5 Things I Forgot About Motherhood

My babies will be 23 years old this year and even though my husband and I raised 5 children there are some things about motherhood that I had forgotten.

Maybe I forgot because I didn’t want to remember them. Maybe I forgot because I’m older and I’m at the stage where I walk around looking for my glasses only to find them on my head. All I know is that recently when my daughter came over to visit me and brought her 2 year old and a 2 month old I soon realized there were a few things I had forgotten.

5. It is impossible to hold a complete conversation between 2 adults while small children are present. We tried and it went something like this….

“So what do you think about,” she started to ask me.

“Mommy, I want my blanky now,” said the 2 year old.

“Just a minute, Mommy was talking to Nana.”

“But mommy I want my blanky.”

“We will get it in a minute.”

“But why can’t I get it now?”

Baby begins to cry and daughter goes to get bottle.

Returns with bottle and blanky.

“Now what we were talking about?”

Neither one of us could remember.

4. I forgot the sheer amount of stuff you have to take with you when you travel with children. By the time I helped my daughter carry in the baby in the car seat, the diaper bag, and some toys the 2 year old just had to bring, my den looked like Babies R Us. And by the time they left the bottles, blankies and toys were in every room of the house. I’m still finding little socks and hair bows from past visits.

3. I forgot the noise. My house has a lot of hard wood floors and the sound echoes. I don’t mind the sound of children, in fact I love it but my twins….the ones who are about to be 23….not so much. One of them asked me the other day why little girls squealed all the time and babies cried so much. I told him that’s like asking why the sky is blue. It’s just the way it is.

baby-cry

2. I forgot the amount of self-sacrifice raising a child takes. My daughter is a great mommy and watching her with my grandchildren reminded me of how needy little people are. She was in constant motion the whole day and just watching her was exhausting. I tried to help but  the 2 year old is so attached to her that most of the time she preferred “Mommy do it.”  I was able to help with the baby until he got fussy and then it took a mother’s touch to know how to get him to sleep.

Watching her brought back memories of all those years when I didn’t sit down. Well, okay, maybe not years but it felt that way. There was always laundry to do, dishes in the sink, babies to change, feed or burp.

Motherhood is exhausting. I really hadn’t forgotten that totally, but watching her sure did bring back the memories.

1. Finally, the number one thing I had forgotten was how much of those early years are spent dealing with pee and poop. While my daughter and grandchildren were here the baby pooped several times and had to be stripped down, washed off and changed. Mommy got some on her, she had to change too. The 2 year old is potty training and had a couple of accidents. There were stinky diapers in my garbage. Wet panties and shorts in my bathroom. Between the 2 of them they created at least one load of laundry, maybe more.

And along those same lines (if you have a weak stomach you may want to stop reading) you forget that these sweet little creatures have the ability to make life very complicated because they don’t just pee and poop or pass gas at appropriate times. In fact, it’s the inappropriate times you never forget.

Last Sunday night I was holding my granddaughter in my lap during church. Someone was leading a prayer. She leans over to get a toy and passes gas so loudly you could hear it outside.

What do you say at moments like that? You say, “It wasn’t me, it was the baby,” and hope they believe you.

And then there was my cousin’s wedding. Every time I see that they have had another anniversary on Facebook all I can think about is what happened to me at their wedding.

My second son was in diapers at the time and we arrived at the wedding just a few minutes before it was to start. Just as we were seated he had a major blowout. The kind that no diaper ever invented can hold. I had to take him to the bathroom and clean poop off him, myself and my purse. I did the best I could but well, let’s just say no one wanted to sit by me when I returned.

One day this week my daughter brought the children back for another visit and this one went much smoother. She took the baby in my room to put him down for a nap and they both slept for about 3 hours. The 2 year old and I had a great time playing.

When she got up she kept apologizing for falling asleep.

“It’s okay,” I said, “I remember what it’s like to be a mother.”

exhausted-mother-yawning

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9 Comments

  1. I’m sorry but I actually lol while reading this, I just sat down from having my soon to be 5 yo granddaughter and my other granddaughter that is 4months younger. They were here for the weekend for the older ones BD party. They squee with joy almost continually. I love it but I’m tired! I do care car the younger one M-F since she was born. So I’m used to it but with two it is a rodeo. I have little tiny animals and tiny doll house toys all over my house 🙂

  2. She will be fine. I survived twins at the age of 36 with 3 other children. It was hard but so much fun. Congratulations and make lots of pictures. It goes fast!

  3. I’m going to have to get in shape. We are have twins coming at Xmas. Supposedly one of each! (They were wrong with my daughter). I’m excited as can be but extremely worried at the same time about my daughter. I can’t imagine 2 at the same time!

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