Make no mistake; I love my son. He is the god damn Disney
World of my life and as far as I am concerned he shits fairy dust. Still, I
must admit, motherhood is no picture off a box of Pampers, and I feel that
reality of parenting must be brought to light. After all, it is the most
critiqued, closely studied, and most often judged part of one’s behavior. My
bookshelf is currently covered with literature written by doctors, scholars and
gurus that dictate parenting styles word for word, page for page, and warn me about
how badly I am already fucking up as a mother. Sometimes, I look at my newborn
peacefully sleeping in his swing and think, “I’m doing alright.” And then that
Bitch from Chapter 3 whispers in my ear, “He isn’t swaddled you worthless piece
of crap.”
I hear people say practice makes perfect. Well, when it
comes to being a parent, that saying is just a load of shit. Honestly, at the
end of the day, no matter how many diapers you changed, every now and then, you
will find fecal matter in your hair and not one chapter of any f-ing book will
convince me otherwise. Shit just happens.
At week four, I
thought I had it in the bag. I was running remarkable well on adrenaline and
found myself in a routine nonetheless. Then, my husband, Chris, got the
Nurovirus. What is the Nurovirus you ask? Simply put- it’s the stomach flu on
mother f-ing steroids and it is 200 times more contagious than any other strand
of flu. So there I was, 1:30 am, with a newborn latched onto my the right
breast, peacefully nursing as I ran up
and down two flights of stairs to care for my sick husband and his abundance of
bodily fluid projecting out of every orifice of his grown body.
Epic latch skills, I know. That night, Chace and I mind
fucked Chapter 2: Perfecting the Latch that night. I can assure you none of
those books that lined my shelves would know what the fuck to do in this
situation nor would my super educated friend Google. So, did I fall to the floor
and cry like a coward? Well, maybe a little. But after my brief mental break, I
did what any new mother would do with her horribly needy and super contagious
husband. I checked him to a Holiday Inn.
Just kidding, that was option A and I chose option B. I
called the only person that would give a shit if Chris preferred yellow vs. red
Gatorade at 3:30 am; the one person that understood that caring for a newborn
was similar to caring for Chris. I called his mother.