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  • Cliff Jumping

    We've got a stack of clean baby clothes.  We've got diapers and a thermometer and baby lotion and two types of baby carriers.  I've read a couple of books about child development, and we took a mess of baby preparation classes - Taking Care of Your Baby, Baby Safety, Breastfeeding.  The car seat is now properly installed in the back of my baby-friendly station wagon.  I've knit a couple baby hats and a sweater, and we have far more store-bought and hand-made baby blankets than any one child not living in northern Alaska could possibly need.  Assorted baby gear fills the closet in the former office, soon-to-be nursery. The upholstered glider and the crib are ready to be set up - once the remodeling is done and we can get back into our house, of course.  It's snowing here today, a heavy, wet snow, the first snow of the year in the city.  We're ready for the colder weather - we have a fleecy little suit for the baby, and at least six hats and a bright red pair of mittens sitting in the stack of things to put away.

     

    It seems like we've got the stuff we need.  Most of the lines on my baby stuff checklist have been crossed off.  Things aren't all set up yet, which is making me just a wee bit anxious, but, that anxiety aside, I've got a deeper sense that something else isn't quite ready for the baby yet.  I've tried to do my getting-ready-for-baby homework.  I've read some books and taken some classes and talked with newer moms and grandmas.  I've tried to remember babysitting and nannying experiences, and what I learned while working at a daycare with toddlers (Lesson One: Toddlers loooove to play in the sink, especially the lower-height sinks built just for them, regardless of their level of interest in using the other facilities in the bathroom.  Lesson Two: Toddlers loooove to take off their clothes and run through the classroom naked, especially when it's time for their parents to show up and wonder what kind of a naked baby daycare their kid is in.). 

     

    I've taken all of the steps to be prepared to have this baby, to be a mom.  I've seen a lot of parents in action, I've got a bunch of baby and child experience.  But no checklist, no book, no class, no countless hours logged watching the baby down the block can really prepare me for the big new world of mommahood.  It's me that, despite my longing to meet this baby, isn't quite ready.

     

    On our second anniversary, my husband and I went paragliding.  I couldn't wrap my head around skydiving - the whole jumping out of a plane thing was too dramatic and crazy.  Jumping off a cliff at 13,000 feet, though, was something I could comprehend.  So, the paragliding instructor told us the whole spiel, we snapped into our harnesses, and we got strapped to one of the experienced paragliders for a tandem jump.  The instructor spread the bright yellow fabric that would keep us from plummeting to our deaths out behind us, and we waited for the wind to pick up.  He told us to lean in to the wind and run, as the chute filled with air and started to lift us off the ground.  Until the moment that I was running off of the cliff, my toes scrabbling at the rocky earth, and into the emptiness above a jagged garden of rocks, I'd understood the steps to take to jump off the cliff, but I hadn't really known what it meant to jump off a cliff, to throw myself in the air and weave and dangle above the earth under the colorful parachute, with a mix of fear and joy and awe.  Once we were floating, I couldn't stop laughing in amazement - despite gravity and pesky things like our lack of wings, we dipped and soared far above the mountain town and hills below.  

     

    The first leap into motherhood must be like jumping and floating off of that cliff.  I have all the gear; I have the basic information.  But I feel like I won't understand it, and won't know what to do, until I'm deep in it, until the baby is out of my belly and in my arms, perhaps months after we've settled back in our house, surrounded by the gear and the books and the piles of blankets.  And even then, there will be new developments every day, and new cliffs to jump off.

     

     

     

     

     


  • Mommy-ness

    Let me first apologize to all of you fabulous, stereotype-defying, strong and beautiful and brilliant mamas out there.  If you're reading this, keep in mind that I know you're amazing and I am in awe of you.  Even though you exist as mama-models, I can't help but worry about becoming a non-model mama.  I'm having a mommy-to-be identity crisis. 

     

    The petty side of me has started to nudge me with soon-you'll-be-somebody's-mother-and-you'd-better-grow-up questions like, "Will I have to start buying magazines that tell me how to make more quality time for my family while whipping up a no-bake cheesecake?"  "Can I still wear my super hot red four-inch peep toe pumps whenever I want to?"  "Will my husband still dig me after the whole sweating, swearing, pooping, vagina-stretching birth experience?"  "Can I ever go dancing with my girlfriends again?"  Look, I know these worries are silly.  I know that, after motherhood, I can wear whatever shoes I want to, and that, before giving birth, my man likely did not think I was devastatingly attractive during that severe food poisoning bout or when my eyes were literally leaking green mucous while I was finishing up my master's thesis, and he still stuck with me.  I know lots of mothers don't wear "mom jeans", nor does my own fashionable mother, for that matter.  So why am I worried that, in three years, I'll be wearing bleached high rise tight-rolled jeans, watching nothing but America's Funniest Home Videos, organizing my husband's sock drawer, and conforming to some antiquated notion of the perfect PTA mom? 

     

    Bill Hickey walrus from weforanimals

     

    Feeling like the bastard child of a walrus and an Oompa-Loompa waddling down the street probably does not help me to gain perspective.  It's hard to maintain a sense of self when your self is oozing out of its previous boundaries, and your body only bears a vague resemblance to its previous shape.   I guess that's what 8 months of pregnancy does to a girl. 

     

    I think I'm wrestling with how to become a good mother - whatever that means to me and for my baby - while still being myself, whatever that means.  I'm trying to figure out how this impending, soon-to-be huge piece of my life with merge and blend with, or overtake, my old life.  Mama, friend, wife, dancing queen - weaving together all of the things I am and would like to be in to a new whole. 

     

     


  • Rebel Rebel

    I would love to say that I have a long history of serious troublemaking.  Really, though, I didn't ditch a day of high school until the last few months of senior year, when it didn't matter.  In recent years, I have been known to say, "But we might get in trouble," as a reason not to go in the back door of a restaurant or duck the ropes while skiing.  "By who?" my husband will ask - rightly, because it's not as though we're being followed by law enforcement officials just waiting to haul us in for refilling our iced teas at Chipotle without paying for a second cup.  Sure, maybe I stayed out a little later than I should have sometimes, and toilet-papered a few houses, and had a few (okay, more than a few) alcoholic drinks pre-21, and, after the Homecoming dance, I climbed a fence in my floor-length formal dress, resulting in a huge rip up the side of it, and hung out with friends in a condominium complex hot tub that I most definitley did not have permission to be in.  But, in general, I was the voice of reason - maybe sometimes the wet blanket - of my group of friends.  I don't think my husband, who may have missed more classes than he attended and sported liberty spikes at various times in his youth, would have even given goodie-two-shoes-me the time of day if we had known each other in high school. I would have loved him from afar and he would have thought I was kind of cute but needed to loosen up.  What I'm trying to say is if this baby becomes a bona-fide troublemaker, I would not have thought it would be a result of my influence. 

     

     

    Pregnancy, however, has turned me into a rebel.  Maybe it's the sheer amount of advice thrown at you from every direction, both from reputable sources (like my doctor's office) and from suspect strangers (like the guy who told me, in the parking lot at the gym the other day, that he didn't think pregnant women should be working out, and his wife was pregnant and SHE wasn't working out, probably, he implied, because she loves her baby more than I love mine.).  I've come to find that, if I followed every piece of advice I've been given - even just the advice from dependable sources - I'd be eating nothing but plain rice and non-GMO chicken and organic vegetables, and sitting in some kind of a protective pregnancy bubble like John Travolta in that bubble boy movie.  So, in the interests of my sanity, I'm snubbing my nose at the man.   I'm taking back the power, even if all I'm doing is eating some raw fish.  Please, you members of the pregnancy police, zip the lip - I don't care if you don't approve of my mini rebellious streak, or my shoes or exercise habits or food. 

     

    So far, I've kept running (really, slowly jogging), after a nurse told me that perhaps my body was telling me to slow down, and perhaps I should lay off the running.  I've gotten my toe nails painted.  I drank a Diet Coke.  I'm using makeup and lotion and it's not paraben-free and it's probably filled with other horrible chemicals I can't pronounce.  I still wear high heels.  Past the fourth month of pregnancy, I've flopped down in bed flat on my back.  I've lifted boxes (though not much in the last week, with the back aching and all), I've climbed on to the counter to get a glass, I've taken baths alone without my husband there to help me out of them (really - a nurse suggested I only take baths when he was home.  Ummm, my husband works 24-hour shifts, and if my back hurts and a bath will help me relax, I'm taking a bath, even if he's at work, probably rescuing other stubborn pregnant ladies who braved the bathtub while alone and fell and smacked their heads on the edge of the tub). 

     

    I've eaten lunchmeat (unheated), smoked salmon (also cold), and, once, raw salmon rolls - though, when I bought them at the store, I had a story prepared about them being for my husband, in case the check-out lady grilled me.  Yes, my respect for authority is so deeply ingrained that it extends to the check-out lady at the supermarket.  Of course, she didn't even seem to notice me or my sushi.  I've licked brownie batter containing a raw egg off of the spoon.  I've eaten peanut butter at least a dozen times,  Maybe four percent of the food I've eaten has been organic.  And let me tell you, it all felt good.    

     

    None of these things are truly so rebellious.  Perhaps I'll deeply regret eating apples dripping in pesticides, or wearing high heels, though I doubt it - didn't our mothers do the same, and sometimes much worse, and still manage to turn out some okay children?  I think my tiny uprising emphasizes the need for balance - the fact that, if you follow all the well-intentioned advice you're given, you will soon be living a frozen, paralyzed existence, and how can that be good for anyone, especially people who will soon be parents and will need to have a little flexibility to remain sane?  I probably would have been easier on myself in high school if I'd realized that the world would not come crashing down around me if I missed cheerleading practice or got a D on a test.  A little rebellion is a good thing.  But please, don't tell my doctor.  I still wouldn't want to get in trouble. 

     


  • The Home Stretch

    I am now officially in the third trimester.  I think - I'm a little confused about when the trimesters start and end.  It seems like a basic thing, but every source I consult says something different - I've read the third trimester starts as early as 24 weeks or as late as 28 weeks. Well, according to my math, 40/3 = 13.3, so, with thirteen and a half weeks left, today is day one of the third trimester, or the home stretch, as I like to call it.  

     

    It's just like reaching mile 17 in a marathon - you think "I am so fabulous;  I've already run 17 miles," and then you think, "Crap!  There are still nine more to go.  And I run at the speed of a turtle on sedatives!"  Mile 22 is my happy place when running marathons, when I can ignore the aches and get that runners' euphoria for the last four miles, and also develop an obsessive need for Snickers that helps to keep me going - peanuts, caramel, and chocolate are strong motivators.  I'm thinking that, by week 36 of this pregnancy, I'll be so thrilled to be almost not-pregnant that I'll be able to ignore feeling like a bloated whale.  Maybe there will be bystanders with cowbells and home-made signs cheering me on for the last four weeks to carry me through the final stretch.  Maybe my fairy godmother will give me a Snickers bar every few days to keep me happy.  Maybe someone will present me with a whole bouquet of Snickers to devour after labor. 

     

    As with marathon running, I'm thrilled to be closing in on the end of pregnancy, but I'm also feeling a little sad that it will soon be over.  In a little over three months, I'll get to meet the little guy that's been doing what I can only imagine is an incredibly complex lyrical jazz routine full of fan kicks and pirouttes each night as I try to fall asleep.  Sean and I will get to see his or her face, without the slightly creepy shadows of the ultrasound machine, and find out if it's a him or a her.  Our house will fill up with that yummy, fuzzy baby smell - and other not-so-yummy baby smells.  But the first six months have flown by so fast, so I'm certain that the first six months of the baby's post-uterus life will be a similar blur, and I'm already thinking of how quickly he or she will grow up before I'm even to the end of pregnancy.  These hormones are making me nostalgic about the development of a baby that hasn't even been born yet.  Life will continue to tumble forward at a faster pace each year - and I'll continue to have a slower marathon pace each year - and I'll keep trying to keep up.

     

     

     

     


  • Parenting Anxiety

    Maybe it's the years babysitting and working at a day care, but I'm not that worried about my ability to take care of an infant.  Feed em, burp em, change em, rock them to sleep - I can handle all of that.  Perhaps I'll have a major freak-out when I have a real live baby of my own to take care of, but for now, I'm not too concerned.  What I am worried about is once the kid reaches the question-asking stage -  lately I've been thinking about all the stuff I don't know and the questions I won't be able to answer.  The short list:

     

    1.  How fish reproduce.  Actually, I'm unclear about how any non-mammal species reproduces.  Make that non-human.  This seems like the kind of thing a mother should know, what with most mothers' involvement in procreation.  I've got to start watching the National Geographic channel more. 

     

    2.  Any of the items from the Periodic Table, except for H, O, and Fe.  Iron just stuck with me.

     

    3.  The color spectrum - it used to be Roy G. Biv, right, but I seem to have heard a rumor about one of the colors getting dropped.  I can't even guess which one it is - they all seem pretty essential to me.  What would the world be without red or green?  This seriously shakes my faith in my seventh grade science text book. 

     

    4.  The names of any trees, except for aspens, or most flowers.  I've got a memory blind-spot when it comes to anything botanical.  If I don't kill the things I plant, they limp along in a sad withered bug-eaten state until they're frozen to death come winter.   

     

    5.  How to parallel park.  That's not totally true - I can parallel park.  I just will go to incredible lengths to avoid it, and, when I must parallel park, it takes seven or more turns of the wheel before I'm in the spot.  That's what learning to drive in the suburbs can do to a girl.  Given my deep parallel-parking anxiety, I can't imagine teaching my child how to parallel park, or parallel parking with an eagle-eyed, mouthy kindergartner in the car. 

     

    6.  How to paint my toe nails without getting nail polish all over my toes.  My toe nails, especially my pinkie toe, are freakishly tiny, which doesn't help; whenever I paint them, I end up with red or pink oozing on to my skin.  Because I'm not any better with a nail polish remover-soaked Q-tip than I am with a nail polish brush, I leave the extra polish on my toes until it wears off.  I'm sure this will cause deep embarassment to any adolescent girl children we might have.

     

    On some level, I feel like I need to be more generally competent in a wide variety of areas to be a parent - I find myself fumbling to open a jar of pickles or driving by an empty spot that would require parallel parking and think, "Shouldn't a mother be able to do that/know that/be better at that than I am?"   But what can I do, aside from read the encyclopedia from cover to cover? 

     

    That's why we have the internet, I guess - to help out clueless parents-to-be like me.  On the plus side, I still remember the pythagorean theorem, I can rock the semi-colon, I'm pretty good on skiis and a snowboard, and I'm fantastic at french-braiding hair.   I'll just have to depend on my husband and Google to help fill in all the gaps.

     



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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