100 days until Christmas

According to my Facebook newsfeed there are only one hundred days until Christmas (thanks for that Nuffnang Australia). How did that happen? The last time I checked there was just under six months to go and I was feeling pretty confident that I could get everything done in time this year, for the first time ever.

Now though, I’m not feeling so confident. I mean, I’m really not feeling confident at all. I have my Christmas layby put away and I’ve started a few crafting projects, but none of those are complete and there’s so much to do! There goes all my Christmas smugness.

What’s left is a burning desire to get back on track. How do I do that? I have no idea, but just this one year I’d really like to avoid the massive Christmas rush that makes me regret holding the family’s lunch at my house.

Bear with me while I formulate some kind of plan—I’m a plan girl, I can cope with anything so long as I have a plan…and a list, I also like lists.

At the bones Christmas consists of three things:

  1. Gifts
  2. Ornaments/decorations
  3. Food

There are of course, smaller things that need to be decided like what we will all wear on the day and when we’ll visit Santa for photos, but they are smaller things and can be decided on the fly.

In figuring out what I need to work on first there are a few things to consider:

When do I want my decorations up?

This is a big thing for me. In years past our decorations have finally been put up sometime mid-December because it didn’t really matter. The girls were too young to understand (well one wasn’t born yet) and I wasn’t keen on the extra working decorating the house would create. This year however, Erin is four and she definitely knows what’s going on and I want to make a fuss for her benefit so getting the decorations up early…ish.

Once the decorations are up I can spend more time focusing on other things, so this will probably be the first time I need to tackle.

How many gifts do I need to make?

Not just how many, but how involved are they? My crafting plan usually involves creating multiples of the same gift which cuts down on cost and the time involved. This year I have two daughters, two nieces, the children of many friends, and a few adults, more than enough to keep me busy.

Feeding the hordes

To be fair, this portion of Christmas is general Naughty Daddy’s domain. While I do like to make special nibbles the cooked food is usually prepared by him or brought by family members and guests. Helping decide the menu and shop for the food will take up some of my time, but not as bigger amount as other things on my to-do list.

The plan

This is where things get a little hairy. I’m not good with the planning, hence why I rarely do it—okay, so it’s probably a vicious circle—so I hope no one has come here looking for an expert article on how to plan for Christmas. My plan is pretty simple and can be explained in a few sentences:

17 September – 15 October:
These four weeks are to be devoted to creating decorations with a “traditional” theme of green, red, white and gold/yellow

16 October – 10 December:
The focus will be on gifts during these weeks, handmade as well as purchased gifts for all of those on my list.

11 December – 23 December:
The remaining weeks will be used to prepare food in advance and ensure the house in ready for guests.

As you can see, this is a fairly simplistic plan which is what works best for me. If you’d prefer something more structured I suggest checking out the 100 Days to Christmas ebook.

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I’m grateful for…hackers

You may have noticed some changes around here, yeah well I got hacked. I first found out about it was when Bad Mummy was de-indexed on Google. Its still not indexed and who knows how long it’ll take for it to be searchable again.

In a funny way I’m kind of grateful for it. It’s given me the opportunity to do something I’ve wanted to do for a long time. Delete almost everything and start again. So here it is, a fresh and simplified. Hopefully this will help me update more frequently.

So yes, in a weird way I’m grateful to my hacker.

Grief as post natal depression

Things were just starting to normalize with Erin when Abi came along. We had no more paediatric appointments, no more specialists telling me how I’m doing it all wrong on a weekly basis and I was trying to get used to the idea that pretty soon she’d be in school and maybe my life could return in some ways to how it used to be. Maybe I could even go back to work. Yeah…no, that wasn’t going to happen.

There was no emergency surrounding Abi’s birth. Aside from being a cesarean her birth was perfectly normal. She roomed in with me and came home at the same time I did, yet there wasn’t the joy and excitement I’d expected to feel. Despite this for a short while, things were good. I had a newborn baby who slept through most things and then she didn’t. I don’t remember when precisely it started, was it a gradual thing or did it happen all of a sudden? All I know is that I went from sleeping badly because I had symphysis pubis dysfunction to sleeping even worse because the baby would simply not stop crying.

As I slept sitting up or not at all for rocking her or taking her for a walk I realized my life was never going to go back to normal. I had this bundle of joy who was nothing at all like I’d expected a full term baby to be. Things were meant to be easier weren’t they? Why then was everything so hard?

Why did Erin’s five month hospital stay feel like a walk in the park compared to my nice, normal full term baby and what was I doing wrong to make her so miserable? I breast fed around the clock–sometimes that was a literal fact because she only ever gave me twenty minute breaks–and I cried. I cried because I was tired, because I was a failure and because I couldn’t see how I was going to get through it.

That’s the thing about depression: A human being can survive almost anything, as long as she sees the end in sight. But depression is so insidious, and it compounds daily, that it’s impossible to ever see the end. The fog is like a cage without a key.
- Elizabeth Wurtzel

As each week passed it become more and more clear that the crying and overwhelming exhaustion wasn’t going to end. Weeks turned into months and I still grieved for my life before Erin, perhaps even more so now because it was so obvious that I’d never have anything that even approximated that again. I longed for a time when I didn’t feel broken from the difficulty I was experiencing just coping with everyday life. I was failing at everything.

I grieved for my expectations of motherhood, what I’d expected raising a full term baby to be like. I cried because everyone was telling me how easier their babies were in comparison to mine. Perhaps other people wouldn’t describe PND as grief, but to me that’s exactly what it was. A loss of expectation, perspective and normal, how do you get those things back when you don’t even believe that there is an end to the difficulty?

Depression update

Yesterday morning I was all ready to tell you that, in the three months since I admitted I wasn’t coping and found my sanity in a box things had been great. Since then I’ve come to realize that’s not entirely true. Things are better, there’s absolutely no doubt, but not great, life still definitely swings from good to bad at the drop of a hat sometimes.

My growing sleep deficit means some difficult days. Days where I’m doing the absolute best I can to keep my eyes open while the girls take advantage of the fact that mum’s not on her best game. Okay, so it’s possible that I’m simply overreacting to regular everyday situations and toddler antics, but at the moment I’m too tired to tell.

The good days, and their number is growing, are pretty good. A good day might mean some fresh bread or a lovely ANZAC slice made in our kitchen. Erin may even get to go for a walk to the park or the pool (assuming it’s not bucketing down). At the end of a good day I’m still tired but it’s a good kind of tired. The kind where I’m happy to sit quietly and watch a movie without a million and one thoughts running through my head. A good day usually means a good nights sleep–at least on my end, a bad day often means tossing and turning, waking at random and from disquieting dreams.

Overall things have really improved. I have more motivation and energy than I have in a very long time, just in the past couple of weeks I’ve gotten more things finished than I had in the previous twelve months. So, yes, things are definitely on the improve and I like to believe that one day very soon Abi will sleep through and things will improve again. Maybe great is still to come.

Life: The wildest ride

Life takes a lot of twists and turns, we all know this. To call it a roller coaster would be all kinds of incorrect. On a roller coaster you can see which way the tracks will dip and twist but life will hit you over the head with situations and experiences you could never have, even in your wildest day dreams (or nightmares), expected.

It struck me today as I swaddled Abi, laid her in the bassinet and began to rock it that, at 30, I’m no where near where I’d expected to be in life. Not that I had any firm plans, but if I did this wouldn’t have been it. I would never have expected to be a mum to two girls, honestly, five years ago I never expected to be a mum at all, I’d all but given up that dream. When I became pregnant with my Erin I had a panicky feeling of foreboding, but even so I didn’t expect a daughter born three months early and who would spend five months in hospital with three years of specialist care to follow. Life really did throw me that proverbial curve ball.

If I had any thoughts on where I’d have liked to end up I think, right now, I would have a series of novels under my belt, written under a pseudonym of course, the sales of which would be just adequate enough to allow me to continue writing. Instead I find myself writing here, not fiction, but the reality of my day to day existence which is nowhere near as glamorous nor exciting as I’d ever hoped, even in those bubble bursting moments when I learnt that Roald Dahl would write in his back shed clad in a sleeping bag against the uninsulated cold.

So here I am, living this life I didn’t expect. Looking back at how things used to be, wondering what’s to come. There are no external accolades to motherhood. Not the regular kind at least. No one looks up from your work, smiling and says tells you how much they enjoyed it. The smiling faces you most often see are the ones trying to convince you that they haven’t stolen and lost the batteries from your cordless mouse while rearranging the renamed icons on your desktop.

I had expected to have a career of some kind. Instead I’m a mum, not “just” mum but a mum all the same and I’m not even all that good at it! I can honestly say that this motherhood gig is the hardest one I’ve ever taken on. I think I would be lying if I said that I wouldn’t change a single moment. In fact somedays, when things are tough I’d almost be willing to trade it in for a different life. A path that was easier. But on the other hand, I think since having my kids I’ve changed a lot. My opinions have shifted and I have a better understanding of what is, essentially, human nature. Maybe I’m a little softer too.

What’s coming up around the bend is anyone’s guess, I do hope though that my future does hold that book I know is in me somewhere. What about you? Are you were you expected to be at this point in your life? How is it different or the same?

Depression: Just keep swimming

This is a particularly hard post to write, not because of the content, but because it’s hard to maintain a focus with the side effects of Paroxetine, my new anti-depressant, still raging through my body and two children who need attention now and constantly.

Despite the side effects, some of which have been pretty nasty, things are looking up around here. Aside from the side effects, Paroxetine seems to be doing its job and I’m feeling much better. I still have my moments, I still need to sit in the toilet with the exhaust fan on just so I can’t hear the noise. Yesterday I holed up in Erin’s room with my head firmly buried in my pillow while Abi grumbled about not wanting to go to sleep. Sometimes, just the noise of every day life is too much for me.

My girls can be extremely full on–I’m sure that isn’t something exclusive to us–some days their needs are constant, these are the days I’m most likely to snap. Even so I’m coping better. I’m not loosing my head because Erin neeeeds a drink and I’m busy changing Abi’s nappy. I don’t find myself screaming and bursting into to tears because, even though it took me nearly half an hour to get Abi to sleep she only slept for forty minutes. It’s frustrating, incredibly so, but it doesn’t cause the world to come tumbling down. I’m learning to deal with her cat napping even though I hate it.

This isn’t the only reason I haven’t been blogging lately, but it’s the biggest. Trying to focus on writing while my head is so full and busy feels like going insane. Finding the words I want to use to get my thoughts down on paper has been nearly impossible so I’ve avoided it. I’ve avoided email and forums for the same reason. I don’t want to be known as the woman who constantly complains about her kids. I don’t want people to skip over my posts because they know it’ll just be more of the same. Maybe that’s paranoia, but maybe not.

But yes, things are getting better. Hopefully they’ll continue to. Hopefully I’ll be able to function properly and get on my with my life soon.

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The hard days

There have been a lot of these since Abi was born. A lot, a lot. I’d even go as far as to say that the bad days, the hard ones outweigh the good ones 3:1.

We’ve had the solid weeks of crying and constant holding before we began giving her Zantac and miraculously things got better. For two weeks. Almost exactly 14 days after she started on Zantac the bad days began again. No, they’re not as bad nor as frequently but they’re still not easy. What do I mean by “not easy”?

Not easy is her sleeping for a maximum of half and hour at a time and no more than 3 times a day and that’s assuming you can get her to sleep at all. When she’s awake she whines constantly because she’s tired. Then there’s Erin who’s three, do I really need to say more? She cries at the drop of a hat, literally. Yesterday we walked to the post office and her hat fell off, she cried broken hearted sobs until I picked it up and put it back on.

Like I said, we do have some good days. These days are fantastic. She’s happy, she goes to bed without a fight and then she sleeps for almost three hours at a time. In the beginning when we’d have these days I’d be optimistic that this was the start of something good. It wasn’t. Now, when we have our rare good day what I find myself thinking is that tomorrow will be another bad one because it often is.

It’s exhausting both physically and mentally and in all honesty I don’t know how many hard days I’ve got left in me.

Depression and me

I’ve lost my perspective lately. Things that probably aren’t so bad have been blown out of all proportion. The baby starts to cry and I do to, Erin neeeeds to help and I loose my temper. I’ve been convinced that there’s something wrong with Abi, something more than her reflux, now I wonder if the problem isn’t just me.

Inside my head it’s so busy, so loud that getting normal, everyday things done is difficult and often overwhelming. Add to that the extra things I do, like writing this blog and things can get…interesting. There’s simply not enough hours in the day to get everything done and I find that endlessly frustrating which contributes significantly to the tension in this house. Unfortunately, the harder I try to cope. The more I try to be positive and normal the harder it gets. It’s exhausting.

Yesterday I bit the bullet. I went to the doctor, even though I didn’t want to, things had gotten bad enough that I knew I couldn’t keep going by myself. I had thought that once Abi was better I’d be better too, but it wasn’t to be. She had gotten better but, still, every time she cries it grates on my very last, well worn nerve.

It could take up to 4 weeks for me to feel any benefits from the happy pills I’ve been given. In the mean time I could have a whole slew of side effects. Of course this assumes that the pills I’ve been given work for me. I hope it doesn’t take that long because, right now I’m just tired.

August Declutter Challenge

It’s time to fess up. I’m the hoarding queen. I keep just about everything, even when I’m actively trying to cull my “collections” I still manage to have a full range of junk. In fact our single car garage is so full of boxes of junk that it’s lucky we don’t have a car because we’d have nowhere to park it.

This month I’ve decided to challenge myself (and you if you’d like to join in) with a de-clutter challenge. Each week of August I’ll announce one section of the house that needs a good de-clutter and then at the end of the week I’ll post about my progress. If you’d like to join in you can leave at link to your post in the linky or else talk about your de-clutter in the comments section.

During the first week of the challenge I plan to tackle my wardrobes. I’ve already been through the girls wardrobe and sent two big garbage bags to Endeavor, though there will be more once the cold weather’s over. This week my goal is to find and give away or discard at least 10 items of my clothing.

Things that I don’t like, that don’t fit or are just too old to hold on to–sadly this means getting rid of my favorite five year old PJ pants which are more holes than fabric–it’s time to move on. I don’t need all these things, some of them I was given, but never wore.

What are your goals for this week?