Tuesday, February 28, 2006

Fantasize This!

Today I saw a blurb about online fantasy camps for adults. Well, I, of course, thought immediately about a fantasy camp for mothers.

What do you think? Fabio washing the stress of the day from our long, luxurious locks. Dr. Phil insisting: you’re a good mother, you’re the best mother, you have nothing to be ashamed of. Your children will not grow up to be axe murderers, there’s not a single thing you could possibly do better. Your husband loves you, your mother loves you, your carpool thinks you’re peaches and no, your ass is NOT too big.

For those of the stay-at-home kind, what about a whole day watching somebody else wash mountains and mountains of dishes and clothes – while we furiously generate a continual stream of dirty ones? Yeah.

Well, not exactly. What actually sprang immediately to my mind’s eye was a bunch of near-comatose hags, sprawled on sofas or walking aimlessly, staring into space looking dazed repeating, yes dear, okay honey, sure I can do that. Tomorrow? No sweat. Right on it. Have you looked under the sofa?

Hmmm, seems my fantasy camp for mothers looks very much like an opium den.

Filled with lost souls who long ago gave up even the fantasy of a fantasy life.

Reminds me of years ago, when my kids were still in diapers. I was listening to this radio contest: You can win the car of your DREAMS! Wow, I thought, the car of my dreams, thought I. And I proceeded to drive to work absolutely wracking my brain trying to decide whether I’d want a Toyota Tercel Wagon or a Dodge Caravan. Day after day I’d drive to work trying to figure this out, before I finally realized that this was supposed to be a DREAM car! I couldn’t even DREAM big anymore.

Of course, that was when my children were very young. As they got older it got much worse.

Even dogs dream, you know. Got an unfulfilled dream to share? I’d like to hear it.

May be the closest you come to getting it.

Monday, February 27, 2006

Housewife From Hell

Here's another sneak peek into the darkness that is my psyche. I wrote it a quite awhile ago, but still stand by it. Love to hear if it strikes any chords. Even bad ones. Hell, especially bad ones, not like it'd be the first time.

Read at your own risk.


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I love my kids to death, but motherhood has undone me. Golden handcuffs is much too polite a description of this state of the union - gentrified slavery would be more like it. Hey, send me back to the factories or the sweat shop, at least there I got to punch out at the end of the day.

I've fallen out of my dirty little closet - now meet the Housewife from Hell. Oops, the h-word isn't PC, but since I have no husband, I am indeed married to this house. If not 'til death do us part, then until the kids are grown, or one of us feels our needs aren't being met. Thank God I haven't put the place through med school.

I'm sick to death of the women who care for kids and keep the homefires burning being blamed for doing it so poorly. I'm tired of us having to do it alone, and get jobs, too, and hold entire neighborhoods, school districts and religious communities together, practically singlehandedly. I've had it with living in fear that if I discipline my kids in the way I think appropriate I may wind up in jail. On the other hand, if I don't do a good job and the munchkins go bad, golly, there's talk about moms being thrown in jail for that, too. Fine, I could use a-rrest.

It's no longer cute and funny - a-la-Erma-Bombeck - that the stay-at-home moms I know feel guilty because we're not modeling strong, career women for our daughters, while the "working" moms feel guilty because they're not at home with theirs. It's sick and it's tragic, and it's at least as important as who won the superbowl or boinked the royals last week.

You might see me in the store yelling at my kids or giving them "that look" or even (God forbid!) spanking them right there. You are so convinced that I'm one of those evil ones, the child abusers. Well, I guess you're right, because I will spank my children before I'll see them grow from greedy, selfish, hedonistic brats to greedy, selfish, hedonistic adults. (Gee, sounds like a recipe for politicians and CEOs doesn't it?) I've read all the damn nicey-nice child-rearing books. Ever known any shrink's kids? 'Nuff said. I finally stopped reading and decided to be in charge of my house.

I used to be such a fantastic parent, back before my kids were born. Like the Bud-sodden armchair quarterback, I couldn't understand why those other idiots didn't do things my way. It was so easy to see that a cranky child needs love, fighting siblings need a gentle word. But what wasn't so easy to see was that the cranky child had worn down the defenses of the exhausted adult, that the fighting siblings were experts at terrorizing the beleaguered parent. It's not pretty here on the front lines.

Now this arrogance has been institutionalized. There is an absolute inability - make that unwillingness - to see that parents have limits. You know, if you take a Mercedes Benz and drive it to death in the city, and don't change the oil and don't tune the engine and don't take good care of it, it's going to fall apart. And, folks, I ain't no Mercedes. I have been driven into the ground, and I call it indentured servitude of the American kind. So, aside from being disgusted with politicians, corporations, the media and the horse they rode in on, too, I feel disgusted every time I hear progressives talk about the workers or working people. We know this doesn't mean us. We know this means paid employees. We know you have no more to offer us than the Republicrats or Demicans. We know your successes aren't going to trickle down to us, because at best you don't know us and at worst you just plain don't like us.

To paraphrase Sojourner Truth (however badly), ain't I a worker? Don't I do what so many people don't want to do, just like the immigrants we hate - and need - so much? Don't I cook and clean and shop and schlep and guide and nurture and haven't I given up all my free time for a worthy cause? Don't I endure backbreaking stress: endless work, constant interruptions, frequent crises, start, stop, start, stop, wait, wait, wait. Work on the house, work for the school, deal with the kids, meet with the neighborhood. And, yeah, feel guilty because I don't have a job. A real job. An important job. A paying job.

Forgive me, I'm in the throes of bon-bon withdrawal.

By God, I'm getting some time off this year. If I have to rob a local convenience store in a freaking ski mask, these kids are going to overnight camp. And when that's over, I think I'll take 'em on up to City Hall and hold the world's first mayhem-in. Yeah, get a few friends together and just let the animals loose. Make sure they're real hungry and overtired first. See how much work they get done. Now, that'll be some movement.

But I'll tell you what. You just better watch out. 'Cause if all of us enslaved mothers ever do get free, it'll be the bitch heard 'round the world.

Thursday, February 23, 2006

Like That Bunny, Stillll Mothering

As I said last time, I've been moping around lamenting my empty nest (after all those years I lusted after it!), wondering if I had anything to say about motherhood anymore. If I even qualified as a mother anymore.

Then I got home from school the other night around 10, utterly exhausted. There was a very sad message on the machine from one of the flown birds saying they had forgotten that their FAFSA was due the very next day. Geez, do they think financial aid grows on trees? (Yup, I had to say that. It's in the handbook that doesn't exist).

So, here I am, going over numbers, trying to understand the applications, which, I swear, were written in Klingon. Thank God (I'm sorry I was so rude last time, God. Really, REALLY sorry! Artistic license, right, wasn't that a clause in the free will paragraph?) -- thank God I had just done my income tax that afternoon.

Now, that's bizarre because I never do it before the very last minute - and usually after. So, what was that all about? Was I really that in touch with a deadline I didn't even know about? Was my kid sending me vibes through the ether? Was God setting me up to look like a total butt after my, um, ungodly rude comment?

Whatever. The fact that I'd already done the 1040 kept me from going ballistic, slamming down the phone and then fighting the guilt all night long - my normal m.o. Instead, I just calmly stayed on the phone till it was done (yet another three hours I'll never get back again).

So, yeah, I'm still a Real Mother, all right. And, although I did have a lapse in judgment last night, you can bet I'll be back on the warpath before long.

Especially since it's pretty clear now I'm going to hell anyway.

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

Here's . . . . . . Mommy!

Am I still a Mommy now that my kids are gone?

With one in an apartment and one in a dorm, I have just recently entered the empty nest phase. Although I'm not actively mothering, I'm in school and continuing to volunteer, so things are still crazy. I guess I like it crazy though. Keeps the rage down.

So, I've been kind of moping around. I couldn't wait till my kids grew up and now that they're gone and I see they are remotely civilized I want 'em back. And, geez, all those years I was so overwhelmed and wanting to get a real mother's voice out there (meaning, none of this pie on the counter, bun in the oven, oh, I'm so happy and I have such beautiful children crap) -- now that I have two minutes to rub together I've lost my voice!

Motherhood? It was just twenty years that flew by in an instant. What was the big deal, anyway?

I swear, it's just like childbirth. You sweat and strain and push and think you're gonna die. Then, a week later you completely forget the ordeal. Just as if it wasn't the scariest, most painful thing you could ever in a million years imagine. I thank God for his highly developed sense of humor.

Oh yes, God is a man. The sick fuck.