Archive for the 'Home and Hearth' Category

A (bad) day in the life

NS March 19th, 2009

I wrote a post last month detailing a day in my life and got quite a few comments about how together and well organised I seemed. Well, let me tell you a little secret: that was a particularly good day in the Noble household. In fact, it was better than good, it was very good. Lots of outings, very little friction and enough activities to keep us all happy. Those days are fantastic but they’re more rare than I’d like. Most days are a mix of the bad and the good and some days are just plain ugly. In the interest of keeping things honest and so that no one gets any illusions about my keeping-it-together skills, I present a (bad) day in the life.

6.12 – Awoken by children; , get dressed, help TNC use the toilet, change the baby’s nappy and head downstairs still feeling bleary-eyed and yawning.

6.30 – Put cereal in front of TNC as she watches CBeebies (that most blessed of early-morning babysitters); she shoves it back at me and I only just catch it before it falls off the table onto the carpet. This does not help my morning grump.

6.35 – Settle down with my own cereal and coffee and check email while flipping through paper; stop TNC from kicking her brother

7.00 – Toddler terror starts demading a sandwich and I dig my heels in and refuse, telling her sandwiches are for lunch. I offer her toast or porridge. This is met with foot stomping and shouting. It’s too early for this.

7.15 – Sit down on the floor to play with TNC; am told I’m not ‘doing it right’ and she keeps getting cross for reasons known only to tiny people with terrible tempers and absolutely no grasp of reason. I start getting fed up and look at my coffee longingly as it goes cold.

7.40 – TNB starts fussing and I realise he’s done a gigantic poo which has gone all up his back. Go upstairs to get him cleaned up and wake TNH. Feel resentful that he got to sleep until nearly 8am while I’ve been up no later than 6.15 the past three days. Feel guilty for thinking this because he’s been working late a lot and has to work all weekend too.

8.00
– Finish getting TNC cleaned and dressed; try to corral TNC while I get ready as she continues to act up.

8.45
– I’m ready. The baby’s ready. When I attempt to get TNC ready, she loses the plot and starts kicking me and screaming, which sets her brother off. TNC goes into a timeout while I attempt to calm myself (and TNB) down

8.55 - Attemt number two at getting dressed begins; More fits ensue and both children begin screaming bloody murder. I barely, barely contain myself from exploding in rage and instead use a very tight, low voice and clench my jaw while combing her hair and getting her socks on. Feel a tension headache invading my brain.

9.30 – Downstairs to get bag packed and shoes and jackets on. More demands for sandwiches and more crying. I slam a book down on the counter and both children wail again.

9.40 - Remember I have washing that needs to be hung up before we leave so leave TNB crying in his carseat while I lug the basket outside and quickly hang the clothes up. By the time I get back five minutes later he is hysterical.

9.45
- Get TNB calmed down and everyone into car. Turn radio up and roll window down to let sunshine work its magic.

10.00 – Almost there and feeling much better. TNB asleep and Toddler Terror has perked up.

10.15 – Arrive at mother-in-laws to drop TNC off but end up going in for a coffee and beg her to watch both children while I sit in peace for a few minutes.

11.30 – TNC asks me to cut her fingernails so I get the clippers and start to do them when she starts screaming so I let her go. She comes immediately back asking me to cut them. I prepare to get them out again. She runs away screaming. I put them away. Repeat. She slams a door very hard. I put her in a timeout and she wails. The headache returns.

12.00 – Feed TNB and then head back home, leaving TNC with Grandma.

12.30 – Back home for lunch

1.00 - Start work but TNB is incredibly fussy. Try to feed him, change him, rock him and play with him, to no avail. Finally put him in front of television and give him a piece of paper to chew on. Silence. Crack on with work.

2.00 - Finish work and decide to go get car washed then grab a frappuccino from Starbucks and take TNC for a walk in the park since it’s such a gorgeous day.

2.20
– In carwash queue, waiting my turn. Taking forever.

2.40
– Finally my turn. I pull in just as TNB starts screaming. I accidentally run over one of the sensors/rail thingies and the cow behind me won’t back up so I can reverse and start again. I try to get it maneuvered correctly but the screaming baby and honking car send my stress levels soaring. I can’t take anymore and just leave the carwash without having washed the car. What a waste of £4.50 and a half hour of my time. I hope the bitch behind me accidentally left her sunroof open and got toxic soap in her eyes.

3.00 – Sit crying in carpark of grocery store while TNB cries too.

3.10
- Get him out and go inside to change his nappy and get emergency cheesecake for medicinal purposes. Set him down to change him and he screams like I’ve dipped him in boiling oil. An employee knocks on the door to ask if we’re okay. I try to pull myself together so she doesn’t hear my strangled, garbled voice.

3.30 – Back home; TNB crying even harder now and not even holding him is doing much. Set him in his carseat, turn the radio up really loudly and get on IM to vent to The Noble Husband. Think about what a terrible parent I must seem to the neighbours, letting my baby cry while I listen to the radio but feel it is better for both of us if I am not near him for a few minutes.

3.35 – Pick him up and take him upstairs for a feed and a nap; lay in bed nursing him, trying not to shake him too much with my hiccuping sobs. Wipe nose on pillowcase because tissues are across room and I am stuck on bed with him.

4.00 – He’s asleep! Hallelujah. Head downstairs for cheesecake and tea. Start feeling a lot better.

5.10 – He’s awake but in a much better mood; play for a little bit and mess around on computer.

5.45 – Tesco delivery arrives; put food away.

6.00 – Put dinner in oven.

7.00 – Mother-in-law brings TNC back, fast asleep in the car. Scoop her up and take her directly to bed, changing her into pajamas and tucking her up.

7.10 – Get laundry off the line outside and say goodbye to MIL.

7.30 – Take TNB upstairs for nappy change and into pajamas. Nurse to sleep.

8.00 – Finish making dinner and eat.

8.30 until 10.30 – Watch tv, read a magazine and blog. Ignore pile of dishes that need doing and list of things that are meant to be done. Add ‘Look for full-time job and a nanny’ to list.

10.35 - Still no sign of TNH from work so going to bed alone soon.

A day in the life

NS February 24th, 2009

7am – Children awake; feed baby

7.15 – Toilet, dress and change both children’s nappies

7.30 – Head downstairs. Let cat out. Pour cereal and make coffee. Get TNB settled on blanket with a toy

7.45 – Eat cereal and drink coffee. Supervise TNC while she eats breakfast and flits between playing and watching CBeebies. Flip through paper. Get on computer to check email/Facebook/blog/Twitter/forums. Bounce baby on knee while finishing coffee

8.45 – Clear breakfast dishes. Take rubbish and recycling out. Let cat back in. Put load of laundry in (all while holding TNB)

9.00 – Herd children upstairs. Put TNB in bouncy seat and TNC in front of the computer. Make beds and tidy up. Take TNB into bathroom with me while I give it a quick clean. Shower and get ready, checking on TNC every five minutes

9.30 – Change both children’s nappies and get them dressed. Run blowdryer over wet hair. Make to-do list for the week. Send a couple texts. Fold and put away clean clothes

10.15 – Sit TNC down with a stack of books and toys in her room. Feed the baby on my bed while reading a parenting book with my free hand

10.30 – Take TNC downstairs for a snack and some one-on-one time. Eat peanut butter toast and have another cup of coffee. Read two books in extraordinarily silly voices. Play grocery store, ‘guess what animal I am’ and ballerinas.

11.30 – Baby wakes up from his nap. Put him in sling and get TNC’s jacket and shoes on. Go kick ball in garden. Hang a bird feeder. Grab the gardening shears and do a bit of pruning and weeding (of what little I can get to with TNB attached to me)

12.15 – Inside to make lunch. Eat while holding TNB

1.00 – Get TNC down for her nap. Clear lunch dishes and then spend some time playing with the babe

1.30 – Feed TNB and get computer set up for work

1.45 – Start work. TNB decides he doesn’t want to play alone, sleep or be fed so spend time jiggling, cooing and singing to him while working with one hand. After a half hour of fruitless attempts to settle him, plop him in front of Baby Einstein dvd. Crack on with work

3.00 – Finish work; browse internet

3.15 – TNC awake. Remember that we’re supposed to be at a playdate at 4pm so race around to get ready. Decide to walk instead of drive for a bit of fresh air and exercise. Get TNB in sling and TNC in pushchair

3.45 – Leave house and ring to say we’ll be a bit late. Stop to withdraw cash and buy flowers and walk rest of the way, which was much further than previously thought

4.15 – Arrive for visit/playdate. Chat with lovely new friend and kids play together beautifully. Lovely new friend serves homemade, authentic Indian chappati and dosa — yum!

6.15 – Head home, stopping at grocery store on the way back

7.00 – Arrive home absolutely exhausted from pushing 35lb toddler and 14lb baby plus pushchair and groceries uphill. Put food away, feed cat and hang up wet washing

7.30 – Sit down on sofa, still exhausted. Manage to Tweet about said exhaustion

7.40 – The Noble Husband home from work; kiss hello. Take baby upstairs to change and put to bed

8.15 – Sneak away from bedroom after getting him to sleep (and almost falling asleep myself!). Chat to TNH about our respective days. Tidy living room. Grab a beer from the fridge. Check email

9.00 – Dinner put in front of me. TNC carried to bed after falling asleep on sofa

9.45 – Attempt to finish attaching new buggy board to pram and realise a piece of the connector has fallen off somewhere when I was out and about. Buggershitdamn!

10.00 – Do the washing up. Make a cup of tea

10.30 – Drink tea, finish this post, kiss my husband goodnight and then go to bed soon after

Tomorrow – Get up and do it all over again

101 Sanity-saving toddler time wasters

NS February 8th, 2009

I wrote in December about feeling that I was letting TNC watch too much television and that I was becoming too embroiled in the computer and how that was making me a crappy parent and her a whingey toddler. I asked for your help in coming up with ideas to get us up off the sofa and our eyes averted from our respective screens. You gave me some fantastic ideas and links to sites with even *more* fantastic ideas, for which I am very thankful.

I promised that when I had a comprehensive list put together I would share it with you and so here it is, in all its sanity-saving glory. Some of them are pretty simple, others are more creative. I’ve included some physical acitivities, some messy and some quiet or low-key. I hope it provides a range of ideas for mums (and dads!) looking for inspiration for playtime with their tots. And if you have even more to add, please do leave a comment for consideration in the sequel, if there is enough material to warrant such an endeavour. Now, get to playing!

1. Baking – Let your little one help mix, knead, pour and decorate the finished product
2. Glueing – Paper, pasta, beans, tissue paper, string…you can glue lots of stuff!
3. Painting – finger or with brushes
4. Make a bird feeder with a pinecone, peanut butter, seeds and a string
5. Nature walks
6. Make a nature table with items collected on your walks, representing each place you went or season
7. Bucket of water, suds and sponges – let ‘em have at it!
8. Visit animals – pet store, petting zoo or farm
9. Make or buy a play kitchen
10. Play grocery store and let them put items from cupboards into a basket or bag
11. Drawing – stencils, doodles, ‘Mystery Picture’ game
12. Music – sing songs, play a cd, dance, play instruments
13. Make a paper chain or bunting with flags
14. Play-dough
15. Face painting
16. Dress-up
17. Cups – pour water from cup to cup, hide objects in them or stack
18. Make a fort/house with blanekts, pillows and chairs/sofa
19. Treasure hunts
20. Coloring
21. Stamps and ink pads
22. Make jewelry
23. Water and sand table
24. Magna Doodle
25. Tea party
26. Reading books
27. Make a squirrel feeder by drilling a screw onto an L-shaped piece of wood and placing ear of corn on the screw
28. Spread icing on biscuits (cookies) and make sandwiches out of them or decorate
29. Put on a play/act out a scene
30. Play ‘Riddley Riddley Ree’ (repeat phrase then say “I see something you don’t see, and the color is ______”; they guess)
31. Play ‘I Spy’
32. Play Hide ‘n’ Seek
33. Give a horsey ride
34. Play Follow The Leader
35. Make puppets
36. Put on a puppet show
37. Play with dolls – feed, change nappy, dress, put to sleep, take for a walk, etc..
38. Go for a walk in the rain and puddle jump
39. Go for a “swim” in the bath
40. Draw on the tub with bath crayons
41. Visit a toddler-friendly website (Starfall and Poisson Rouge are good ones)
42. Play Candyland
43. Play memory/matches with cards
44. Decorate and play in a large box
45. Stickers
46. Play ‘taxi’ by putting two chairs in a row and pretending to drive each other to places you know
47. Make a car out of a laundry basket or large box; make a steering wheel and tires out of paper plates
48. Make shadows and light patterns with a flashlight (torch)
49. Cook together
50. Copycat – mimic each other’s actions
51. Bowling (can make your own pins with empty bottles)
52. Take pictures of each other (with supervision using your own or a toddler-friendly camera)
53. Tube ball
54. Balloon baseball
55. Big Mouth ball toss
56. Musical chairs
57. Wrap, open and rewrap a small toy until bored of it
58. Wear mummy/daddy’s shoes and try to walk
59. Bottles and lids – Give an assortment of bottles and lids and see if he/she can match them up and screw them on
60. Thread beads, tubular pasta, curlers, etc..
61. Play Postman using junkmail
62. Play with clothespins
63. Blow bubbles
64. Pin the tail on the donkey
65. Collect rocks
66. Dig in the dirt/mud
67. Give them a handbag or backpack and let them put their treasured posessions inside
68. Building blocks
69. Paper airplanes
70. Shape sorter
71. Sticky Feet – put tape on shoes/feet and walk across non-carpeted floor
72. Fold clothes and match up socks
73. Make a wave bottle
74. Make a reward chart
75. Potato or cork prints
76. Cut fruit into shapes and make faces
77. Make candy
78. Foot and hand tracing
79. Draw with chalk on a chalkboard or outside on pavement
80. Make popcorn and thread or glue while munching on some
81. Paper plate faces or hats
82. Bubble wrap – pop it, jump on it, paint it, stuff it into bags or boxes
83. Make smoothies or juice pops
84. Make ice cream
85. Play with cooked spaghetti noodles
86. Flour and water messy time
87. Paint rocks
88. Read books in silly voices
89. Blow bubbles in a glass with a straw
90. Play doctor/patient
91. Pretend to ride an airplane by laying on your back, balancing your child on your knees and hands and moving them up and down
92. Race each other
93. Leapfrog
94. Play ‘sleeping bunnies’
95. Ring-around-the-rosie
96. Toss/roll/kick a ball
97. Make a menu
98. Put makeup on each other for fun
99. Jump on the bed – do somersaults
100. Let them help sweep or dust
101. Going on vacation game – pack a bag or suitcase with what they think they’ll need

On a break

NS December 15th, 2008

Dear Internet,

I love you. I really do. But in the famous last words of Ross and Rachel, we need to go on a break.

When I first met you years ago I was able to use you for informational or entertainment purposes and only in small doses. Then I became a stay-at-home mom, isolated from the outside world, and you provided me with adult interaction, virtual shoulders to cry on, advice to consider and others with which to empathise. Blogs and chat forums were like manna straight from Lonely Mama heaven for me. You lured me in further with flashing lights and audio clips. Over time, you made it so I felt that I could only learn, read and interact through you. If I could crush you up with a credit card and snort you up my nose with a £20 note on the back of a pub toilet, I so totally would’ve.

Now, nearly three years into my stay-at-home-parenting gig, you have me in a stranglehold of email accounts, YouTube channels, RSS feeds, chat forums and news sites. I go into withdrawals if I can’t have you, can’t see you or use you. I pace. I get angry. I fidget. I can’t concentrate. All I can think about is when I can see you again. You make me laugh, you make me cry and sometimes you make me want to stomp on your head and throw you out the window.

But you know what, Internet? As much as I love you, I love me and my family more. When you suck my energy, attention and time towards you, I (and they) lose. When I spend two hours every day just reading blogs, another hour a day blogging, and the equivalent of another couple hours browsing forums and news sites, it’s no wonder that things sit undone in my life — books unread on the shelves, the house in a thin layer of filth, my hobbies untouched, friends unvisited, exercise abandoned and, worst of all, my children and marriage unappreciated. The thought that I may miss an opportunity to teach my children something (or learn from them, more likely) or an attempt by my husband to connect, all because I was busy staring at a computer screen, makes me feel queasy. So over this holiday period, and for perhaps a little longer, we are On a Break. I’m putting you down and backing away before I am unable to do either of those things and the choice is no longer mine but made for me.

When I was in college I came perilously close to becoming addicted to drugs, and one in particular. Only a wafer thin line of common sense and sheer luck brought me back from the edge that I teetered on, between Harmless Fun and Life-Altering Ruinous Carnage. The way it started making me feel, making me hate myself for indulging, promising that I wouldn’t do it again or that I’d cut back — that’s the way I’m staring to feel about you. And so, you see, I have to leave you before things get ugly. I don’t want a divorce, just a trial separation. Time away to do some thinking. Find myself again so I have something more to give when I return.

If you can’t wait for me, I’ll understand. Things move fast in your world and what’s out of sight is often out of mind. If you move on before I get back, I want you to know that I will always care for you and remember the good times we had. You helped shape the person I am today and I won’t soon forget that. But now it’s time for me to move on, to quiet the keyboard and still the mouse. To get up off the sofa and put ‘home’ in my house. So it’s farewell for now, I bid you adieu. Merry Christmas, Internet, see you soon.

No longer aspiring

NS December 10th, 2008

Up there on the intro, just underneath my banner, it used to say: “Noble Savage is a fusion of commentary on leaving the motherland, parenthood, culture, world news and feminism, written by an aspiring freelance journalist, expatriate and mother of two.”

Well, the ‘aspiring’ is no longer there because I landed my first regular freelance gig yesterday! It’s not exactly what I was hoping for as it doesn’t involve writing but it’s working as a producer on a web-based project for someone in the media and it at least gives me a jump-start in the right direction. It’s all about who you know and where you start and I have a good feeling about this. The timing is perfect as the deadline space is right when TNC is either napping or at pre-school. So while I’m sure it will be a rush some days and a bit stressful trying to deal with The Noble Baby and rush off to pick TNC up from school as I’m trying to get my work finished and sent in, it’s so worth it to have something that is ‘mine’ again. Not only has it boosted my self-confidence by a mile already, it will give us a bit more financial breathing room and make sure that my CV doesn’t collect too much dust on it while I’m raising my sproglets.

It’s been nearly three years since I stopped working and while I thoroughly enjoyed having TNC’s first year off, since then I’ve been itching to sink my teeth into something that isn’t baby-related. I won’t use that dreaded phrase that so many people use in situations like this and say it will “stimulate my mind” because that indicates, to me anyway, that I wasn’t using it before. My mind is always in use, just in different ways and by different stimuli. Raising children has stimulated my sense of empathy, tenderness, patience (or lack of it sometimes), communication and love. Working will now stimulate my organizational, creative and business skills. The ol’ grey matter…it’s really going to be firing on all cylinders now!

I am officially a work-at-home mother. How strange and wonderful is that?!

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