Archive for October, 2009

Light at the end of the toddler

NS October 3rd, 2009

amity's visit 576

I’ve written before about how difficult I’ve found The Noble Child at times: her tantrums, our bad days, my exasperation. I’ve also written about the good times: her sweetness, our funny moments and the goofy ways we diffuse the tension.

I love her unreservedly and unconditionally. She makes me laugh ’til my sides hurt sometimes and there is never a dull moment around her.

But if I’m honest, I’ve found the toddler stage, overall, very difficult. From 18 months onwards, TNC has been a full-steam-ahead, non-stop whirling dirvish of mishievous, independence-asserting, strong-willed spiritedness (or other nice ways of saying, “She’s a real handful”) that at times has brought me to the lowest lows I’ve ever known. In the last two years I have found myself slumped on the floor in total defeat, tears streaming down my face and my body wracked with great, gulping big sobs, sure that I couldn’t ever get up again, sure that I was not cut out for motherhood and that she’d be better off without me.

I’ve seethed with a rage that made my entire body shake, my teeth grind uncontrollably and my fist or foot lash out at or thrown some inanimate object that bore the brunt of my outburst, and then beat myself up with guilt.

I’ve sat in my GP’s office telling him of my problems with anger, feeling like I should be whispering in the confessional booth at church, shrouded in secrecy and fingering a rosary that I hope will grant me  forgiveness.

Hail Mary, full of grace…

I’ve not felt full of grace in quite awhile, frankly. Some days, I’m happy with having simply survived.

But now, she is three-and-a-half. She is going to pre-school four mornings a week; the other day she spends with her grandmother. She can grasp the concept of having to wait for something, and of sharing. I can have very lengthy conversations with her now, about all sorts of things. She can dress herself, pour herself a drink of juice, pick her brother up to move him out of harm’s way, open her own snacks and recite books completely from memory. She is making friends everywhere she goes and just today while out shopping on the high street, she ran into three of them — one from pre-school and two from ballet and tap class. She, very endearingly, insists on doing things “By on my own” or “All on myself” and does just that.

She is no longer a toddler but a pre-schooler. She is shrugging off her baby days once and for all and entering the next stage of childhood, in all its wonder-filled, song-and-dance glory.

For her, a bright light is shining down and illuminating all of the things she yearns to touch, smell, see, taste and explore. The world is her oyster and she’s got her clam-diggin’ boots on, determined to find and polish every pearl she can get her increasingly dexterous fingers on.

For me, there is light at the end of the tunnel that I’ve found myself in for the past couple years. I am so close to the edge I can almost see the ground beneath the drop-off point. The funny thing is, I’ve been looking forward to this — no, begging for this — for so long that I couldn’t actually fathom the time actually coming. And now that it’s fast approaching and I am clambering out of the end, all I want to do is crawl back inside to that tiny tot back at the beginning and hold her close to me; smell her baby smell and hear her baby words and see her baby steps.

My whirling dirvish, I never meant to wish the wind out of your sails. I know your fiercely independent, fighting spirit will serve you well in life, as it has mine. You have a fantastic personality and are a character of fascinating, epic proportions.

But if you ever find yourself in a tunnel of darkness from which you can’t seem to find your way out, remember that I’m there behind you (fumbling, perhaps, but there) every step of the way… and I won’t stop nudging you forward until you’ve seen the light at the end, just as you did for me.

Mother-to-mother (in-law)

NS October 1st, 2009

I am a lucky woman in that I get along fabulously with my mother-in-law. Our relationship wasn’t always so effortless or, dare I say, close as it is now (we had a few minor snits in the beginning of mine and TNH’s marriage)  but 98% of the time we get on really well. The other two percent of the time just means that I really do consider her family. After all, everyone gets slightly annoyed with people they love occasionally!

Every Thursday I bring The Noble Child here to her house (from where I’m writing this) so they can spend the day together and so I only have one child to look after. Sometimes I leave and go do other things, sometimes I stick around for coffee and a chat and end up staying here all day, happy to just have some company and a hand in looking after both the kids. We talk about them as only a parent or grandparent could (“He did the cutest thing the other day. Watch!” *cue endless attempts to get a repeat performance*; “I got her to eat broccoli the other day, it was amazing!”) and ask for each other’s opinions on the day’s news as I flick through the papers. She’ll ask me a question about my childhood and I hers. We find out things about one another that you only find out by just hanging out in a low-key, informal setting. It’s lovely, definitely, but it makes me incredibly sad sometimes as well.

I want to do this with MY mother. Sometimes I want her to be the one to come rescue us when we’re all sick and can’t get out of bed, or have us over for Sunday lunch. I would give anything to be able to just pop in for a coffee and look on admiringly and contentedly as the children play, chatting and sharing and scheduling family events. Every Christmas, birthday, summer party or milestone achievement finds me taking pictures frantically, trying to capture for my parents what TNH’s have just seen with their own eyes.

The guilt and the sadness can be overwhelming sometimes.

And even though I comfort myself by thinking about a possible future move to be closer to my family, I’m then reminded that my inlaws will be put in my parents’ position and how difficult it would be for all of us to leave them behind. They’re our family, too.

I will always be pulled in two different directions by the two nationalities in my family, my two homes. I knew that upon becoming an expat. But I didn’t realise how much harder it would get after having children.

I can’t dwell on these thoughts though, I just can’t. My heart won’t allow it.

So I pour another coffee and smile at my mother-in-law’s comment on how tall TNC is getting and remind myself to count the blessings in my life, not the hardships.

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