In a little over a month, Max will be 2 years old.
I
Two
years marks the transition from talking in terms of “he’s xx months” to
“years.” Years. He’s getting older,
which means I’m getting older, which means soon I’ll be in my empty nest with
an aging Chihuahua, a husband who walks around in a those light blue old man
jeans while fiddling with something in the basement he’s been working on for…17
years…and myself with gray hair and a purple track suit. It
might not happen that rapidly but the point is that Max is growing up.
He’s
also growing mischievous.
The photo is
what happens when I leave Max under Chris’ watch for one minute. Chris was
writing a shopping list when I came into the kitchen and noticed above art
work. Creatively executed across our stainless
steel dishwasher with permanent black Sharpie.
Moments like this immediately throw you into a rage of HOW and then
WHERE and finally WHY. As in: HOW did
this happen? WHERE did he get the
marker? And, upon opening the kitchen
drawer in which you find six permanent black markers, WHY do we have all of
these Sharpies?
Are
we planning on personally body marking the entire neighborhood!?!?
Parenthood. Every day you think you have it under
control, you’re one step ahead of him, you’ve got your eye on him when he
walks, fully clothed and shoe-ed, in the kiddie pool in your backyard. Despite what your legions of followers
believe, you are not Facebooking instead of watching him. You are sitting outside - watching him – when
you momentarily do something insignificant - like blink - when disaster
strikes. It happens that quick. He senses a disturbance in your steady gaze
and – makes his move.
This
is also how you end up with deodorant smeared all over the bathroom wall.
(though
they are small, they are FAST)
Another
example of damn fine parenting: The
other day, Chris had to ride 90 minutes, I had to run 50 minutes. While he sat on the trainer, I stood at the
bar in the basement with the laptop, setting up a playlist and thinking about
getting on the treadmill. We were both
“watching” Max which means that we are both in the same room as him and
thinking – what trouble could he POSSIBLY get into with two adults within 5
feet of him at any given time? See – he
runs by. He’s fine. Max loves the basement with all of its wires,
boxes and Daddy items. Anyone who thinks
that kids need fancy toys need look no further than this:
You
can spend 20 minutes trying to plug a set of headphones into a trainer. And then listen desperately like a shell up
to your ear swearing you heard the ocean.
I’m
assembling a set of tunes that will take me through 10K intervals when I feel
something on my leg. Know that many
times in parenting you feel things on your leg.
Kids are obsessed with parent legs – for sitting on, hiding behind or
hanging off of. But this time, it felt
different. Max was rubbing something on
my leg. It took a few seconds but when I
finally looked down I realized something wasn’t right. And at that moment, Max flung whatever he was
just holding on to the floor. And then
ran away. This is built in 2-year old
fight or flight mechanism – rather than fight against the parental throes of
WHERE DID YOU GET THAT _____ (sharpie marker, screwdriver), they just
flee. In this case, Max fled the scene
but left behind a piece of….
Poo.
My
child was rubbing my leg with a piece of dog
poop.
I
did what any normal parent would do – I nearly piss myself laughing. Then horror and the thought process sets in: HOW
did that just happen? Better yet – HOW
long was he holding a piece of poo? And
WHERE did he find a piece of poop? Next,
it cuts to the core of my housekeeping abilities. WHY is there dog poop in my house?
At
least once a day, I am faced with existential issues like this – am I really a
good parent? Am I doing everything I can
to make him a well-mannered, smart and independent adult? More importantly, do I really live in
squalor?
I
consider myself a confident person. Not
much shakes my belief in who I am. Yet
parenting does almost every day. I’ve
not yet mastered the ability of taking belief in myself into belief in my
parenting abilities. I’m constantly
comparing myself to other mothers – are they talking more to their child? Are their snacks healthier? Are they paying more attention? And wondering if I’m doing everything I can
to be the best parent I can be to create the best person Max can be. It’s a doubt that sometimes leaves me feeling
unsatisfied and frustrated with myself – I can’t do anything right, I’m not
perfect, I’m the most distracted uninvolved parent in the world.
It’s
negative self-talk at its worst. It’s
not that I expected parenting to be like puppies shitting rainbows (I’ve been
waiting WEEKS to use that phrase in context, and let me tell you, if my puppy
indeed shat rainbows I would not have spent 5 minutes of my life wiping puppy
shit off my leg), but I expected to feel a lot more sure of myself with
it. After years of teaching kids and
teaching other adults how to teach kids, I realize all of that education was
bullshit. Like many things in life, you
have to learn your own way and build yourself up along that way to build confidence
and competency at anything. It's not something you can learn from "education."
I
have to stop myself from comparing what I’m doing to what other moms are
doing. I have to stop worrying that
there might be something better – a better meal, a better way to do bath time,
a better way to improve Max’s talking. I
wonder if these worries are exclusive to women.
Chris seems to move about in parenting with ease and awkward grace. Max and Chris together is like a duststorm
moving at 120 mph through my house yet at the end of the day – they both seem
quite satisfied. At the end of the day,
I find myself questioning – did I do it right?
Did he enjoy himself? Is he
really connected to me? Are these
worries exclusive to mothers only? Is
worrying about and wanting the best for our child part of our motherly genetic makeup? Is self-doubt ingrained into women?
These
are the thoughts that cause my space outs in parenting – those moments where
your eyes glaze over and the next thing you know, your kid is nearing the
street when they were just standing right next to you. Like training, you can overthink parenting
and overthinking always has consequences.
It’s easier to recognize than fix.
And sometimes when you’re in the middle of it, you can’t stop thinking
enough to see the way out – which is usually right next to you.
Parenting
is a lot like training. The results are
not immediately apparent. I’m not sure
if what I’m doing now is going to pay off – all I can do is trust the process
and be confident in my abilities to execute that process. Like training approaches, there are dozens of
different ways you can succeed in parenting.
There is no formula. It’s art and
it’s science. The more I try to change
who I am as a parent, the more frustrated I become. I’ve realized the best way to parent
is to just be me. I read somewhere recently that confidence is courage with ease. It takes courageousness to be who you are, but when you do that you feel what can only be described as ease. It feels right to be me.
So IJ’ve learned to put on my parenting blinders and parent away – not worrying about anyone else’s training plan. This takes a lot of confidence. But it works. Honestly, it’s not lack of preparation, lack of talent, or anything else that usually stands in the way of our success – it’s distraction that takes us away from our end goal. It’s hard to sustain the focus required to succeed when you’re always looking at someFone else’s plate. It’s hard to believe when you’re always inviting self-doubt and negativity.
So IJ’ve learned to put on my parenting blinders and parent away – not worrying about anyone else’s training plan. This takes a lot of confidence. But it works. Honestly, it’s not lack of preparation, lack of talent, or anything else that usually stands in the way of our success – it’s distraction that takes us away from our end goal. It’s hard to sustain the focus required to succeed when you’re always looking at someFone else’s plate. It’s hard to believe when you’re always inviting self-doubt and negativity.
I’ve
strayed from parenting to training – which is the messy mix of my life these
days. The two cross paths
constantly. I’ve realized that as I sit
at the sandbox and judge myself for not being IN the sandbox with my kid like
the other mom sitting there – I’ve just sabotaged myself. In training, the other mom at the sandbox –
or the distraction – is social media or chatter at the local training session. For as much as I enjoy social media and
training with others, as I get deeper into race season, the more I need to step away from
it. I find the less I look at it or
listen to it, the less my mind fills with the nonsense thoughts that fill our
head as we process and judge everyone else’s random thoughts. Even if I don’t care what anyone else is
doing, the very fact that I attend to it means it needs to be processed and
then filed away. That’s a lot of mental
work. I don’t think any of us need that
– the training and recovering from the training is enough work in itself.
Whether
it’s parenting or training, you rarely need to change the plan, simply follow
it. Give it time. If it’s not working for you, you’ll know
months from now. At the end of a year or
the season. So quickly we want to fix or
change things to make ourselves immediately feel better. When all that we had to do to actually ‘be’
better is stay the path. I know in my
heart there is a reason for the way I parent.
It’s not the same as anyone else but it works for me. I believe the same about my training. Now I just need to spill over into other
areas in my life and enjoy the empowerment of confidence.


8 comments:
Did you write this post for me? :) Love it! And I'm even more thankful that the baby can't even roll over yet (much less run around getting into cat poo). Thanks for this!
Sometimes I get irritated reading blogs Liz. Not one day have I stood on Earth, and felt like I had all the answers, and if I did I was probably just full of myself.
I love this update, because if people like you can have questions, well than people like me sure can have some too.
Thanks for showing us the times, where maybe you are unsure of yourself. I think we can learn a lot from each other in these... less than strong times, although... they really are our strong times. :)
xoxo Liz. :)
Great post Liz. I don't think you are alone AT ALL in these questions or thoughts.
LOL!!! Thanks for sharing and where did he get the poop?
I can't believe Max is going to be 2 already?!?!? I can easily recall when you first became pregnant and when you actually had him. I don't usually comment but I always read, I look up to you and hope to be half the active momma you are someday. (I also secretly wish I could write as witty as you) Anyway had to comment today because I literally died at your puppies shitting rainbows reference, please tell me you've read Katie from Run This Amazing Day's blog?!?!? If not, read these: http://www.runthisamazingday.com/2012/05/its-not-all-puppies-shitting-rainbows.html / http://www.runthisamazingday.com/2012/05/team-amazing-day-take-two.html
I died. You should buy a shirt! :)
Oh and, did you ever figure out where the poop came from?
Okay, I *really* should have read this before Honu. ;)
But it's okay.....never to late to make the changes I want to make, right?
Thx for this post. I really think social media can hurt us and we I step away from it I feel better. Glad to see your thought s on this. You crack me up :))!! Happy parenting and training:)!
I have similar art work on my doors. :) Thanks to my husband's watchful eye.
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