Late Night Grocery Shopping for the Grumpy Mother

We took Gutsy and a friend to one of those indoor amusement park type thingies yesterday. We avoid those places like the plague for financial, psychological and, well, plague reasons, but he had been wanting to go for  a while, and his birthday is on Tuesday. Geekster and I felt like we needed to do something special for him, so we caved.

My check-in status said it all:


Just kill me now. 

It was a guilt-induced torture chamber, where parents lay curled up in fetal positions along the walls, rocking back and forth to the shouting and air horns, and mumbling, "I'm a good parent, see?... I'm a good parent after all... Has anyone seen my Xanax?"

I quickly remembered why I carry a special hate for these places. Geekster and I found it easier to text our disdain to one another than try to yell over the fray. We left after two-and-a-half hours looking like we had just attended a less fun, G-rated S&M party - with all the pain and none of the gain.

There are many reasons not to breed. I might not understand all of them, but if "taking children to indoor germ-infested scream carnivals will be a part of your life for the next several years. Bahahaha!" was part of the pregnancy brochure, I just might have given my decision some extra thought.

Exhausted, I dropped everyone else off at home around 9:30 p.m. and then had to go to the grocery store because families of five eat a lot. That wasn't in the brochure, either.

I found a spot relatively close to the door and was just turning in while thanking the gods of motherhood for shining down on my flared-up plantar fasciitis, when I noticed this:

UM, NO.


Now, maybe it's because I was so tired, or maybe I was just being a judgmental bitch, or maybe it's because it was a rich person car and I was feeling pretty broke by then, but this bothered me more than it normally does. And that's probably why I spent several minutes tearing through the inside of my car in search of a pen so I could write a note:


Dear Sir/Madame, 
Kindly learn to park your douche canoe. 
Sincerely,Everyone

Sadly - or thankfully - I couldn't find a pen. But I did glare at the car as I walked by, hoping Mercedes is advanced enough these days that their vehicles come with an emotion chip. My theory is that a car with shame won't let its self-important owner take up three parking spots.

Realizing I was clearly (more) unhinged (than usual) from the day's torment, I put on my headphones - which I never do - and dubstepped my way through the produce department. It helped me start to feel a little more like my Mavenly self.

As a mom and regular gym rat, I buy headphones with earbuds that block out every little noise. If they don't pass the three-foot-away tantrum test, they aren't good enough. That's what I was wearing in the store when I came across this nice little surprise:


HOLY MOTHER OF AWESOMEBALLZ.


Chris Hemsworth could have been lying on a table with "free sample" written across his boxer shorts and I wouldn't have been quite this excited.

... I have a problem with food, don't I?

You have to understand what a goldmine it is to find freshly-baked gluten-free goodies at a grocery store. In the last two years, I've had to either bake the stuff myself, or go out of my way to get it. And I'm a lazy North American, ok? Sometimes I just want a damn cookie with little effort.

I whipped out my phone to snap a picture for Facebook.

And that's what I was doing when I got a polite tap on the shoulder. I turned to find a rather confused young man and two of his coworkers lugging a massive dolly full of water jugs behind them. You know, one of those heavy loads that takes a lot of momentum to get going, and a great deal of effort to slow down again? So you kind of hope you never have to stop; that people will either see or hearing it coming and they'll get out of your way. You hope that they won't, for example, be standing mesmerized in front of a bakery display, holding a phone and wearing headphones that are blasting Skrillex into their ears at the expense of every other auditory experience.

You would hope wrong, my slightly annoyed friend. I apologize on behalf of every moody, tired mother who has ever escaped into her music as she's trudging through the store on a sore foot and wishing she was doing anything but.

I decided I was about done listening to music after that. It was my gift to the universe - or at least to everyone else in the store.

I got to the checkout with a full cart. Once it was all scanned through and I was (poorly) helping to pack it in my (disgusting) reusable bags, the cashier said:

"Because you spent over $200, you qualify for a free urn!"

... Excuse me?

Please Google "definition urn". Actually, don't bother. I'll do it for you:

Noun: A tall, rounded vase with a base, and often a stem, esp. one used for storing the ashes of a cremated person.

I must have shot the guy my very best grocery stores and estate planning are not exactly compatible business models look, because he quickly pointed to the display along the wall, which said:

FREE URN*!!! 
(*With a minimum $200 purchase.)

First of all, calm down with the exclamation points, ok? There is nothing exciting about an urn - even a free one. Ever.

The display had a bunch of these sitting on it:






That's an urn?

Ok, maybe technically, but come on. The tag said "Outdoor Holiday Display." How about that?

I walked over, picked one up, examined it and asked if the ashes go under the cedars, or in those little silver Christmas balls.

He laughed politely, but shot me his best you clearly lack a tact filter - please leave my store look. So I did, with my new forever resting place bouncing merrily in the cart.

I thought of putting it on top of the douche canoe, but luckily for that person, they had already left.

Besides, given that it's technically an urn, that might have constituted a death threat.




Most Popular Posts



Just stopping by? Checking out the crazy lady? That's cool.

Want a sample of some of my most infamous, um, work? Can I call it work? I mean, I didn't exactly get paid for writing these. Also, I enjoyed doing it immensely. Who enjoys working?

I'm over-thinking things again, aren't I? You go read. I'll go call my therapist.


This is my tattoo.
That's how serious(ly nutty) I am about my writing.
There's a link to the post about this below. Read on.


Why being fat and miserable keeps us fat and miserable 
I get thank-you's a semi-regular basis about this one. At the time this page was made, this post is the first hit on Google when people type in "fat and miserable." Good, because it's all about loving yourself. And we could all use a little more of that. Along the same lines is Ladies: Size Doesn't Matter.



You don't like me and that's o.k. 
This one struck a chord with a lot of women. Apparently I'm not the only one who gets some hate.



PORKrotica (AKA 50 Plates of Bacon.)
This post was read on the radio and will be published in an upcoming compilation of short stories from various authors. I'll also be reading it in New York City in the spring at a fundraiser. Details to come.



My Son Wants to Wear Nail Polish
This post was syndicated on the BlogHer website, and even got a mention on The Today Show. But most importantly, my confident little rockstar got people talking about gender stereotypes. I couldn't be happier about this.



Away From a Manger
What happened when my non-Christian children were given a nativity scene for Christmas. This is a classic post - well, as much as one can have a "classic" post when your blog has only been up since 2006.



And This is Why Gardening and Photoshop Do Not Mix 
Proof that I am a very sick and immature individual.



If I'm a Bad Parent, So Are You
This was probably my first viral post. You'd think I wasn't the only one questioning their parenting skills, or something. Weird.



An Open Letter to my Childless Friends
I'm a parent. Some of my friends are not. This is for them. And maybe for you. Or your friends. I'm not sure. It's not like I know your whole life, ok? Well, unless you blog.



Today I Got My First Tattoo
An explanation of why I got "Maven" tattooed on the back of my shoulder. But really it's more about growing up, chasing my dreams, and believing that I have value in this world beyond "what's for dinner, mom?" (Although that's important, too.)



7 Things Never to Say to a Stressed Out Parent
This was a collaborative effort. Basically, I asked people what they hate hearing the most when they're dealing with parental chaos, and then I stole their ideas and wrote about it. Oh, ok. Don't get all angry with me. I told them what I was doing, ok? And I compensated them with immense thanks. My gratitude is a hot commodity.


No, I'm NOT Pregnant. But Thanks For Asking.


Picture this:

It's Halloween night and I'm doing my parental duty of walking around the neighbourhood with the family. I'm feeling fan-freaking-tastic because the post I wrote that was syndicated on BlogHer is up, and the script I'm working on is going well, and I had a stellar workout at the gym earlier in the day, and, most importantly, there's going to be a huge stash of candy this PMS-riddled Maven will be able to tuck into as soon as its guardians are passed out in their respective sugar comas. It was perfect.

Too perfect.

Generally, when things are that good, something not-so-good will crash the party. My life enjoys a certain level of balance, which usually involves my ego taking a little bit of abuse to keep it in line. That's how it works.

I just didn't think it would work quite like this, that's all.

We bumped into a family we hadn't seen in a while - a young family with a couple of kids. The woman immediately came up to say hi, stopped, looked down at my belly, got a huge smile on her face, gasped and asked, "Maven! Oh my gosh! Are you... expecting?"

I had no idea what to say, so I shrugged and replied, "No, I'm just fat. How are things?"

She immediately apologized and we went about our fairly awkward conversation about kids and life and other things one speaks of when you're trying to make polite chatter after one of you mistakenly took the other for being knocked up. And then we parted ways. The end.

Incidentally, this is what I look like pregnant (circa 2006)
Kinda like if I had a baby and 6 months later
he decided he didn't like me from the outside
as much, and so he crawled back in.


Ok, totally not the end. I want to tell you that I was able to shake it off. I really do. I talked a good talk for a couple of hours - to my sister, my mom, my husband. I scoffed, and laughed, and made it out to be not a big deal at all. I even believed myself at first.

I'm the girl who writes ample posts about how much she loves her ample body. I've been to counseling, I've read books, and I've encouraged others in believing they don't have to be thin to love the skin they're in. Type "fat and miserable" into Google and my blog is the first hit. It's a sneaky little bastard of a post, because it isn't about being miserable at all; it's about being happy and kind to your body as it is today, because we don't do things for people we hate, we do them for people we love.

I'm that girl.

Except, I wasn't. Not that night, anyway. Despite PMS and the cravings that generally accompany it, my desire to touch the gleaming bags of candy was nil. And not because I wanted to do good things for my body, but because I was suddenly disgusted by it. I felt uncomfortable and disproportionate. I avoided mirrors. I began berating myself for all the food and activity choices I'd made in the last 36 years; Choices which were, of course, why I looked like I had a fetus growing inside of me when my baby just turned 6. I told myself I was lazy for not going to the gym every single day; that I ate too much; that I was fooling myself every time I took a "nice" picture, or put pretty clothes on such a grotesque body and think I look good.

Hello, Darkness, my old friend.  

My ego didn't just take a bit of abuse. It was dragged out into a field and asked if it would like more blood with that baseball bat.

I haven't felt that way in ages. It was awful. At one point I was even in tears, my poor husband doing his best to talk me down from the hormonally driven ledge I found myself on.

Tears.

Me.

In them.

As if.

It's so uncool that I went there. I woke up pretty angry with myself for it.  The Maven doesn't treat The Maven like that - ever. It's our golden rule. And we'll ignore the fact that I just described myself as two separate people right now. That's a whole other post. And a whole lot of therapy.

By the light of day, I realized the truth: A woman thought my belly looked like it had Maven Junior balled up inside it. And that implies the fat deposits in my stomach are significant enough that it might appear, in very bad outdoor lighting, that I am with child. Okay, that kind of sucks, but it's not the end of the world. I know I carry a lot of weight in my stomach (as well as scar tissue from three major abdominal surgeries) and I know I would like it to shrink for a few reasons. I'm working on making healthier choices in my life, and my ample abdomen is ever so slowly responding to them.

I should have been able to shrug it off, laugh about it, and taser any little tentacles of hate quickly so they retreated back into the lagoon of self-loathing before the entire beast emerged. But I was tired and hormonal, and I guess it just took me off guard. I can't blame the woman for the dramatic woe-is-me-fest that occurred that night. And I shouldn't be angry with myself, either. I'm only human, after all. A pretty fabulous human stuffed full of amazingness (and scar tissue and fat), but human nonetheless.

Anyway, the whole experience was terrible, but it reaffirmed some things for me:

1. I need to remember to be gentle with myself, always.

2. It is my God-given right to devour my children's candy on Halloween night - even if I'm hormonal and crying (especially if I'm hormonal and crying.).

3. We have a really big tentacle creature in our head. We should see somebody about that.

4. Doing things in love and not in hate feels a lot better and is far more productive overall.

5. Even though my ego took a beating, my self-esteem was there to stitch it up and remind it to stay away from baseball bats. Because, if you cultivate self-esteem, it always has your back.

6. Self-esteem is a powerful thing. This morning, when Spawnling and I were mentioned on the Today Show* (4 minutes in - check it out!) I was reminded that I love myself just the way I am, even when I'm not mentioned on big news programs.**


*I'm sorry. I know that clip had nothing to do with the post topic. So tacky. But I had to mention it somehow, you know? When is that ever going to happen again? Also, I figure if someone's going to troll me, they now have the option between my weight and my self-importance. I'm just trying to be helpful.

**But, like, it doesn't hurt.


How Spawnling Rocked the Nail Polish - an update

You know what's really awesome? 

No, not me. I didn't say "who," I said "what." I am not a thing. Stop objectifying. 

What's awesome is when you write something you feel is important and it gets picked up by a network that reaches way more people than you could alone. That's what happened this week when BlogHer syndicated my post on letting Spawnling wear nail polish. I couldn't be happier. 

I even got a shiny new badge:



Anyway, we need to normalize differences. Which, when I think about it, is the oxymoron of the century. But that's really what it comes down to, isn't it? Everyone is trying to fit in, but we shouldn't have to do it at the expense of who we are. In an ideal world that would be easy, but anyone who's survived 8th grade knows you're going to have to pretend a little if you don't want to get harassed a lot. 

This is not acceptable. It might be the way it is, it might be the current reality, but that's not OK. Our society has come a long way towards acceptance and tolerance, but we still have a long way to go. It takes those who dare to be different to change minds. 

I couldn't be prouder of my six-year-old son, who insists on being one of them.

Of course, there's the fear of intolerance; the teasing and taunting and ostracizing that can come with standing out. I suffered what many would deem an extreme amount of bullying when I was a child, and the scars it left are as immense as the pile of chocolate I eat when I'm sad. That weighed on my mind a lot the day my boy went to school with nail polish on. And from the feedback I've received from other parents who read my post, this is their biggest worry as well. 

I'm pleased to say that Spawn totally rocked that polish for many days, with no negativity whatsoever. I attribute that in part of the great kids in his class and the parents who raise them, as well as the supportive environment fostered in his school by all who work there. Oh, and then there's my little rockstar. You can't help but love him with all his flare and monster attitude to match. 

He's so like his mama. But, you know, not as modest.

Even though everything went smoothly for Spawn, I know that's not always the case. Right now, there's a girl being picked on in a schoolyard for not wearing pink, or for liking "boy" games. There's a little boy who's being mocked because he has sparkly shoes or brought a My Little Pony for show and tell. And if they grow into outcast teens who struggle with depression or, heaven forbid, try to take their own lives, we have failed them.

We can't sit around and say "that's just the way it is." Let's educate and enlighten ourselves so we can educate and enlighten our kids. I hope this post has helped get more people thinking and talking - at least a little.  

And so, may I send a huge thank you to Jenna Hatfield at BlogHer, and to everyone who's read, Facebooked, retweeted, emailed, yelled, yodelled, flash mobbed, and skydived naked with a parachute that says: MAVEN IS HAWT AND YOU SHOULD TOTALLY CHECK OUT HER BLOG POST ON GENDER STEREOTYPES.

No idea how that would all fit on a parachute, honestly.

And since we're talking about how hot I am normalizing differences and following up on things, let's discuss my tattoo for a minute, which got a ridiculous amount of attention this week. 

Nearly a week since I got this
and I can't stop checking it out in every mirror.
I'm a smitten kitten.


That post enjoyed so many hits it signed up for an S&M convention. I guess getting my alter ego tattooed on my flesh is something worth checking out; if anything, just to see if I was crazy enough to do it. Keep on creepin' on, creepers. I'm glad you like it. Or hate it. Or whatever is making you look. It's healing really well, I might add. I'll take better pics when it's done flaking (barf.)

If you dig my tattoo and live in or around Ottawa, Canada, you should make an appointment with the very talented Travis at Planet Ink Studios. He made my first time memorable, and was so gentle (Stop giggling. Are you 12?). I'll definitely be seeing him for future work.

And now I must run out and find an off-the-shoulder top for this weekend. I have two get-togethers to attend, and this Maven feels like showing off her ink a little.


How To Brag About Your (Unorthodox) Kid

I know a lot of parents. Like, because I'm so popular and stuff.

Anyway, Sometimes these parents I know brag about their children. Who can blame them? I do it too. We all want to share the good stuff with others, right?  We all want to celebrate the accomplishments of our little sperm and egg omelettes. Broadcasting those accomplishments is what parenting is all about.

Okay, and maybe there's a bit of unconditional love in there too, but let's not get too wrapped up in details.

Let's say, however, that your family is, uh, going through a phase, and the children haven't done anything you'd deem worthy of posting on Bragbook lately. Maybe changing your status to "Alex kicked ass at the class spelling bee!... two years ago." lacks the likes you'd hoped for. What do you do then?

Or maybe your child is a late bloomer who's going to do amazing things like cure cancer or end global warming when she's older, but there's currently a lack of material going on between "Pam learned to walk! We're so proud!" and "Pam graduated high school! We're so proud!" Then what?

Or perhaps you're the family with the kids who are chronically late for school every day and arrive dressed inappropriately for the weather, throw fits in the hardware store when you won't buy them bubble gum at the counter, and proceed to punch you in the stomach right before you throw them over your shoulder and walk out wondering if there's some kind of relocation program that hands out new identities to families who leave stores embarrassed enough to consider such things. Not that I speak from experience.

Don't worry: As as mom who's family is infamous for regularly "going through a phase", I've found a way to combat those temporary feelings of parental inadequacy; those awkward moments when everyone at the table is finished talking about how great their kids are and they're waiting for you to chime in with your own stories.

The secret is this: Through the power of perspective,  you can turn almost anything into a brag.

You are so going to thank me for this. It's basically just an exercise in reframing. You take something that could unfairly be seen as negative and turn it into something unbelievably positive and even potentially envy-inducing. It takes a bit of practice, but you'll get the hang of it.

Here are some examples:

Them: "OMG, you guys! Thomas got straight A's in every class - again!"

You: "OMG, you guys! Johnny got an award from the principal for not biting anyone this term! I'm having it professionally framed because it's so unique. Not like a good report card or something."


Them: "My daughter helped make dinner and then did all the dishes. I'm so proud to have an amazing child like her!"

You: "I can really relate! My daughter didn't rub it in my face when I ran my foot over with the cart at Walmart and swore so loudly it made babies cry. I'm so proud to have a child who knows when to pretend things never happened."


Them: "Martin's team won the finals, in large part because of his incredible goalie skills!"

You: "That's great! You know, just the other day, Garfunkel ran into an old man with a walker and  knocked him right down. Don't worry, the walker's fine. Anyway, talk about some great body checking skills, am I right? We're thinking hockey in the Fall!"


Sometimes there's a more challenging situation, like this one:


Them: "Thanks so much for having us over for dinner. Cindy's doing so great! This year she's captain of the basketball team, head cheerleader, sings in the church choir and, in her spare time, tutors orphaned amputees. We couldn't be more proud. How's Laura?"

You: "How lovely! Well, Laura's finding herself through indie music and graffiti this year because screw you and go home. Oh, and leave the pie."

The positive part of this method is that you get to stuff your angry face full of pie.

Happy bragging!



Today I Got My First Tattoo

I got my very first tattoo today.



I know, right? What the hell is going on here? Could someone be so egotistical as to get their lame-o blog name imprinted on their shoulder blade for all eternity? Who would do something so narcissistic? 

Psst. Over here.

Today is your lucky day, my friend. I'm just insecure enough right now to explain the choices I make about my own body. And only because I'm PMSing. Otherwise I'd be all, "step off my grill, bitch," and you'd totally start crying and stuff and then I'd be all apologetic because I'm a people pleaser at heart and then we'd awkwardly hug it out and the whole thing would be messy.

Anyway, the thing is, Maven kinda saved me.*

Once upon a time, I was a lonely stay-at-home-mom named Amanda who ran a full-time daycare and was so pregnant with her third child she wanted to kill at least three people a day.** I was socially awkward, a little sad, and not entirely sure where I fit into the life that was going on around me. 

I knew I was someone's mother.

I knew I was someone's wife.

I knew I was someone's daughter, sister, friend.

All good things, but I didn't know who I was apart from that. 

And then, out of sheer frustration, I started this blog. I gave myself a catchy new nickname: The Maven of Mayhem. I used the blog as my place to vent about how crazy my life was. Because I was going by The Maven and not Amanda, it somehow gave me permission to be more honest. Amanda would have never said the things Maven said. Writing everything out did wonders for my mental state. 

No, really. Try to imagine what I'm normally like today, but so much worse

Now go call your therapist because that was probably really scary. 

Maven also helped me grow as a writer. She helped me practice my storytelling and humour. I was a girl who thought she had no talent in anything, but writing this blog got people engaged, laughing, and thinking. They started telling me how much they could relate, or how much they needed the chuckle I gave them that day. They told me to keep writing because it brought them joy***. 

And slowly, I started to believe in myself. 

That confidence has lead me to take bigger risks. Thanks to Maven, I'm trying new things. I'm currently working on a huge screenwriting project. I've been featured and published and read on the radio, I've read my work in front of large groups of people. And they clap like I'm not paying them, even. I never, ever imagined any of this stuff would happen.

Maven has helped me meet great people. I'm surrounded by the brightest stars in the sky. If the old adage "show me your friends and I'll show you your future" is true, then my future is going to be totally amazeballs. I've formed some really meaningful relationships through this blog and the social media circles built up around it. I am a much better person because I know all of you.

Most importantly, Maven has helped me learn to accept who I am. She's helped me feel more comfortable with quirky, awkward, silly Amanda. She's allowed me to see that I can be more than just a mom, wife, friend, sister and daughter; that I'm not just someone playing a role in other people's lives, but have my own as well. I can shine as brightly as the other stars around me. 

So, in short, I felt like I needed to commemorate this not-so-silly little blog and all the things it's done for me in the last few years. Maven has done nothing short of reshaping my entire life. And that's either the coolest or lamest realization ever. Either way, I couldn't think of a better thing to get inked on my skin.

There. I hope you've stopped judging me now. I've completely run out of chocolate and I'm one hormonal fluctuation away from geting rage-y.

*Maven did not save me in a physical sense or a Jesus sense, just an emotional one. Although, if you read the entire blog post and still needed this footnote, we might need to work on your comprehension skills.

**Disclaimer: I did not actually kill three people a day, or two, or even one. Although I stared down an older guy with a walker once and he almost fell down. Close enough.

***No one has ever said to me "keep writing because it brings me joy," I paraphrased the shit out of that.

My Son Wants to Wear Nail Polish

The colour that started it all.


A friend of mine texted this afternoon in the midst of a crisis. She couldn't locate her giant box of nail polish and was afraid she'd thrown it out in a fit of overzealous purging. She asked if I had any she could borrow. 

I can see why she asked. I don't do nail polish often, but I do have some fabulous colours. I am a maven, after all. We don't do neutrals.

As soon as I took out my own box of polish, six-year-old Spawnling ran up to me excitedly and slapped his hands down on the table. "Can you colour my nails, mom? Please?"

This used to be such a simple thing. He wanted polish, I had him pick a colour, and we painted them -  just like that. He would then happily wear it about town, to preschool or playgroup, and to play with friends at the park until he either got sick of it or it peeled off.

If the other kids made comments, they'd be positive or maybe surprised ones - never negative. Little kids don't usually care about gender biases the way we do; yes, they are forming ideas about what makes boys different from girls, but are generally still more accepting of differences. Far too quickly, however, children start to make generalizations about how each gender should be. It's only once we get a little older - and hopefully a lot wiser - that we begin to accept that not everyone has to dress, act, speak or look a certain way.

Unfortunately, Spawnling wore his new blue polish into the living room and proudly showed it off to the group of kids occupying the space. Gutsy has a couple of boys over. One is a good friend's son and, at eleven, is one of the most liberal and accepting kids I know. The other one, however, is nine and comes from a more conservative military family. The first thing he did was declare, "You look like a girl."

Spawnling's answer? "Um, this is my house, you know. I can ask you to leave if you're going to be rude."

My youngest, thankfully, is not easily picked on.

I had to take a deep breath in the kitchen and collect myself before I went into the living room. I then went in and said, ever so calmly, "You know, boys wear nail polish too. Have you ever checked out a rockstar's hands?"

"Yeah, it's true," declared the insightful eleven-year-old. "And they sometimes wear lipstick and eyeliner too." I could have hugged him right there.

"I know," said the other boy, quickly. But he was clearly thinking about it; maybe for the first time.

I wanted to cry; both because society sucks and also because I can't protect my kids from it.

I'm not mad at the boy who told Spawnling he looked like a girl. First of all, there's nothing wrong with being female. Nothing. I'd like to think I'm a prime example of that, thank you very much. Secondly, he is a product of our society's biases. He's not a bad kid, and I know he didn't mean to upset anyone. We just don't see nail polish on boys very often. He thought Spawn was trying to be funny, or that it was weird.

I have watched my sons go from little children who pretended to birth and nurse their babies, to slightly older children who watched shows like Hannah Montana and didn't care who knew it, to older still, where they are purposefully filtering out anything  that would make them seem less male.

I'd like to think my husband and I are openminded, liberal people ourselves, who have tried to raise the Gremlins Three in a way that allows them to be who they really are and not what we expect them to be. We've never told them anything like "only girls do that," or "boys should act like this." Sadly, society does expect certain things about them based solely on the fact that they have penises instead of vaginas. It's not okay to wear girl things. It's not okay to watch girl shows. It's not okay to like girl music.

And it's certainly not okay to wear nail polish.

As I write this, I'm sitting with a ball in the pit of my stomach. There's a fine line between letting your kids be who they are, and worrying that you're sending them off to be eaten by the wolves. Do I live by our principles and support Spawnling's decision to wear polish whenever he wants? Or do I gently discourage it and feed the gender assumption machine? Both of those thoughts stress me out to no end. I hate the idea of his self-esteem taking a beating if he gets teased at school next week, but I also loathe the thought of contributing to the idea of "normalcy" that sometimes leads those who don't meet those criteria to take their own lives. The last thing I want to do is tell my son he can't be who he is.

Am I a better parent for protecting who he is, or protecting him from who other people can be?

I took Spawn aside a few minutes ago and said that, if he was worried that kids might negatively comment on his nails at school on Monday, we could always make sure to take the polish off before the weekend's over.

He confidently replied, "No, it's fine. If anyone says anything I'm going to tell them I'm a rockstar."

And so, the blue polish is staying unless he decides otherwise before Monday morning. This foolishness, this ignorance, this prejudice has to end. We need to take a stand for all kids, whether they fit the mould or not. We need to challenge gender stereotypes and support our children in being who they are. And in this case, change starts with some blue nail polish on a kindergartener.

Sorry, a rockstar kindergartener.


5 Quick Tips For Work-at-Home Parents

Dreaming of the day you can earn an income and still be at home with your kids? That's always been my goal too. Now that it's happening, I feel like I should share my illogical thought processes horrendous mistakes serious fuck ups incredible insight with others. So I've taken a few minutes out of my busy writing/parenting/coffee swigging schedule to share the following.

1. You can have kids at home, or you can work from home, but not both at the same time with great success unless you:

a) have a really good lock on your office door
b) have chloroform and some rags on hand
c) invested in a velcro wall like I should have done years ago
d) are successful enough to have a nanny, in which case, most of us non-nanny-families are giving you the stink eye

2. As a working parent, you have to rethink your former sick day guidelines. Like, if you told your child he could stay home, and three hours later he's running around your office with the lights off, a tinfoil hat on his head, and pointing a Nerf gun at you as he screams, "KILL ALL THE THINGS!!!" as you're trying to write creatively, he is

not.

sick.

enough.

Not even close. Sigh.

3. The house will look like a Hoarders reunion show (minus the dead cats) until we catch up to the Jetsons and get robot maids. You could try and make your kids clean the house, but that would take both parenting and supervision. And who has that kind of time?

4. Nachos will become a gourmet meal, and that's okay. Well, until one of you has to have a valve replaced. But until then it's totally fine.

5. Feeling bad about being stretched so thin? Don't. You can learn to navigate the waters of a working parent with far less guilt than you thought possible, thanks to the help of 80's family classics. According to most films from my childhood, the following formula is true:

more money = happier family

Look at how happy Marty McFly was after he came back from changing the past and his parents were more financially successful? Okay, and maybe his mom had stopped drinking and the family bully became the friendly family lackey, but the clear message they're sending is that only struggling families have those problems. By that logic, my choices are either workaholism or alcoholism. And which one is going to pay for a trip to Fiji? Exactly.



I hope these tips helped you immensely. Now, if you're excuse me, my ever-so-sickly children have managed to hit each other a few times, spill cold coffee all over my desk, and smear fake blood on each other.

I love my life, I love my life, I love my life...


Our Hamster is Inbred - and so is Yours.

Meet Nibbler.
She likes your purdy mouth.

Our family got its first hamster in June. It was completely my fault. I felt sad for Spawnling who was heartbroken over his last day of preschool. So I did what any good parent does and threw money at the problem, stopping in at the pet store for a spontaneous rodent purchase. 

I bowed to five-year-old peer pressure. I'll never live it down. 

For the record, I hate hamsters. Okay, that might be a little strong. I mean, I don't hate them like "I would smush one of those little bastards with my combat boot", but I have a general unease around them after having been bitten by my friends' hamsters as a child. It is not right that something resembling a miniature teddy bear can take a chunk out of your finger like that. Totally traumatizing. 

I haven't liked them since. But I do like my kids, so I had the pet store lady poke and handle the hamsters until she found one that wasn't skittish or nippy. Putting other people's hands in peril was the least I could do for my children. We brought our new friend home as a surprise. 

Incidentally, don't surprise people with rodents, especially your spouse. And especially after you've already had the discussion that three kids, two dogs, a cat and two african dwarf frogs is a big enough family. If you bring one home after that, there might be some explaining to do, and you might have to say sorry a few times, and use the children as emotional shields ("But look how happy they are! And they've already named her. We can't take back a pet they've already named. A hamster is way cheaper than therapy and methadone clinics down the road. What? I'm just trying to look at it logically.")

The kids were thrilled with this little ball of fluff, They came up with all kinds of names for her, but eventually settled on Nibbler, a nod to Leela's pet on Futurama. My idea to call the stupid thing Snaggletooth Sophie, Princess of Death, was overruled with a lot of eye rolling. Killjoys.

I hate to admit this, but Nibbler has burrowed her way into my heart over the last few months. She's kinda unexpectedly grown on me. And she once unexpectedly pooped on me as well, but I've forgiven her for it. 

Nibbler is the coolest hamster of all time. That probably doesn't sound like much, given my general dislike for her species, but it's a big compliment. She's incredibly social. She'll walk right up to the side of the cage to say hello just like the hookers used to do with cars in front of our first apartment. I thought about getting her little fishnet stockings to complete the look, but I'm worried she won't like them without a matching pleather skirt - and hey, I'm not made of money.

Anyway, she's fun and cute and loves to hang out whenever she's awake. The only time she'll nip is if she's fast asleep and someone wakes her up. That's normally when I would take a chunk out of someone's hand too, so it's all good. We understand each other.

There's just one thing I've noticed about Snaggletooth Sophie Nibbler: When she runs on her hamster wheel, she tilts her head to the side and continuously whacks it on the spokes. It's very amusing. Geekster and I will sometimes watch this phenomenon instead of primetime t.v.

"Did she have a stroke?" Geekster wondered aloud one day.

"Maybe she's a masochist. Check for little copies of 50 Shades of Grey in her tiki hut," I suggested.

"Maybe she's inbred," he joked, and we both had a good laugh.

Until we checked Wikipedia.

A couple of nights ago, we had a discussion about where hamsters originated from. I consulted Professor Internet and found this very informative page. It turns out a lot today's domestic hamsters came from Syria, where they are, indeed, wild. And then I read this:

"Although the Syrian hamster or golden hamster (Mesocricetus auratus) was first described scientifically in 1839, researchers were not able to successfully breed and domesticate hamsters until 1939.[3] The entire laboratory and pet populations of Syrian hamsters appear to be descendants of a single brother-sister pairing"

So, basically, it took 100 years and probably a lot of miniature bottles of alcohol to get some hamster siblings to hook up and make creepy little inbred babies. Wonderful. 

This explains so, so much about Nibbler. If she seems a little, uh, special, it's because she is. If she can't run straight and hits her head, it's only because she inherited the genetics from her sister-cousin. And if she stares blankly at her food bowl for a few seconds before realizing what it is, that's likely a genetic gift from her uncle/pappy. 

I'm now on the lookout for a little banjo and rocking chair. If you see any on eBay, let me know.