What is this “date” thing you speak of?

 

Valentines Day is coming up and Care.com asked to interview me for their Date Night Series.

I was like, “Really?”

They were all, “Yes, really.”

I was like, “Are you sure?”

They were all like, “We think so.”

I said, “Okay.”

They were like, “Cool.”

Okay- perhaps it only went down like that in my head.  Clearly, I miss the Valley.

 

But they did interview me and you should go check it out HERE.

The big ole’ title at the top says, How To Have A Blast On Date Night Post-kids.

Please note: I have no actual tips on how to have a blast on date night post-kids.

 

PS- If you’d like to check out the whole Date Night Series, go here.  There are five other kick ass bloggers who weigh in on the subject.

 

 

Hello Depression. 1, 2, 3, down they go.

The clock struck midnight and we didn’t even know it.

A new year was starting as we stood, teary-eyed and paralyzed.

He said he would leave me if I didn’t get help.

For a moment, I didn’t care either way.

***

The darkness had become too much.

The anxiety…

The rage…

I blamed him.

I blamed my family.

The family that needed more than I had.

I blamed a traumatic birth.

I blamed being split in two.

I blamed circumstance.

I blamed my baby…

The baby that needed to be held 20 hours a day.

The baby that screamed endlessly.

The baby that made me cry…

made me scream…

made me smile…

made me ill with life.

I blamed myself.

***

The word “depression” was hard to find…

clouded by actual, real life hardships.

“It’s not me.  Anyone would think this all sucked.”

Was it my outlook or was it all the crap life was throwing at me?

Did it matter?

***

It all felt wrong.

I didn’t belong here.

I took a wrong turn.

These thoughts were unwanted.

This life was not mine.

***

I felt myself failing.

Failing at the public “happy face”.

Failing as a wife.

Failing as a mother.

Failing to live.

I was too exhausted to tread water.

***

And now…

1, 2, 3, down they go…

Every day they travel to my brain.

The black and grey are slowly lifting…

I breathe…

and I fight.

I fight.

I fight every day…

the feeling of not having been good enough on my own.

 

 

 

Learning a new thing is scary.

Learning a new thing is scary.

I sympathize…

I cry at milestones too.

 

Shopping Cart Roller Derby

I white knuckled the handle.  He could tell I was slowing down.  I knew he could sense it. The anxiety was making me sweat.  I wanted desperately to speed up.  My internal speedometer told me I was going about 4 miles an hour… not good enough… I had to pick it up to 5 or all hell would break loose.

Five miles an hour may not sound very fast to you.

It’s not fast for the highway.

It’s not fast even for a residential street.

But it’s ridiculously speedy for the local grocery store.  You can’t even read labels at that speed.

At this point in my life, a newborn with colic had turned my life into a dark and desperate farce.  Colic demanded to be in motion.  Colic had me bouncing and swaying at all hours of the night.  Colic had me making unnecessary right hand turns on the road, so as not to have to stop at a red light.  Colic also made me a speed demon with a grocery cart.

“Excuse me”, I said semi-politely to the old woman in front of me as I tried to shimmy my cart in front of her.  I felt her give the evil eye to the back of my head as I quickly jogged my cart down the aisle.

I glanced down at the infant car seat in my cart, and saw the left foot stop it’s twitch.

*sigh*

That old woman had no idea that I just saved her, and the whole damn store, from the High Pitch Baby Wails Of Doom.  The colic can scream.  The colic scream hits a special spot in the brain of anyone that hears it.  It can paralyze you.  It can make you see spots, drop to your knees, raise your hands, and yell “Oh my fucking Gawd! Make it stop!”.

I saved that bitch’s life.

Damn.  I also realized as I left her in the dust, that I also passed the granola bars and forgot to grab some.

Continuing my jog, I looked into the car seat and saw the left leg starting to twitch again.  My heavy breathing was telling me that I was still at 5 miles per hour, but maybe that wasn’t good enough any more.  It had been fifteen minutes of jogging up and down the aisles… maybe the colic had been complacent long enough.  It needed more motion.  More.  More!

So I started to run.

I ran through the dairy, and without slowing, whacked at a carton of non-dairy creamer hoping it would fall into my cart.  Then I turned and circled back toward the granola bars.

I began to turn down the cereal aisle, but when I saw how packed it was, I veered to the frozen aisle.  It was just as crowded.  I glanced again at the little twitching foot, and now BOTH were moving.

*shit*

I pointed myself down that aisle and started hoofing it.

“Excuse me. Pardon me.  Sorry.”

I dodged.  I scooted.  I bumped.  I probably, maybe ran over a toe.

I finally made it to the granola bars again, and the little old lady was STILL THERE.

She was standing right in front of the Nature Valley Oat n’ Honey granola bars.

These granola bars were essential to Bam Bam’s existence.

I was desperate…

and determined…

I glanced at the hands gripping my cart and revved them…

I took a deep breathe…

and I willed my sleep deprived feet into a sprint…

and as I approached the lady and the granola…

I bent my legs into a lunge…

lept into the air, grand jete-style…

reached up over the old woman’s head…

and knocked a box of granola bars off the shelf and onto the floor, where it slid halfway down the aisle.

I continued my run, and scooped up the box along the way.  I caught the eye of a surprised man heading our way.  I smiled, and mumbled, “In a hurry”.

I paused for just a millisecond to mentally bookmark the moment, and make sure that this was in fact my life.  Then I hightailed it to the self checkout where I rock and rolled my cart and even did a couple little circles with it while scanning.

Crisis averted.

Granola acquired.

*****

For some of you, grocery shopping may seem boring.  For some it’s just a chore.

But for others of us, it’s unbelievably tense…

it’s action packed…

and it’s dangerous.

It’s a shopping cart roller derby…

and it’s coming to a supermarket near you…

because, let’s face it – I don’t think they will let me into the same store more than once.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I was going to tell you a story…

I was going to tell you a story…

But I showered instead.

The four day old crust was begging to be sloughed off.

Then I was going to tell you a story again…

But I ate something.

I’ve learned to shove my face when I have any spare moment – a wild animal.

Then, this one time, I was going to tell you a story…

But with the sleepy sleepy I fell.

I am a bottom dweller on Maslow’s pyramid of needs.

“breathing, food, water, sex, sleep, homeostasis, excretion”

You’d be surprised at the ones I’m missing.

I have a story for you.

In fact, I have five.

But the sleepy sleepy is calling again…

or maybe personal hygiene should take precedence…

and that glass of water is too far…

forget it…

I hear a baby crying anyway.

Or is that me?

I’ve got so many stories for you.

But at this moment…

excretion wins.