We are all told, over and over, all our lives long, that
becoming a parent completely changes your life. And it is absolutely true. It is
also absolutely true that until you become a parent, you cannot possibly
conceive of the breadth and depth of that statement. Parenthood changes who you
are as a person, how you view life, what you think about the world around you. But
it also changes your daily routine. Well, obviously
it changes your routine. But no-one ever tells you the sorts of changes it
makes, changes that you don’t really expect. Changes in everything from what
you eat, to what you wear, to how you spend your time.
I am going to break that century-old pact of silence that
experienced parents have apparently made with each other in order to ensure the
continued existence of the human species and just hope that babies are cute
enough that some people decide to have them in spite of these changes. Here are just a few of the ways your life changes when you have kids that they don't write about in parenting books.
MORNING ROUTINE THEN: Long shower, leisurely blow dry, curl
or straighten hair, brush teeth, moisturize, deodorant, careful wardrobe
selection from closet, makeup, leisurely cup of coffee while reading newspaper.
MORNING ROUTINE NOW: (Good Day) Brush teeth, brush hair,
throw on something from the hamper that still passes the sniff test, three sips
of coffee which will be finished later in the afternoon. (Bad Day) Three sips
of coffee which will be finished later in the afternoon.
LUNCH THEN: Takeout Thai or Indian food, eaten at your desk.
LUNCH NOW: Peanut butter sandwich crusts, leftover mac and
cheese, and slightly browned apple slices, eaten standing over the sink.
MUST-HAVE LAUNDRY PRODUCTS THEN: Woollite and the number of a
good dry cleaner.
MUST HAVE LAUNDRY PRODUCTS NOW: Tide Pen and large economy
size bottles of Oxyclean.
FREE TIME ROUTINE THEN: Exercise, reading, dinner or drinks
with friends, movie, concert, theater performance.
FREE TIME ROUTINE NOW: Hahahahahahahahahahahaha. But
seriously, laundry.
TV WATCHING THEN: 24, Law & Order, CSI, Desperate
Housewives (oh, the irony), SNL.
TV WATCHING NOW: Sesame Street, Caillou, The Cat in the Hat,
Peg + Cat, Transformers, Paw Patrol, Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood, Team
Umizoomi, Yo Gabba Gabba, Downton Abbey. (The kids DO go to bed eventually,
after all. Well, most of the time.)
DATE NIGHT THEN: Fancy restaurant (anyplace with a French
name, valet parking, or involving the word “Bistro”); elegant clothes;
conversation revolving around current events, politics, and the latest movies.
DATE NIGHT NOW: Restaurant (anyplace that serves food on
actual plates – actually, anyplace that serves food; if it’s a birthday or
anniversary, anyplace that serves alcohol); reasonably clean clothes;
conversation revolving around children and their bodily functions.
SLEEP THEN: Quiet bedtime conversation with spouse followed
by peacefully drifting off to sleep in blissful silence; waking 7 to 8 hours later to the
gentle sound of a bedside alarm clock.
SLEEP NOW: Fall exhausted into bed after finishing
household chores neglected for several days; immediately fall into ugly
snores involving drooling; wake up half an hour later to sound of small child
yelling for no apparent reason, trudge into child’s bedroom, offer glass of
water, blearily pat child’s back for half an hour until child peacefully drifts
into slumber; fall asleep again but wake 2 hours later recalling that child’s
preschool has requested food pantry donation and diorama of the Civil War made
with only pasta, toothpicks, and Elmer’s glue due at 8:00am; get up and make
noodle diorama; grab random collection of non-perishable items from back of
cabinet (check expiration dates; return expired items to cabinet); start back
to bed but realize children will be awake in 15 minutes; brew coffee, take
three sips before children come racing downstairs demanding breakfast, abandon
coffee until afternoon.
So there you have it: the truth about how your life changes
when you become a parent. But before you make an appointment to have your reproductive
tubes tied or snipped or otherwise incapacitated, let me add one more then/now
comparison.
STUFF YOU LOOKED FORWARD TO THEN: Promotion, pay day, vacation.
STUFF YOU LOOK FORWARD TO NOW: Hearing your kid read an
entire book on his own for the very first time; watching your kid struggle to
master a new skill and grin excitedly when he does; seeing the joy on your
child’s face as she tells you the awesome
stuff that happened at school today; watching your kid’s first
concert/recital/soccer game/gymnastics meet/school play; goodnight hugs and
kisses; the magic words, “Mama, LOOK!”; the even more magic words, “Mama, I
love you.”
All in all, it’s a pretty fair trade.
Just fanastic
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