarterback in the NFL (I've never even liked football, so who knows where that idea came from), professional Cabbage Patch doll namer (that's probably not even a job).  

 

I always planned to be a mother.  I also used to think I'd stay at home fulltime with my kids - before launching my presidential campaign when my kids were in middle school, of course.  Most of the time, I like my job at a local community foundation.  Let me take a moment to acknowledge how lucky I am - I work four days each week, I don't punch in or out, I have generous benefits, I work with good people, and I don't have to abide by one of those antiquated pantyhose-required policies.  I'm not a single parent and I'm only trying to care for one healthy baby.  My work/home life balance, as the magazines call it, is closer to an easygoing teeter-totter than a rollercoaster.  I know I have nothing to complain about. 

 

Some weeks are harder than others.  Sometimes I wish I could spend more time with my son.  Monday, for example: my husband was on shift, so he left the house by a little before 6.  While he was headed out the door, I nursed Axel, both of us in our pajamas.  I then scrambled to get us both ready and load up the car.  Axel was having a don't-put-me-down-Mama morning, and though I've gotten pretty good at doing things one-handed, I dropped the bag with my breakfast in it and splattered soy yogurt all over the kitchen floor.  I plopped Axel in his exersaucer, and he promptly released an enormous runny poop the color of spinach, which spurted out his diaper, all over his clothes, down his leg, and all over the exersaucer.  After cleaning him, his toy, the floor, and myself, we finally got out the door - both in new outfits.   Let me just say that the day at work was not my favorite.  It was a struggle just to pump seven ounces of milk, less than half of what I usually get.  By the time I got back down to daycare to pick up Axel, battled traffic, and made it home, it was after 6 - Axel's dinner time - and so we rushed to begin the dinner/playtime/bedtime routine.   By 8:15, when he was asleep, I was exhausted, and still had to do breast pump and bottle clean up and preparation for the next day, feed myself something decent, and do more work.  Oh, and clean up the dog pee on the living room floor (thanks, Angus).

 

When I got to daycare earlier that same day, Axel sat on the floor, gnawing on the blue plastic arch of a floor gym.  He'd crawled out of his shorts - most of his pants are too big in the waist for him, though they're the right length.  As I walked over, he grinned and reached up toward me, then started giggling.  I dressed him in his shorts and socks, and he laughed some more, either because he knew he'd just pull them off as soon as he got into the car or maybe (as I like to think) because he was so happy to see me.  Most of my waking hours with him were spent frantically getting ready to leave the house, in the car, or getting him fed and ready for bed.  It was the sort of day that prompts me to do frantic budget projections for one-salary, rice-and-beans living.

 

Days I'm alone with Axel aren't necessarily easier or better.  They, too, contain explosive poops and a dog who believes it is his duty to eat one sock out of each pair of Axel's socks.  There are nap battles, frustration when Axel gets fussy, countless mugs of tea that grow cold before I can drink them.  At work, I get a chance to sit down and drink my tea.  What's more, I like working outside of the home.  At least, I think I do.  Most days.  I don't know.   I can make a hundred general arguments for working outside of the home or for not working outside of the home, but I'm having a hard time sorting through what it means to me.

 

I guess I'm officially a grown up, though I don't always feel that way.  I can check off all the boxes my eleven-year-old self associated with being a grown-up: have a child, hire babysitters, drive, can answer Trivial Pursuit questions that aren't about cartoons, have purchased a lottery ticket, can eat all the bomb pops I want without my mom nagging me.  When I was a kid, the lives of the adults around me seemed set.  They had decided what to be, and that's what they were.  Or, if they hadn't decided, they still were something - a lawyer, a librarian, a bagger at the grocery store, a father - and that was that.  Their lives were as permanent as I thought my blood-sister bonds were.  Now I know that their lives weren't fixed.  I've only kept in touch with one of my blood sisters. 

 

I know that parents who stay at home with their children or who work from home have a unique set of challenges.  Neither choice works for every family, and neither choice works for every family all the time.  Choice is a luxury.  My father has always told me that having options is the best position to be in, and I agree.  But this philosophy can get me into trouble - sometimes, the challenge is deciding to close off an option, to diminish the choices available to yourself.   Sometimes options are closed off easily or naturally, sometimes choices are clear, and sometimes they're a tangle.  We can't have it all all of the time.  I will never be a Rockette.   Katarina Aurelia Sunshine the Cabbage Patch Kid will never come rolling off the production line.  Grown-ups don't always know what they're going to be. 

 

 


+ DIGG + DEL.ICIO.US

Comments

 

amanda said:

Sometimes, when I read your blog, I think we're living the same life. I have never felt that more than I do when I read this entry. Sounds like we are sharing nearly the exact same challenges, and having the same difficulty deciding what to do about it.

June 12, 2008 9:57 AM
 

KaritaG said:

So true, and well written!  I don't even HAVE a kid yet and I still do frantic budget projections like that...usually when I am sitting in traffic on the parking lot they call I-25 and thinking there is no way I will ever be able to handle working and a morning like you just described...

June 12, 2008 10:28 AM
 

LauraLaura said:

Wow, Oz the Oversoul strikes again - same challenges for me all week (the boy is developing separation anxiety and leaving him at daycare has been not only logistically challenging but heartbreaking this week). Modern American parenthood seems crazily difficult, even for those with resources. I wish I were well-slept enough to figure out a solution for all of us.

June 12, 2008 11:48 AM
 

lex said:

such a good post!  i feel EXACTLY the same most of the time.  

my grandfather once told me (when he was 89) that he still didn't know what he wanted to me when he grew up.  and the man had an incredibly rich, full life.  i guess some of us will always be thinking about that.

June 12, 2008 11:49 AM
 

Hillary said:

Add me to the Amen chorus.

Tuesday -- our anniversary, I might add -- I worked a busy busy eight hours then went home, as usual, to deal with the boy by myself until my husband got home for dinner. Except my husband was later than usual. And the boy was clingier and screamier than usual. And in the middle of the boy's bottle, the cat comes running out of the bathroom with poo sticking out of her rear. And it took her 10 minutes of butt-dragging through my whole house to get it off. And I spent my anniversary wiping feline skidmarks off my floors.

And when something good did happen that night -- a call from my boss saying I was getting a new job I wanted -- I thought he was my husband and shouted at him.

I'm with LauraLaura. Maybe if I slept more, my life would feel less like a sitcom.

June 12, 2008 12:02 PM
 

Karen said:

Great post! I've told a lot of my students (high schoolers) that they can do anything but they can't do everything. A friend of mine says that it's great to have choices but you still have to choose.

I went back to work early (by Canadian standards) after my son was born but it was for a half-time job that's a 7-minute walk from our (1200sf) apartment. I think some people look down on us for living without a playroom or backyard (we're so selfish!) but our mortgage is so affordable that I can forgo half my salary as still not need to eat rice and beans.

June 12, 2008 1:35 PM
 

BB said:

I'm a stay at home mom. I had a fairly long maternity leave (6 months) and at 4 months I had my son all enrolled in his daycare and I was READY to leave him. HA HA so I thought. When it came time to go back to work I just didnt' think I could do it. I decided after months of thinking and mind changing to quit. There are days when I regret my decision. I miss the adult interaction, being able to pee without thinking where to put my son so he'll be safe. I miss my job and my coworkers and I miss the "alone time". Yes I was working but it was all on my own time table. I could pop on my headphones and go.

Now my days are full of my son's schedule. Lots of  making meals, cleaning up after means, trying to fit in spontaneity and fun wherever possible. I know that what I'm doing is imortant for me and my son and I'm glad I have the option. But that's just it isn't it. When you have the option it means the choice is yours and that is an even bigger stuggle  I think.

June 12, 2008 2:54 PM
 

hippygoth said:

Here, here! for all that work stuff.  I don't have anything profound to add, just a pat on the back and an I-know-how-you-feel.  I also want to add that when I was 10, my three criteria for being an adult were:

1. being able to spit out toothpaste neatly

2. knowing how to file taxes

3. knowing how to write a check

In fact, the check thing stressed me out so much that my mom made up pretend checks for me so I could practice.  Because basically I had a breakdown that I would never be able to be a grown-up because I didn't know how to write a check.

June 12, 2008 11:20 PM
 

AdrienneM said:

I love that Axel crawled out of his shorts and sat there laughing until his momma came over for a hug.  No matter what we chose, it's always the right decision.

June 13, 2008 10:21 AM
 

Marie Eve said:

Wow, so true I'm all teary.

If we are so many women in the same situation (personally I feel like I can manage, but often just barely and that I'm only moderately successful at everything), why does it seems like there is never a perfect solution for ourselves and our families?

My slim son is the same regarding the pants situation. I don't know what I was doing before I bought an outfit that came with a tiny fabric belt -I now reuse it almost every day.

June 13, 2008 11:36 AM
 

Don Mills Diva said:

I love this post 'cause I still don't know what I want to be. My grandma was adventuring into her 90s so I still feel like maybe I could be Prime Minister or something...right now I'm shooting for world famous blogger. Maybe I'm delusional, but better delusional than defeated!

June 13, 2008 12:43 PM
 

Melissa said:

I wanted to be a model or a business woman (which to me at the time meant going to work in a power suit).  I'm a legal secretary and a good one, so yeah, we all make concessions.

I really relate to your time crunch issues.  I always feel like I'm rushing my son.  During the week I only get to spend 2 hours in the morning (one of which is spent driving) and 1-1/2 hours at night (part of which is spent trying to start dinner) with my son.  It's so hard some days I just want to cry.

June 13, 2008 1:02 PM
 

zellmer said:

I have so been in your emotional shoes. I began to hate my job because it tore me away from quality time with my daughter. I fantasized about staying home, too, and was often bitter because I was the one in our family with the more lucrative career, so I didn't feel I had a choice.

However, I know if I had the choice, I might not like staying home all day either. I think when you have limited time with your child, sometimes that makes for better quality time, because you don't have limited patience. And I think if I was a stay-at-home Mom, I would be a mom with limited patience.

I will say this, it does get easier to accept with time. And once Axel is a year old, there are (in my opinion) more benefits to him being in daycare. The social skills he will learn, especially.

If you really can't stand it, I have two pieces of advice for you to take or leave: move him to a daycare closer to your office so you can spend your lunch hour with him, find a job with more flexible hours that allows you to work from home part-time.

The latter is what I have now, and I am ever so grateful for that.

And, your office sounds like a family-friendly place. I bet you could ask to work from home one or two days a week. No?

Anyway, the constant longing...I remember it, but it does go away after a while.

June 13, 2008 10:22 PM
 

knockedup said:

Thanks for all your comments.  It's comforting to know how many of you have similar feelings.  

June 15, 2008 9:01 PM
 

Ewokmama said:

Well said!!

June 19, 2008 2:24 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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