I am
extremely frustrated with my kids. Yea, I know I’m preaching to the choir, but
there it is, and I’m not going to sugar coat anything. They are driving me
crazy. And it’s not the crazy that comes from being bipolar. At least there’s a drug for that kind
of crazy.
My husband
and I have been parents for almost eight years now—boy and girl. I remember,
especially with our son, getting ready to leave the hospital, scared to death
and having no idea what we were getting into. I kept waiting for the nurse to
come in and deliver the manual—you know, the one that tells you everything you
need to know about raising your child. Well, they didn’t bring it and that’s
when I got the first clue that being a parent was going to be anything but easy.
So in honor
of my frustration, I’m choosing to tell you a few things about why my kiddos
are driving me nuts these days. Yes, I know exposing all of the Meyer children’s
misbehavior sets us up for worst parents of the year award. But let’s go there
anyway.
1) My
daughter still wears “night-night” underwear. She’s five. And in kindergarten. I
know that many older children struggle with wetting their beds, but here’s the
problem with the whole scenario. A couple of times we’ve caught her going in
that pull-up when she’s wide awake. What the heck? There is at least one
positive spin to this problem. As my husband points out, wearing “night-night”
underwear when she’s a teenager will definitely limit her dating life.
2) Here’s
another one, the kids will be playing quietly or having some screen time when
ring, ring, ring someone calls. I kid you not, within seconds of being on the
phone, my kids go from playing quietly to arguing and shouting at the top of
their lungs. Worse yet, when I lock the door to my safe haven, the bathroom, they
pull the old bang on the door thing Bam! Bam! Bam! like there’s an urgent
matter that needs to be addressed.
3) This
leads me to number three. Our kids have way too much screen time. I know I have
no one to blame but myself, but every time I attempt to limit or take screen
time away, they start driving me crazy. It’s then that I remember why I let
them have screen time in the first place.
4) I hate
being judged. In public. Like people staring at you as your toddler plays the
best trick ever—magically becoming a wet noodle during one of her worst
tantrums—making it impossible to carry the stinker out without making a huge
commotion.
5) The
seemingly constant arguing and bickering. My kids can be calmly and quietly
playing together, even having fun, when the situation suddenly turns on a dime.
Chaos ensues and I have no idea where I put the spanking spoon. Just kidding.
Kind of.
6) There are
no easy answers. You know I joked about the hospital giving out manuals. Well,
in a lot of ways, I wish they would, because these days it feels like I need
one more than ever.
I am going
to be serious for just a moment here, people. Parenting isn’t easy. I’m not
perfect. The kids aren’t perfect. In fact, there is no such thing as the
perfect parent. And anyone who tells you otherwise is just plain delusional. When
it comes to parenting, there are no easy answers. Each child is special and
unique and what works for one kid, doesn’t necessarily work for the other.
Perfect
parenting, there’s no such thing. But problem-solving-parenthood—like admitting
mistakes and moving on, or giving yourself grace when you feel you’ve royally
screwed up. Yea, I’ll take that kind of parenting nine days out of ten. (Actually
I’ll take it all ten days.) Even if problem-solving-parenthood isn’t in the
instruction manual, I’ll take it. But seriously, are hospitals really not
handing those things out yet because, honestly, I would pay top dollar for
that.
Welcome to the world of parenting. If you look closely at my photos you notice that I have no hair - I am confident that this is a result of parenting 5 daughters.
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