Octomama

our arms are full.

Not ready to throw in the octo-towel November 30, 2008

Filed under: General, Lulu — octomama @ 9:26 pm

Well, NaBloPoMo is over, and we survived with just one or two missed days. Thanks, Coco, for covering my hiney several times along the way.

I just send the URL to a friend today, and I was re-reading some of the November posts, and then some of our early posts, and it made me think. We still have plenty to talk about on the site. So, no, I’m not ready to let go just yet.

Maybe we do need to reconsider format, topics, promotion/readership and a few other things. But I hope we can figure it out and stick around for a bit.

I don’t know about the rest of you, but I still need a little help figuring things out…

 

Judgment November 29, 2008

Filed under: Coco — octomama @ 12:41 am

So, my mom’s family, whom we’re visiting now, is every which kind of crazy. There is a lot of alcoholism and other dysfunction, so when everyone gets together, we’re never sure what to expect. Our branch of the family and one other branch are considered the “hoity toity” ones that “have money.” Jasper and I are not wealthy (I mean, in the American sense), but we are educated and have jobs and bank accounts, which puts us way ahead of some of them.

One of my aunts in particular is using drugs and is nasty to everyone. She has a son who is 25 and barely wants to be associated with her, and she’s very self-conscious about how everyone knows that she has been a pretty bad mother. Anyway, she was at our Thanksgiving dinner tonight and observing Mavis, who was behaving well but squirmily, as a two year will do. She wasn’t noisy or bothering anyone, but my aunt needed to take the opportunity to cut us down to make herself feel better (it’s so obvious that this is what she’s doing, even though it’s really a cliche to say so). So she leaned over to my cousin, who is a nurse, and said, “Do you think she’s so hyper because they don’t let her have any sugar?”

I love the logic on this one. First, we do let her have sugar, but not candy on demand. Secondly, wouldn’t she be hyper if she had sugar? My cousin said, “Well, she doesn’t seem hyper to me–she seems two.” My aunt then baked up some story about how sometimes Ritalin has a reverse affect on children, riling them up more than it focuses them. How this analogy works, even in theory, was so baffling that my cousin and I got a good laugh out of it.

Later, laughing over this story as I retold it to my mom, my mom informed me that my aunt had also criticized me and Jasper for encouraging Mavis to say “please” and “thank you” when gifts were given to her last night. Later she also reacted to Mavis’ good vocabulary by saying, “well, living with two teachers, you know everything is letters and numbers for her,” in a snarky voice that suggested we just drill our toddler endlessly. It couldn’t be, you know, that Mavis is just a smart cookie.

My aunt is a crack addict who was also drinking tonight and has no real authority on anything, so I’m not hurt by these comments, especially based on the approximately two hours that she saw Mavis. But they do remind me of how quick we sometimes are to judgment from minimal facts, how soon we want to draw conclusions about other people’s parenting skills when we’re unsure of our own. I think my aunt is just an extreme example.

Tonight Jasper and I went out to a movie with my cousin and siblings while my mom watched over a sleeping Mavis. After the movie, Jasper and I stopped at a grocery store that is open 24 hours to get some snacks for our return trip tomorrow. On the way out, in 27-degree air and at midnight, was a young mom bringing her sleeping toddler into the store. I felt myself rush to judgment–why isn’t that baby in bed?!–and then stopped myself and felt, instead, some sympathy for whatever it was that made that mother have to haul her child into a grocery store at midnight, by herself.  Whatever the reason was, it had nothing to do with me.

 

50/50? November 27, 2008

Filed under: Coco — octomama @ 9:00 pm

I hesitated last night when I typed that Jasper and I share the parenting load 50/50.  Because some days, I know, it seems a lot more like 65/35, with Jasper spending more time with Mavis than I do.  I feel inordinately guilty about these days, even though I do spend 1.5 days a week with her by myself every week, which evens out the time he spends with her on the weekends while I catch up on work.  He does more of taking her to the playground and even takes her to more of her doctor’s appointments than I have.  He toured a preschool without me.  Once he even took her to a birthday party without me–which we didn’t think much of, but birthday parties are kind of mom zones.

Jasper doesn’t complain about our arrangement; in fact, he thinks I do in fact give 50%.  It’s been hard for me to feel like that because it just seems like the maternal default position is something like 80% or even higher.  But I was thinking this morning, as I was choosing what toys and clothes to bring with us on her trip and getting a bit frazzled, about the other things I do for Mavis that don’t always get recognized.  I do a lot more of the behind-the-scenes parenting for her.  Sure, we both clean up after her after bedtime.  Jasper makes sure her preschool bill is paid and sometimes collects advice about things like good preschools or pediatricians from his colleagues at school.  But I do a lot more:  buying all her clothes, choosing them each day (she just knows that he puts them on her), buying all her gifts (for herself and for her friends and teachers), planning and throwing her birthday parties, keeping photographs organized, keeping her history through a blog (though you could argue that’s not solely for Mavis, of course) that helps her stay close with her grandparents, who all live far away.  I always pack for her for all of our travels.  I build the traditions. I write Christmas cards with her pictures in them. I pack her lunches and plan for snack when it’s our week at school.  I spearhead research on everything: adoption issues, parenting issues, where to send her to school, whether X weird potential health thing is to worry over, what classes I could enroll her in.  I weed out clothing and other stuff she doesn’t need anymore and tend to her keepsakes.  I wrote and published her lifebook.

Some of this stuff is day-to-day operations that she just doesn’t see.  It happens mostly when she’s asleep or I’m at work or whatever.  But a lot of it is about tending to her past and to her future.  Jasper’s maybe more of our go-to man on the day-to-day, but I’m doing a lot more of shaping the bigger picture (not, of course, that those are really separable).  And really, I’m not complaining at all: I like doing almost everything I listed above.  But I think they sort of don’t get noticed or counted in the scheme of “parenting” sometimes–by me, especially.  Maybe I’m just rationalizing here, but it strikes me that these things I do for Mavis behind the scenes–things she doesn’t necessarily know about–oughta count too, in the constant accounting I do to make sure I convince myself I do enough.

 

Abundance November 27, 2008

Filed under: Finding Balance, Lulu — octomama @ 3:04 pm

In a time in our world where so many have so little, I sometimes feel embarrassed about all we have. We are far from wealthy, but we have a cozy home, plenty to eat, manageable non-mortgage debt, and steady income.  We have wonderful friendships, and mostly healthy families that we get to see pretty frequently.

Most importantly, we have each other, and as Max, Elsie and I enjoyed a pre-Thanksgiving treat at Starbuck’s this morning, I thought about how huge that is in my life. We waited so long to be a family of three, and I really worried about how high my expectations were becoming of what family life would be for us.

Not everything has been expected. Not everything has been rosy or blissful (by any stretch).  But I cannot even describe how fulfilling it has been for me personally, and for us as a couple.  I am so thankful we took this leap of faith, and I am eager to see what the days, months and years ahead bring to our lives.

We really do live in abundance at our house, and I mean that in all the ways that truly matter.

 

Thankful November 26, 2008

Filed under: Coco — octomama @ 7:31 pm

I got my first hand-turkey from Mavis (via her teachers), declaring her “thankful for Mama.”  As my Facebook status reads right now, tonight I’m feeling mostly thankful for her 7 pm bedtime.  But there are a few other things, too, besides the obvious “friends and family” answer:

  • my husband, who shares this parenting business with me 50/50
  • the election of a clear-headed president whose values and actions seem to align
  • the fact that I only have one more semester after this one of PhD coursework–I’ve been at this since 2003, and it is pretty old
  • one friend in particular who, though he is not a mushy type, has really been a huge support to me in work/school this year and whom I think I failed until recently to recognize as being as good a friend as he is
  • a group of cool women at work, even though I don’t get to spend a lot of time with them
  • most of my students, most of the time–I spend more time with them some days than with my friends, so it’s nice to have good ones
  • my family’s seeming embrace of a simpler Christmas this year, including their agreeing to come here instead of us having to go to my sister’s, which never goes off without an argument
  • the exciting stuff that’s happening at work, even if it also freaks me out equally if not more
  • a trip to Mexico planned for March and funded by Jasper’s aunt–this should help me get through the misery of January and February
  • the births of my friend’s twin daughters, who came after a long time trying
  • Facebook’s reuniting me with a ton of people I haven’t talked to in ages–I’m a ridiculously nostalgic person, so this has been really lovely for me
  • for Mavis, who daily this fall has picked up the biggest leaf she can find, remarked how pretty it was, and decided who she wanted to share it with.  She’s exhausting, but she’s a good little egg and she’s mine.

Jasper, Mavis, and I will be packing up the car in the morning and driving 8 hours to see my grandmother, who doesn’t know we’re coming.  My siblings and mother are all coming too–all of us from out of town.  We’ll stay about 48 hours and turn around and drive home.  It’ll be exhausting, but that is how it goes.  I’ll try to keep up with the November posts while we’re away, but forgive me in advance if I miss a day!

Happy Thanksgiving!  I’m thankful to you readers and especially to you, Lulu–you’re a great friend, especially for someone I’ve only ever spent a few days with.

 

Culture November 25, 2008

Filed under: Coco, Race and Culture — octomama @ 10:48 pm

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about how Mavis is starting to come into culture.  I mean, of course, we are always in culture, but lately I really notice that Mavis is accessing ideas and stories that are bigger than what I can regulate.  It’s mostly little stuff: her learning the term “Native American” at school and then asking me, “What do Native Americans do?”–as a teacher of culture studies, this question was way too dense for me to unpack!  But other things, too.  Her increasing awareness that there are “girl” and “boy” things to do.  Her recent (and, I’m proud to say, late) coming into knowledge of princesses.  My recognition that to allow her to watch the movie Shrek, which she saw on a shelf in the video store and wanted to see, meant that I would have to explain a whole slew of cultural references she didn’t understand.   Her love of The Backyardigans, which actually draws on all kinds of cultural myths and narratives (cowboys, clowns, samurai, professors in the jungle, the Orient Express, pirates, Tarzan, etc.).

At the same time, I have been talking a lot with one of my students, a young woman, who is convinced that she is unattractive and ugly and will never attract a decent boyfriend.  She is a smart, funny, and attractive. This attitude is out of character for her.  Yet fresh off her latest rejection by a boy looking for more of a bimbo, she is upset, and I just feel angry for her.  What in our culture gave his rejection the power to make her feel so disqualified from love?  Almost all women, I think, have some part of themselves they find hard to love.  How did that happen?

Lately Mavis has fallen in love with a series of books that I also loved as a child.  It’s not particularly high quality literature, but she loves the characters and the stories.  I loved them too, so its pleasurable for me to share them with her.  Yet as I read them this time, I recognize the way the gender roles are quite stereotypical.  I also think about how the Backyardigans are such a mega-brand–not quite as pervasive as Dora, but getting there.  I have never wanted Mavis to become a dupe of marketing.  Yet it’s fun seeing her enjoy these characters and their imaginative adventures (I like the fact that the show has no pretense to being “educational,” which is a big twitch of mine).  And I like showing her those old books.  I also tend to think of most parental cultural micromanagement as parenting that a) shows silly over-obsessiveness and b) reflects a desire to promote an aesthetic that signals a certain class-based notion of taste. In short, I think it’s mostly about allaying parental fears and/or cultivating a parental image that, usually, is just materialism of a different stripe.  Parenting by art direction, I once heard it called.

And how much do my books or the Backyardigans really ruin Mavis?  I read Babar the elephant, say, when I was a kid, and I don’t think I’ve become an imperialist.  Despite my reading these gender-stereotypical books when I was a kid, I have a very egalitarian marriage and before I met Jasper never did have a romantic relationship where I felt any kind of negative gender expectations.  I already have with Mavis those kinds of conversations about media sources where we critique whether it’s real or really like that or whether it should be like that.  Maybe she’s better off learning this kind of stuff–princesses, etc.–with my voice gentley questioning it along the way than learning it later when it seems new and exciting.

But I don’t know.  Despite being raised by a feminist, despite never having been told, ever, that I was less than for having been born a girl, despite having had wonderful teachers and always having had women role models, I had some of those hang-ups that my student has.  I cringe at myself in the mirror.  I remember thinking, in fourth grade, that math was for boys (no one ever told me that, ever).  In college, even though I was often one of the smartest in the room, I never spoke in class.  Something had to have taught me this.  My hunch is that the culture taught me this–where? I don’t know, really.  But there was a cumulative effect.  One way or the other, I learned these things–along other things like prejudices, no doubt–from the culture all around me.  I was thinking about this as I viewed, last week, a museum exhibit of popular culture images of racism, sexism, and other -isms.  The exhibit made me realize how casually these ideologies get inserted into the culture.  Sometimes I wonder if I should be more judicious in what I let Mavis see.  Then again, it’s pretty much inevitable that she’s going to learn these stories that are our cultural heritage one way or the other, as she grows.  Shrek is so interesting because it’s a positive message, but it totally relies on its viewers’ familiarity with the conventions of fairy tales, that you have an established sense of beauty that, well, pretty much sucks.

So, I don’t know.  I’ve typed a lot to say not very much here, except, I guess, that sometimes it’s interesting to talk to my students and cast their issues onto my parenting choices.  I’m pretty sure the middle course is the best way to go here, of course.  But it’s crazy how much I feel like I’m always juggling when I just read a simple story or turn on the TV.  I wonder so much what she’s really hearing.

 

When the song (or video) remains the same… November 25, 2008

Filed under: General, Lulu — octomama @ 11:50 am

 In a comment to my last post, Cate says:

I have a Dora dvd but my boy will only watch one of two videos – both Sesame St singalongs. Good in theory but i am starting to go a bit bonkers. How do you get them off one addicted video? Seriously – big time meltdowns if I put on Dora or anything else but “the two”. HELP!

We have a similar situation at our house, and I’ve just started trying to address it.  Elsie used to be delighted with any/all videos — Sesame Street, Barney, Pooh, various kid’s music video options, etc.  But lord help me, now she is all about Barney, and she has been for months. 

We don’t do a huge amount of video time, usually 30 minutes in the morning while Max and I are getting ready for work.  And at some point during the week, there’s generally one full-length Barney in the basement family room while I’m doing laundry or other downstairs projects.

I’ve been trying other options, but she definitely has a huge preference for Barney.  It seems to be very music/singing driven.  I tried The Wiggles, but honestly, they creep me out. Elsie has very little interest in plot-based videos, but she’ll do one every now and then (see Dora nightmare below).

So here’s the question(s):

1.  How do you diversify your child’s video viewing?

2.  Suggestions for kid’s videos with singing that won’t drive me crazy?  Although, I am a freak.  I don’t hate Barney.  I just need a little more diversity.

3.  Is Ni Hao Kai-Lan less annoying than Dora?  I was thinking of putting the Season 1 DVD on Elsie’s Christmas list.

Thoughts, suggestions, recommendations, therapy?

 

The joy of doing nothing November 23, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — octomama @ 10:23 pm

We did very little today, and it was lovely.  We did make it to church, even though I wasn’t very motivated to go, and Elsie had a blast in the church nursery. They ran a slideshow of this year’s confirmation candidates, and it reinforced why I love our church.  There was such diversity in the group, which is an unfortunate rarity in the catholic church.  I wish the school system in our neighborhood was half that diverse.

OK, I tried to watch a little Dora with Elsie while some laundry finished up in the basement, and I have to say, I don’t get it. I admit that it was a very old episode (our neighbors gave us a bunch of old VHS Dora’s), but man, that was lame.  Borderline annoying.  And this from a woman who watches a frightening amount of Barney.

Barney is a Coen Brothers film compared to Dora.  What am I missing?

Sorry, this was going to be a post about lolling about, reading the paper, and eating pork tenderloin.  My apologies for letting Dora dampen my love of laziness.

 

Thanks November 22, 2008

Filed under: Uncategorized — octomama @ 1:01 pm

Thanks, everyone, for your kind thoughts about the situation with my mom.  I talked to her this morning and feel better about the situation.  I needed a little time to settle down and then things felt a lot saner.  Somehow, she had no idea how much that news would shake my siblings and me.

Today I’m writing a paper.  I am going to finish it today.  I type that here so that you can hold me accountable. Because what I’d really like to do is take a fabulous nap.

 

Where do we go from here? November 21, 2008

Filed under: Coco, General, Lulu — octomama @ 9:13 pm

OK, I was pretty encouraged to see five responses to Coco’s future of Octomama post.  It certainly isn’t about whining for comments, really.  We just envisioned the site as less blog and more discussion forum.  Sometimes, it has been that, and it has helped me a lot on a few topics.

So, what next?  What would you, our lovely few readers, like to see this site become?  Is it a question of more promotion, like Cate mentioned?  Is it rethinking the overall purpose/content of the site?  Is it finding more contributors?

Do you go to blogs anymore?  I really do, but often just to check up on friends, and like Coco, I don’t comment much.  But my other blog has really become a true mommy-blog, so it has been nice to have this site as well. A large part of me would hate to see it end.

Sound off — what do you think?  Where should we go from here?