Tuesday 31 May 2011

My approach to parenting - hot tips...

My approach to motherhood is what is widely known as ‘the crazy approach’. It is based on the following model of brain development: the more I talk to Esme, the bigger (and more complex) her brain will be.  With no upper limit. (Of course I know there is an upper limit. I’m not literally crazy. For example, I know that talking to her in her sleep wont help improve her IQ– or at least not much anyway. And I am sure there is a maximum number of hours of chit chat per day, beyond which any more talk does not make any difference to her future chances of Nobel Lauriature.  But as I don’t know what the crucial number of hours is - as I don’t know where the limit lies - I hedge my bets by talking to her pretty much all day. Every day.)  
Dont get me wrong, the crazy approach to motherhood has its benefits.  Well only one really: if Esme never learns to talk - if she never gets past ‘baba, mama’ - I can be sure (and I mean absolutely certain) that I am not to blame.  But it has some major drawbacks too. The main one being BOREDOM. For me, for her, for the cat, for the man next to us on the park bench and for pretty much anyone who has anything to do with us. I have of course been stuck with my own internal dialogue my whole life ( or at least since I had an internal dialogue) but it is a beast best kept caged. It is much, much worse out in the open. Believe me. And all day every day? That is too much for anyone to stomach – even me. Just to give you a taster, a normal morning will go something like this ‘let’s go upstairs now, one two three...’ , ‘now Im changing your nappy’, ‘now Im eating my breakfast ,.yumm’ ... and so on. Of course I don’t have any other internal dialogues to compare it to, (If I did I would really be in trouble..) but Im pretty sure that this one is a little on the dull side.
Until recently, I was content in the belief that these unfortunate upshots of the crazy approach were a well kept secret. Known only to me and baby. It turns out I was wrong. It turns out that I am absolutely radiant with loneliness and boredom. So much so, that with no prompting from me (absolutely none), my friend, in an episode of altruism, saw fit to set me up on a blind date with another mother. I already have a whole two mum friends. Nice ones.  Yet this morning I found myself shuffling off to a blind date was with my friend’s friend.  Otherwise known as Laura.  Mum-extraordinaire. 
 The chances are, that you haven’t been on blind-mum-date yourself. So let me fill you in. They tend to begin with an episode of coo-ing at each other’s respective babies. There is (of course) an element of comparison going on behind the coo-s, but this is well hidden behind exclamations of ‘isnt he cute’, ‘What lovely eyes’ and so on.  (A word of caution: If any of you pre-baby readers think yourselves too level headed and well-grounded for coo-ing, think again. So did I.  Then I had Esme, and realized that the coo is an integral and unavoidable feature of post-labour life (as if there were any other sort..).  Nowadays, I often find it rather hard to contain my coo. I find myself  Lambasting unsuspecting babies in the street with an unexpected ‘arent you sweeet’. Coo-ing tourettes – it’s no joke. )   As Coo’s were returned in Esme’s direction, it seemed things were on the right track.  But Es had other plans...
The best way to alienate a future mum-friend is with a display of parenting incompetence. And mine was glorious. Spilt milk and a screaming baby were topped off with a wholly unnatural smile as I attempted to continue the chitchat among the mayhem.... (These episodes are not uncommon in my life. Pre-baby I imagined I would be a mother like you see on the pampers adverts, serene,fulfilled, with beaming baby in tow. Like an ad from the 1950’s, my days would be filled with happy hours in the park - playing with a cherub-like baby on a gingham red and white picnic mat. With a bottle of coke. i thought i might even get a dog just to complete the picture. And an old fashioned picnic basket..never happened )
Laura did her best to help me as I gathered my stuff together to make my shame-faced exit. Passing me the bottle she inquired as to the whereabouts of the lid. There was no lid.
That was my third mum-date. Humiliation. Defeat.

Saturday 28 May 2011

Baby Swimming

Baby Swimming
Another day, another bout of misplaced optimism. Today I took Es to “baby-swimming”.
 We started off with an awkward conversation at the help desk. One of the benefits of having a small human strapped on to your chest is that you can pretty much predict the chit chat that is going to come your way in the course of any day. As a result, you develop a stock of mildly amusing retorts upon which you can rely to make conversations glide seamlessly by. To ‘what a lovely baby’ you reply ‘well, we think so ...but then we would (chortle chortle).’ To ‘what a lovely pram’ you reply ‘Oh for a moment I thought you were going to say ‘what a lovely baby’!’ (chortle chortle) and so on. Gone are the days of mulling over what you really should have said to stranger X. Now you can do all the mulling in advance.
But this particular conversation was not aimed at me. Es is big for her age.  I mean huge. A Godzilla of the baby world. This has the unfortunate side effect of making adults and juniors alike talk to her as if she is much older than she really is.... and of making Es appear a little slow off the mark. It took a good minute for the cashier to realize that Es didn’t understand a single thing she was saying to her, and that Es had no plans of waving goodbye any time soon. If it hadn’t been so awkward I would have found a little pleasure in watching the penny drop.  As things went, I put Esme’s blank stare down to shyness, and hurried off to the giant pool of chlorine and baby wee I was about to immerse myself in.
The  really funny thing about baby swimming groups is that they invariably have - as their official ambition - the goal of getting your baby to swim under water. Of course no baby ever accomplishes this, but some get dunked and manage to emerge without crying – and this is what we parents mean by ‘swimming under water’.  Those babies who accomplish this feat are heralded as achievers and lavished with praise.  And those who do not are consoled – their parents told to give it time.  Forgive me if I am wrong, but this ambition is misguided at best. It is the sort of bizarre ritual you would expect to find in the pages of a history text book – a tale to gawk at - of an ancient and brutal civisation. ‘Baby-Dunking’. And yet here I was, as close to sane as I have ever been, pushing my cherished baby under the water.  Why? Because Sally, our instructor - the all powerful oversee-er of the leisure pool -  told me to. Because I had paid £4 for this class, and I was going to get my monies worth... (If baby-dunking was on the menu, so be it...) Because it is baby-swimming-group culture. I was not going to be the one to embarass myself by going against the grain – I would be bumping into these parents on and off for the next ten years or so and I did not want to be known as the chicken. Nor was I going to lead a small revolution against Sally’s tyrannical rein.
Es got dunked.  She cried. I was consoled and feigned disappointment at my baby's ‘failure’.
That was baby-swimming.  Try it if you dare, but dont expect the front crawl.

Friday 27 May 2011

Baby Dancing

Baby dancing is no where near as much fun as it sounds. Babies (for those of you who arent acquianted with any) cant dance, and no number of 40 minute classes is going to change that. So dont get your hopes up.

The class is run by an etherial long-legged spindly creature whose life's dancing ambtions obviously lie outside baby-dance-training for under 18 month olds.. We began by sitting in a circle, as is the way with all good organized fun, barefoot. I was relieved to be informed by our coach that this was to be an informal class.  (thank god I hadnt signed up for the formal baby dance lessons - whatever they might be.)  There was a lot of twirling around the room with my ton-weight child.  And lots of smiling at other mothers,   pretending to be at ease with 'free-style' dancing. The thought had struck me that I could very well free-style for free, at home, ... but that wouldnt help keep craziness at bay - which is of course the whole point of mother-baby groups.  Be it 'baby-dancing', 'baby-sensory', 'rhyme-time', each is really a thinly veiled lonely hearts meeting.

Then we returned to the circle, and were each given a feather. Ours was yellow, which was nice, but it it was  the tiniest most scrawniest feather I have ever seen. We did some tickeling with the feather, and I made a funny high pitched squealing noise - half in the hopes of keeping Es entertained, but also just because it seemed appropriate.  That is the really strange thing about baby-groups. They have a whole new social code all of their own - one which you wont know about until you go along and try it out for yourself.  (I not sure exactly what the code is yet, but I am certain that tickeling your baby with a feather without making some sort of squeal, or 'oooh' as well to show your enthusiasm for the task in hand, would be a violation of it.) Surely no where else on earth are such high pitched cooing noises part of social etiquette.

That was baby dancing.

Thought for the day: must stop high pitched squealing. Es does not find it entertaining. In fact so used to my high pitched squealing is she, that she now finds my everyday'adult' voice amusing. Im serious, if I try to talk to another adult human being (which is an infrequently nowadays - believe me), she looks at me and grin a big gummy grin, as if to say - who are you kidding we all know you are a squealing ideot.  Joe tells me idiot is spelt with an 'I' not an 'E' . Thank god for my editor.

Just realized it might be worth inluding a note to explain my choice of web address. It is cute - yes - but I havent chosen it for this reason alone. My preferred choice was the-baby-treadmill, but that was taken. No big surprise there. As far as things go, a merrygo round seemed like the second best metaphor for my life at present.  No I dont run round in circles all day on a hobby horse. Rather my days are characterized by repetition. There is no getting away from it, there are 7 nappies to be changed each day, three meals to be administered, 100 or so squeals to be made,  and so on - you get the picture.
And anyway merrgo-round-baby does sound CUTE.