Freaky Friday: Life with a stay-at-home dad

Every now and then, I stop and look around my life and say, “Wow, how the heck did this happen?” This meaning all of it. When I was a kid, I never spent hours daydreaming about being a public servant when I grew up, but all in all it’s a good job and I’m quite happy with it. There was never any doubt in my mind that I would be a mom, even though it hurt to keep believing that through our infertility struggles. But what really surprises me is to find myself a working mom and breadwinner, counterpart to a stay-at-home dad.

Beloved teaches, which is not a profession known for its extravagant recompense, and a part-time one at that. During the school year, between office hours and teaching, he puts in about 15 to 20 hours a week, and he stays home with the boys two days a week. He also teaches private classes in the evenings when there is enough demand, but only about half of the courses he offers through the Ottawa School of Art ever have enough enrollment to run.

Now that it’s summer, he’s at home full time with the boys (minus one day of daycare, both to keep continuity for the boys and to allow Beloved to keep a tenous grip on his sanity) and I have mixed feelings about this arrangement.

Part of me is simply green with envy. The rest of the family is home, or at the park, or at the mall, ostensibly having fun together, and I’m at work, drinking hot coffee and sitting on my arse all day (you can see, there is room for ambivalence here). I envy the time Beloved is spending with the boys, too. I’ve worked really hard at giving up the guilt I feel about being away all day, but I simply miss them during the day.

Another huge issue has to do with control. After a year’s maternity leave at home with them, I got used to the idea that I am the primary parent. Make no mistake, Beloved has been a hands-on kind of dad from day one, but he has always deferred to my way of doing things, probably largely because I’m so damn bossy and it’s just easier to let me have my own way. It’s a habit left over, I think, from the newborn days when parenting is all about facilitating eating, sleeping and pooping… I covered the first two bases and most of third base, and Beloved was left to shag the occasional fly in the outfield, watching the infield plays with detachment.

When I went back to work in January, Beloved would call me at least a couple of times each day with some pretty inane questions. “Can I dress Simon in the blue outfit?” “What should I feed them for breakfast?” “Have you seen the Penaten lotion?” And I enjoyed it, because it made me feel like I was still important, still a part of the daily routine, even as I rolled my eyes and wondered why the hell he was calling me for this stuff.

Since he’s been staying at home with them more frequently, he’s found his own way of doing things. He’s doing a fine job without me, in fact, and I think we’re both a little bit surprised by that. And sometimes (grits teeth) his ways are better than mine. It’s tough – I’ve got this picture in my head of me as the family parenting expert, and here he is finding perfectly acceptable routines and solutions and ideas that never occured to me. The gall of him.

My anxiety in handing over control has manifested itself in some pretty silly ways. The other day I had to talk myself down from a good head of irritated steam when I was going through Simon’s drawers putting laundry away and found he had reorganized the drawers without consulting me. He changed them from the way I’ve always organized the boys’ drawers. Can you imagine? And we won’t even talk about how annoyed I get when he persists in loading the dishwasher with the sippy cups on the inside row, instead of dispersed through the rest of the cups and glasses.

But I have some more weighty concerns, too. Beloved lets the boys watch a lot more TV than I would. He’s not extremely fond of the great outdoors, and doesn’t take them to the park or even out in the backyard or driveway nearly as often as I would. And being both a less social creature than me and a daddy to boot, he finds playgroups and drop-ins somewhat painful and avoids them entirely. Again, it’s not so much that what he is doing is inherently wrong or bad, it’s just not what I would do.

When I was very young, my father was a musician (mostly a nights-and-weekends kind of job) and my mother worked during the day to supplement their income. Around the age of four or five, I spent my days with my dad and I have some very sketchy but fond memories of that time. I particularly remember going to the Red Grill in Woolworth’s for breakfast with him and some of his friends. (I think these early days had a lot to do with cementing my princess complex and my love of being the centre of attention.)

So I know, intellectually, that being home (or out on the town) all day with their dad is good for the boys. And good for Beloved, too. But on a beautiful sunny Friday in July, I’m feeling a little bit regretful. Okay, the word I am trying not to use is resentful. I know they are doing just fine, but am I?

Bloggy flotsam and jetsam

Seems I’ve left a lot of loose ends lately. Far be it from me to keep you in suspense any longer. Here’s a progress report for you, board members of Danigirl’s Life Inc.

Back at the end of May, you were treated to my spectacular break-up with Weight Watchers. I’m pleased to nyah-nyah in the general direction of the “points” plan and tell you that I’ve lost not only the weight I gained while on WW but a pound or two more. Hooray! I’ve been to the gym at least three times a week since joining three weeks ago, and am loving it. No really, I am. Even better, a pair of shorts that did not fit me at all at the beginning of June now fit quite comfortably. Did I mention I love the gym? Pass the potato chips, please.

(And did you know that if you google “Tim Hortons Weight Watchers points”, I am the number one return? I get at least one hit a day from this. People, it’s a doughnut shop. Forget about the points and just enjoy your cruller, for goodness sake.)

A few of you have since asked me what ever came of my job choice dilemma a couple of weeks ago. I had the choice between a temporary increase in pay/status and staying with a familiar team and portfolio or accepting a new and permanent position with a new team and new workload. I chose (no real surprise) to stay with my current team, and have been assured they’ll do whatever they can to make my promotion permanent. And most importantly, I didn’t have to retake my second language tests!!

You seemed to enjoy my blog recommendations from earlier in the week, so can I direct your attention, if you haven’t already been there, to Getupgrrl’s poignant post yesterday on Chez Miscarriage. Her surrogate is getting pretty close to her due date, and Grrl is handling the stress with her usual neurotic wit. I wish she still had archives, because she is truly one of the funniest writers in blogdom.

And finally, a little geek fun. You’ll see over in the sidebar an icon that says, “I made science.” It’s part of a survey MIT is doing on weblogs. If you own a blog, please take 15 minutes or so to complete their survey. It’s quite interesting to see where your responses fit in with the returns to date (for example, at not quite 36 years old, I am considerably older than the majority of bloggers. But I have been at it for only 6 months, considerably less than most bloggers. And although I read fewer blogs than most respondants, my hits are pretty high.) Not that any of that means anything, but I’ve always loved playing with numbers. It’s all just lies, damn lies and statistics, according to Mark Twain.

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I’m such a joiner

Cuz Andrea and Marla were doing it…

“If, as you live your life, you find yourself mentally composing blog entries about it, post this exact same sentence in your weblog.”

(I think I’ve forgotten how to live without an editorial voice-over making notes for future blog entries. Beloved has on more than one occasion looked at me and said, “You’re blogging this in your head right now, aren’t you?” And of course, he is right.)

We now return you to your regularly scheduled Wednesday…

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My third child

Lately, I have taken to referring to blog as my third child. At first, it was merely a bit of a jest, a way to illustrate how much blog has ingratiated itself into my life. Then I started to think about it, and have come to the realization that there are more similarities between blog and my boys than I would have expected.

For example, I have no idea what I did with all my spare time before the boys came along. Ditto blog. Both are very needy and I must pay attention to blog at least every day or so. Ditto boys.

Beloved is just a little bit mystified by my obsession with blog, and often mystified by the strange behaviour of the boys. (Inasmuch as running around the house with a bucket on your head hollering the theme to Blue’s Clues is strange behaviour.)(It’s the boys who do that. Not blog. Blog has a bit more sense than the boys.)

When they are particularly adorable, I will sit back with a mixture of wonder and satisfaction and think to myself, “I made them!” And I could be talking about either blog or boys.

I find the lamest excuses to work anecdotes about the boys into conversations. I don’t need much prompting to talk about blog either.

Both boys and blog have done a lot of damage to my previously svelte and girlish figure. (I dimly remember a time when I used to go for walks on my lunch hour.)

Blog and boys have both introduced me to a world of people I never would have met otherwise, and for that I am eternally grateful.

Both are an endless source of temptation to acquire the latest gadgets and do-haws. Digital camera, notebook computer, life-sized ride-on Thomas the Tank Engine. No, it’s not in the budget, but think how happy it will make {the boys/blog}.

Although both blog and boys are for the most part very fulfilling, they can at times cause me an inordinate amount of stress. I spend a lot of time lying in bed at 3 am wondering about their future and hoping I am doing right by them. (And by ‘them’ I mean the boys. And blog.)

It’s fun to dress both blog and boys up in new outfits, and bask in the glow of admiration by proxy. Although I have yet to find a way to coordinate their outfits. (Hmmm, maybe some ‘Mothership’ logo Ts for the boys…?)

Despite the fact that I try very hard to impose some discipline and direction, the boys and blog are willful creatures and insist on having a mind of their own.

My boss, although extremely patient and understanding, would probably prefer that I spent just a little bit more of my work day focused on something other than the boys. Or blog.

Like any parent, all I want is for them to grow up to be fine upstanding citizens, settle down near by and provide me with oodles of grandbabies/blogs to keep me company in my old age.

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Media slut conquers the Interweb

We’ve discussed at some length the fact that I am just the tiniest bit of an attention junkie. And a media whore.

I’ve had a handful of letters to the editor published, most notably my recent whinge on changes to Ottawa bus service and a few years ago when some wingnut said the embryos lost from IVF were tatamount to abortion. And I’ve dragged poor Beloved with me onto the CBC national news to talk about infertility and IVF not once but twice back in 2001 and 2002.

Having conquered print media and television, I am pleased to announce that I can now add the Interweb to the list of media outlets credulous enough to give me a forum. And I’m not just talking blog, either. This is a real cititation in on a respectable Web site!

Back in April, our favourite resident parenting author Ann sent out a call asking for input from people who had experienced pregnancy after infertility for an article commissioned by WebMD. She took my random blatherings and made them sound like considered insight from a reasonable and well-adjusted person. Ann, maybe you should try your hand at fiction writing?

Give it a click and admire my pithy comments and Ann’s handiwork! Emotional roulette: Pregnancy after infertility.

You know that old Hollywood axiom, “Say whatever you want about me, just make sure you spell my name right”? Well, now I understand that. Close but not quite on the surname. Oh well, I’ll take my 15 seconds where I can get it.

So we’ve covered print media, TV and the Web. Time to turn my sights on glossy magazines and books. And since I’ve signed up for Ann’s parenting panel on her latest sleep book, looks like I only need to ingratiate myself with a periodical editor. Don’t think I haven’t given up on the idea of being a centrefold for Blogebrity Magazine, staples and all!

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One of those days…

Sorry, folks. Not much to see here today. I came back to work from a week’s holidays this morning to find that the new PC they were supposed to install in my new cubicle is not installed, and my user-id has been wiped so all my favourites and everything have been lost. Sigh.

I hate to leave you stranded though. Try checking out some of these blogs – they’re my daily favourites:

The Mother of All Blogs: My first blog buddy! Ann is funny, smart and addicted to Starbucks. Drop by and read about her new book in progress.

Lowly Scribe: Troy is a great writer, a sweet dad and wickedly funny, especially when he is in rant mode.

Hello Josephine: Marla is either my long-lost sister or my evil nemesis. I haven’t decided which yet. Nobody spins a tale like Marla, and only Marla could make sunscreen smudges on her camera lens seem like art.

Confessions of a Community College Dean: Dean Dad was the first person to ever be kind enough to comment on my blog, so holds a special place in my heart. He’s also got two preschoolers at home, and his struggles with bureacracy in academia often reflect my own frustrations with government-think. Also a very funny writer.

If you’ve never visited these blogs, give them a try! You won’t regret it!

Happy Canada D-eh?

Okay, so this might be a little trite and overdone, but it’s the end of a long hot week of being on vacation (translation: brain dead) and it’s the best I can come up with.

In honour of Canada Day and in no particular order, ten reasons I love Canada:

1. One year maternity leave.

2. Bilingual TV. Yah, I know, I vacillate on the whole bilingual thing. But at least it makes us unique.

3. Four seasons – spring, summer, fall and winter. A little something for everyone.

4. Constitutional monarchy – quaint, but effective.

5. Crispy Crunch chocolate bars. Not candy bars, chocolate bars.

6. CBC Radio One.

7. Canadian Tire (and by extension, Canadian Tire money).

8. Spelling colour and honour with a “u” and pronouncing ‘schedule’ to start with a shhh and not a sk.

9. No out of pocket charges for appointments with the doctor or trips to the ER.

10. Leonard Cohen, Diana Krall, Mike Myers, Neil Young, Margaret Atwood, Mordechai Richler, Burton Cummings, William Shatner, and The Barenaked Ladies.

And a little Canada Day anecdote:

I was on a step ladder, hanging the flag up over the front door (been meaning to do it since spring, but just now got the Christmas lights out of the way) and Tristan was watching me with interest.

Tristan: Whatcha doing, mummy?

Me: Hanging the flag up, so it can wave to us whenever we come home and go in the house.

Tristan: Hmm. Hello, flag. Lovely day, eh?

Cheers!! Happy Canada Day!

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