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It was brought to my attention that mentioning the hard week Hugo and I had was a little alarming to some of you. I should have given more detail, perhaps, or not made it sound just so terribly awful. I'm sorry if what I wrote was upsetting to some – it never occurred to me that there might be people out there who were worried by what I wrote. To relieve the pressure I sometimes feel from parenting Hugo alone so much of the time, it helps to write about it here and there, mention it, get it off my chest, then move on.

But after I heard from many of you privately, I felt like I needed to explain a few things.

First of all, I realized that I rarely write about Hugo when things are good. And they are so often so very good. We have been blessed with an impossibly lovely child who has made the majority of his first year quite easy on his mother. When you consider that I am his sole caretaker five days a week, all day long, that's quite a feat. Not a day goes by when I don't feel lucky to have so much of Hugo to myself, to get to really see every tiny stage of development he goes through. Particularly because I know how acutely Max misses being around us every day, I feel a responsibility to witness everything Hugo does for both of us, to be present as much as I possibly can. It's a privilege that I've had as much time home with him as I have.

But of course things get tough sometimes. Of course they do! A few months ago, Hugo – in a very short window of time – simply stopped taking naps in his crib. He'll sleep in the stroller or car seat for 30 minutes, 40 if I'm lucky, but if I put him in his crib at naptime, he screams and screams (and pulls himself to standing and screams and screams). In addition, the poor thing has been cutting four teeth in at the same time. FOUR! He's been in pain for months.

Teething, over-tiredness, what we think is sadness at seeing Max so infrequently manifesting itself as massive clinginess with me – and all of this on my shoulders without a break, 12 hours every day. It's hard, no matter what kind of angel I birthed. But still, you need to know that most days Hugo is a peach. A beaming, chattering, toothy peach who strokes your face lovingly if you get close to him, who full-body-bops to music like an old pro, whether it's Haydn or blues, who charms the pants off every single woman (and many men!) who we pass on our daily outings, who purses up his lips and blows each time he sees a mobile or a hanging lamp or a tree branch silhouetted against the sky, who pages through books in silent concentration, who goes to bed without protest and sleeps so well that I'm too superstitious to say any more than that, and who always lowers his head on my shoulder just before bedtime so I can hear him breathing in my ear just as he did as a newborn and a four-month old and an eight-month old, giving me the opportunity to once again tell myself: don't ever forget this sound, this feeling; don't ever, ever forget it.

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For many months, I didn't want to do anything but be Hugo's mother. I relished staying home and caring for him all day. I didn't care about work or cooking or anything but being there for him. It was a delicious immersion into another world – I felt deeply fulfilled and totally happy. But over the past few months, I've started feeling the urge to work again. Not just because we are most definitely a two-income household, but because I have that old creative itch again. It's wonderful! I'm so happy it's back! It's also…impossible without outside help.

How can I get any meaningful work done when 12 hours a day I can't do anything but take care of Hugo? We have organized a daycare spot for him, but it's not until next January. (In Germany, it's hard to find daycare for children under the age of 12 to 18 months.) And because Hugo only naps on the go, I can only work after he's gone to bed in the evening, at which point I'm tired myself, exhausted, really, and hungry and want nothing more than to crawl into bed and fall asleep while reading. (Related: If you sent me an email sometime between June 12, 2012 and now and are wondering why I haven't responded yet? This would be why. I am very sorry and also a little embarrassed.)

So, help.

Three things that helped me see the light on what a (or this) self-employed writer and mother needs to do in order to be able to work and continue to parent well were:

1. This gorgeous post, Help Is (Not) A Four-Letter Word by Rebecca Woolf.
2. A chapter called No Mystery About Sperm in Tiny Beautiful Things.
3. Talking to my village of girlfriends who are mothers and who all have slightly different situations in terms of childcare, but who all have childcare.
(4. And this post is good too.)

Lightbulb! All of a sudden, things seem possible again. Instead of trying to squeeze in a few emails and writing sessions before bed and feeling frustrated that I can't get work done while Hugo naps in his stroller and I'm stuck on the park bench, I have the prospect of real time for myself again. I can finally go ahead with that site redesign that is sucking up so much of my mental space. Take control of my blog advertising once and for all, so that this beloved blog of mine can start to be a source of meaningful income again. I can get started on that second book that my agent has so gently been prodding me about. And maybe even possibly ooh I don't know have a little time over for long-shot dreams like my novel. In the meantime, Hugo gets to be entertained and loved by a whole new energetic young person and I get to mother him feeling refreshed and ready for everything he wants to do. Maybe a little distance will even mean that naptime goes from being a big battlefield of anxiety for me to just a thing that my little peach does in his own quirky way, no big deal.

Uh, yes to all of that, please. As my mother likes to say sometimes, I can be a little slow, but I get there eventually.

So that's where we are these days, dear readers. Figuring out next steps, acknowledging that help is not a bad word, but a necessary part of this woman's daily life as a breadwinner and a loving mommy, and thinking that even though he does sometimes drive me to distraction (show me a kid who doesn't?), I feel like I won the lottery when it comes to Hugo, the bright shining light of my life.

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84 responses to “Balancing Work and Motherhood”

  1. Debra Avatar

    My goodness–what a beautiful, blossoming, beaming child, and an exquisitely honest and moving post. Hugo is very lucky to have you for his mother!

    Like

  2. Jackie Avatar
    Jackie

    What a great (and honest!) post. Currently being pregnant and knowing I’ll go back to work (far too quickly- thank you US maternity leave!) this was very comforting.
    It’s always ok to ask for help…and I can’t wait for your next book!

    Like

  3. Ann Avatar

    Thanks for this post — I found it so very heartening. I think about the juggle of motherhood and work almost constantly. Love the links, too, and here’s another one that made me look at this issue in another light:
    http://parenting.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/04/16/why-do-i-think-my-salary-pays-for-child-care/

    Like

  4. Brittany Avatar
    Brittany

    Nicely said, Luisa. I read your post last Friday, and far from concerning me, I just nodded knowingly and promptly forgot about it. With a 14 month old, I’ve had MANY a day of despair and low low lows, and couldn’t understand more. It seems like my daughter and I have finally found a nap schedule/routine that makes both of us happy, but it was agony for many months before we found it. But, as you said, most days my little girl is a ray of sunshine, and the time I share with her is so utterly precious. I’m home with her alone 5 days a week as well, so I really understand the way that it can wear (and wear and wear…) on a person, especially when our little ones are having a hard day. Such is life and motherhood. I always think of that comic that shows a pie chart labelled “Parenting”, with 49% as “a huge pain in the ass”, and 51% as “the most sublime joy you’ve ever felt”, haha.
    Wonderful to hear that you’re going to be getting into writing again… can’t think of a book I’d look forward to more than your next one, honestly.

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  5. Victoria Avatar

    Beautiful.
    Yes, Luisa, help is not a four letter word.
    And someday, you will be the helper!

    Like

  6. Sliceofmidlife Avatar

    I wish this had appeared over Mother’s Day weekend, when my book Ruminations from the Minivan: musings from a world grown large, then small was available as a free Kindle download. (It’s still available; just not free). Once I had kids, I experienced similar challenges of trying to determine my place in the world and was sometimes surprised by the results.
    Once you become a mother it strengthens your membership in the community of women. There were few, if any, blogs when I had my first baby, so I found strength in reading essays by other women and eventually began writing and publishing some myself. These days there are so many ways to receive support and so many creative ways to work and be creative.
    As everyone will tell you, childhood is fleeting. Now that I have teens, I miss those sweet, simple yet often frustrating days (it once took me four hours to make a peanut butter and jelly sandwich). You truly do get the opportunity to see the world through a grain of rice (or rice cereal). In my case, this sharper focus enabled me to grow and shape my life in unexpected ways. I hope the same is true for you. Enjoy that sweet baby. Soon he’ll be asking you to drive him places.

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  7. Dawn (KitchenTravels) Avatar

    Being a parent is incredible, life-changing, and a joy… but also very challenging, even under the best of circumstances. We mothers, especially, tend to ignore our own needs as we tend to those of our children. A wise friend once told me to take care of myself and my marriage first… because the best way to be a good parent is to be a happy, healthy woman. Honestly, I have not been very good at heeding that advice! But I’m working on it… slowly but surely, working on it.
    Your Hugo is adorable. Enjoy every minute and don’t beat yourself up for those times when you feel overwhelmed. You are not alone. If you like, take a peek at this post I wrote last year, in which I touched on one of my own motherhood challenges. We got through it, and you will too. 🙂 http://www.kitchentravels.com/2012/03/gluten-free-buckwheat-pancakes-with-caramelized-apples-recipe.html

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  8. Wendy Avatar
    Wendy

    What a cutie that boy is! And I just realized that he is exactly 50 years younger than I am . . . June 12, 1962. Anyhow, so glad things are really fine. I never thought otherwise. My own boys are 15 and 11, and have lots and lots of teeth.

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  9. Katie @ cakes, tea and dreams Avatar

    Thanks for this honesty, Luisa. I’m not a parent yet – but when I am, I hope I can find some balance (with help!) amid the craziness of caring for little ones.

    Like

  10. The Brussels Cook(er) Avatar

    Your post really struck a cord Luisa – I live in Belgium where (like France) all babies can go to state nurseries from the age of three months – and to kindergarden/pre-schools from the age of 2 1/2 (which almost 100% do). I too was happy to stay at home with my two (now 10 and 12) until they were 12 months old – but then the “work bug” kicked in again (I’m a freelance educational author)and they started creche – happy babies + happy mum! But this is still SO stigmatised in Germany I feel where you’re a “Rabenmutter” if you don’t look after your children exclusively until they’re 6(+) when they finally start school… So – good on you!

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  11. Anna Avatar

    Thanks for sharing your thoughts and such great links. I think this is definitely a conversation and topic is important to have. I will read this again when I reach this point.

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  12. Honeybee Avatar
    Honeybee

    Great post, thank you. Can I just say unterschreib to everything? My wonderful beautiful baby son woke up hourly for the last two nights. I’m too tired to write anything else and should really get to bed.

    Like

  13. Brittany Avatar
    Brittany

    I’d never heard of the term “Rabenmutter” even though half my family is German, and I grew up with the language. I just did some googling and read a couple articles on the stigma in Germany of working being inappropriate for a mother of young children. I find that absolutely fascinating… as a stay at home mom in Canada, I’ve often encountered the exact opposite! It has been difficult and very frustrating at times in the last year.

    Like

  14. Abbey P. Avatar

    Thank you for this post! I am a brand new mom deep in the trenches of diaper changes and constant feeding. Sleep deprivation is a total understatement. I will be going back to work (at home) before too long and I just love reading other mom’s experiences knowing that we WILL get through the overwhelm of each different stage.

    Like

  15. Alicia Avatar
    Alicia

    I’ve been following you for years but only commenting sporadically. I’m due in Aug with my first and I already know that the day I go back to work (lovely 12 week typical US leave) will probably be one of the hardest of my life so far. Thank you for your honesty here- I know I will be rereading this post probably many times over the next few months.

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  16. Amber Avatar
    Amber

    I love my son SO much but hiring help and getting some time back for me and my pursuits has been life altering. Raising little children is HARD work. My husband is gone a lot too (musician) and I find the days when I have him all on my own to seem endless. Help comes in all different forms and I’ve learned to ask/pay for it when I need it. Even if it’s technically just for me to have an hour of uninterrupted time to think/read/watch tv.
    It gets easier and it gets harder as you move forward. Appreciate the good parts and remember the bad parts are (for the most part) fleeting. 🙂

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  17. Stefanie Avatar
    Stefanie

    Love your post! It is so relatable. I work full time and finally got some help with the house work. The moment I let go and realized I could not do it all was liberating. Best of luck!

    Like

  18. Michele Hays Avatar

    Louisa, don’t let anyone tell you how to feel, and don’t edit what is going on with you.
    Motherhood is very, very hard work and the truth is that an awful lot of it is unpleasant. I think that just because we Moms so love those moments when we can see our child unfolding like a flower…we tend to gloss over the poop and exhaustion and the sheer relentlessness of it all. I think sometimes that leaves an unfair impression of motherhood for those who come after us.
    The last thing new mothers should feel is alone. We’ve all been there – mine is twelve now, and I can just now start to see the man he will be in the frighteningly near future, it’s breathtaking – but I have never forgotten the intense, nearly superhuman, effort it took to mother a baby mostly on my own (my husband was present, but in school and working, so rarely home.)

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  19. Molly Avatar
    Molly

    What a great post. I sometimes count the hours until my husband is home. Not because I don’t love my children, not because I dislike being with them, but because it is such an ON sort of job. And no one really talks about how exactly it is hard, but people do write about it. It must feel safer than blurting out to a friend that sometimes you fantasize about moving to Mexico. Alone! I get real courage from reading other parents’ experiences and realizing that I am not that bad a parent! Congratulations on wanting to work and finding solutions to the obstacles! No mean feat.

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  20. Kelly Avatar
    Kelly

    Thank you so much for this. My little girl just turned one, and I am still trying to figure out how I’m supposed to handle working from home and mothering at the same time. Earlier today I had a quick meeting at the home of a colleague who also works from home and has a one year old… and has help. She seemed to be so much more TOGETHER than I am, and it got me thinking a bit about the possibility of hiring some help of my own. Of course there’s that darn mothers guilt to contend with. I’m off to read a few of the posts you’ve linked and think things over…

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  21. Annie Avatar
    Annie

    This totally resonates with my experience, too. My maternity leaves were long by US standards (6 months thanks to combining FMLA and summers off my teaching position affords), and while I wish they could have been a bit longer, and that it was more financially feasible to work part time, I was never in doubt that I would return to work or that I wanted to do so. And, as much as I love soaking in the time with my kids (3 and just 1!), and do feel plenty of maternal guilt on other counts, I do not feel guilty for wanting (not just needing) to work.
    Oh, and teething is tough! My little guy has been teething nonstop for two months (six teeth when the latest pops through) and though naps have survived, sleeping through the night has not. And since nursing is what comforts him the most, the nocturnal visitation is mine. It’s a silver lining of working motherhood, though, that this extra time together feels more like a bonus than a hardship.

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  22. Annie Avatar
    Annie

    Oh, and my goodness is he handsome!

    Like

  23. Merle Avatar
    Merle

    You two are beautiful…and all shall be well.

    Like

  24. Amy Avatar

    I know this is kind of unrelated (or maybe completely related?) to your post, but oh my god, Hugo is the cutest baby I’ve ever seen! I believe the whole charming-the-pants-off-everyone bit! And you are such a beautiful mother.

    Like

  25. MJ Brodie Avatar

    Hi Luisa, I came on your site looking for your braised fennel recipe that I tried and loved last week and then I find this!
    I could identify a lot with what you say as I’ve also been a full-time parent to my son since he was born. It wasn’t really my choice to not work at all but I’m living in the US and don’t have a working visa here as I moved here for my spouse’s job so it turned out that way.
    I’m originally from Ireland and previously lived in Berlin for a couple of years so I loved your blog anyway but now I find we have much more in common than I realized!
    If it helps, I found that phase between 1 year and 18 months particularly hard as they are always going through some trauma – learning to walk, teething, first colds, stomach bugs, fussiness with food etc. It was just an endless roller-coaster for us. Now that my son is 19 months, it is getting better as I take him out to the park to run around for a couple of hours a day. He sleeps better now too – so there is a light at the end of the tunnel!
    It’s great that you’ve decided to look for help. I’ve done the same thing here and enrolled my son in a daycare for 2 mornings a week to start, possibly 3 if he likes it. It’s important to admit that mothering full-time to a baby / toddler is a tough job and one that requires support.
    Well done for getting through your first (almost) year as a mother and I wish you every success with your new projects and hard-won free time! ‘Halt die Ohren steif’ as they say in Berlin 😉

    Like

  26. Greygonegreen Avatar

    This post really hit home for me. It’s 11:30pm and I’m getting through all of the work I could not do during the day because I’m a stay at home mom (or I guess part-time work at home mom) to a wonderful 11 month old boy.
    I left my job after the baby was born and I often struggle with whether or not I made the right decision. I would absolutely rather be with my son than away from him for 10 hours a day, but sometimes I feel like I’m so exhausted that I don’t give him the attention he deserves. I’m just going through the motions of our day, trying to get everything done.
    I’ve been lucky enough to pick up some freelance work so that I can work from home but that’s just added another layer of exhaustion. I felt guilty for hiring a sitter for 3 hours a week when I’m staying at home but I’m starting to think it might be the key to my sanity because there’s nothing worse than feeling like I’m not being the best parent I can be.

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  27. Shiri Avatar
    Shiri

    You just linked to APW and I feel like the whole Internet is a warm and cozy, connected, little place and I’ve found everything I need in it. I mean, I realize this sounds nuts, but you read APW! That makes me happy.
    I’m glad you’ve got help. We all need help. And a happy, cozy, connected little Internet to remind us of that sometimes.

    Like

  28. Charlotte Avatar

    Luisa – just be true to yourself and Hugo and you will find your way. It is hard on your own all day with a baby no matter how much you adore them. I cherished my year off with my boy (thank you Canadian mat leave policy) and I was happy to set off to work again (and I cried for 2 solid weeks in the interim when we were weaning him into daycare and me away from him at the advice of his daycare team – thanks to them). It is hard whatever way you do it and not made easier by the judginess that we are all periodically guilty of and in some cases, not family friendly or two income parent friendly child care policies….You are such a lovely team – mum and child – my goodness what a cutie Hugo is and sooo big now! Good luck finding your path.

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  29. Suzy Avatar

    Great post. And the Rebecca Wolf link. Excellent.
    I was pretty smug about raising my first child all by myself. But did she fare better? Did I? I am not sure.
    Inconceivably, sometimes it’s easier to climb up onto the cross yourself then to ask for help. To admit you want help. Even if you could probably stretch and scrape your way through the whole thing on your own. It is probably possible. But at what cost?
    It sounds corny but a happier, saner mother is a better gift to your child’s overall well being then one that is tired and grumpy.

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  30. Nuts about food Avatar

    I have been through pretty much everyone of those steps and feelings. I have come to realize that being a mother means feeling endless love, stress, guilt, joy and worry at the same time, 24/7. It is the best thing that ever happened to me and despite the fatigue and sometimes even loneliness (especially in those first months) the thought of leaving my child in someone else’s care terrified me. It eventually had to happen when I went back to work and then I realized it wasn’t all bad, because I needed some space to be me again and not just a mother (also why I started a blog). Still, when I used to hear parents talk about going out without kids I just wasn’t ready: I didn’t want to pay someone to be with my child so I could go out and play. Work was one thing, personal entertainment another. But now we do it occasionally and although I feel unconvinced when I leave the house, by the time I get home I am a better parent. So remember, don’t get help just so you can work. Sometimes just take an hour to yourself to window shop or get your nails done or sit in a book store or go out with Max or friends for a drink. It will help in the more stressful times.

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  31. The Graphic Foodie Avatar

    Man, do I HEAR you.
    With a 16 month old, things seem to be finally easing up. I relished being at home the first hard, exhausting year but I’m now back at work designing, even if it is 3 days a week, but I feel more like me again (albeit with lashing of guilt) and the mamma/work balance is good.
    BUT, I have so much help from my family and even then I feel there is little time for me, or I’m so exhausted I can’t possibly do anything once all is done and dusted in the evening. Everything is affected; blogging, bathing, eating properly, skincare routines, your relationships, your inner peace!
    Those wonderful moments with your kid are always going to be interspersed with wondering when the crazy rollercoaster is going to end, but, yes they are truly exquisite moments that I never had before motherhood. Worth it.

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  32. Jenn Avatar
    Jenn

    I’ve never seen such an adorable baby boy!(your Hugo). I’m sure you’re a wonderful mother and just going through what all mom’s do from time to time. Any chance you could translate the German baby ad for us — I watched the video you posted and would love to know what the baby said…

    Like

  33. Adrianne Avatar
    Adrianne

    Dear Luisa,
    I love your baby’s face.(Also, his tiny shawl neck sweatshirt!!). I want to squeeze his cheeks in a way he would find MOST distressing. : )
    Everyone needs help. It takes courage to ask for it, always.Virtual hug!

    Like

  34. CM Avatar

    Aww, I love this post. So universal and so beautifully said. I agree, it’s so important and sanity-preserving to have some time for you — to concentrate and focus, to be an adult, to do something creative and productive! As much as we love our children, we need to keep something for ourselves and there’s nothing selfish about that. And hopefully having someone else involved will help with the clinginess a bit, as he realizes his entire universe doesn’t have to be you… maybe just 90% of it. Just a warning, though, these transitions are often rough for a while before everything improves. If things seem to be worse for the first month or two, don’t worry or question whether you made the right choice! Give it a little time. Best of luck. (Don’t you love unsolicited parenting advice from Internet strangers?)

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  35. michelle Avatar

    What a great post. Thank you for sharing.

    Like

  36. Matilda Avatar
    Matilda

    Great post! I have also been looking at Ask Moxie’s most recent post asking for data points on the choices women make about work. Most of the comments are U.S.-based, but there are some European and Canadian stories there, too.
    Askmoxie.org was a lifesaver for me especially when my first son was a wee baby (he’s in kindergarden now and I also have a 3.75 y-o and a 15 month old, so I have a busy house!)–lots of data points on eating, sleeping and behavior. This is especially helpful when one’s kid seems out of sorts–Magda (the woman who writes/runs the website) is a big fan of the Wonder Weeks and the theory that children spend 6 months being cooperative and lovely and then struggle to keep their s#@% together for the next six months because of developmental spurts (wash, rinse, repeat). Anyway, that community of nonjudgemental moms made me feel a lot less lonely.

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  37. lorimac Avatar
    lorimac

    I cannot believe you feel obliged to explain why you had a bad day in the motherhood arena. Everyone has bad days and good days- at work; in their marriage; with their hair; with their kids. Completely normal. It is when the bad days start to seriously outweigh the good, or even normal, ones that one needs to seek some sort of help.

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  38. Sarah G. Avatar
    Sarah G.

    I’m sorry your well meaning readers are worried. I’m a mom of two (four years and 17 months) your recent posts have been endearing but not concerning. It’s just the way life is! I love love love this post about finding the right balance of help. It’s a struggle I’ve yet to figure out.
    Thanks so much for sharing with us. The links were incredible and soothing.

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  39. Sarah Avatar
    Sarah

    I read the post about your horrid week at the end of my horrid week and it made me feel so much better that it wasn’t just me. Like you I love spending time with my 10 month old but he’s doing exactly the same nap thing as Hugo, and the poor little mite seems to have been teething forever so he’s not really sleeping at night. So I totally get where you were coming from. Please keep being normal it makes the rest of us feel better! Enjoy your new help and your new projects.

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  40. Kate L. Avatar

    Haha, this is how I felt to see the link to Rebecca Woolf at Girl’s Gone Child. I’ve added APW to my Reader and I hope other people will also add GGC – she is one of the best things on the internet, I think.

    Like

  41. Bérangère Bouffard Avatar
    Bérangère Bouffard

    I wanted to comment sooner but was struggling with time and supper for sick, demanding, grumpy girls. I read that honest Friday post. It was short and not saying much but I was in the thick of it myself and as much as I felt bad for you and wanted to know more, I seriously appreciated the relief you gave me! 🙂 I felt less alone in that roller coaster ride that is raising young children. I was struggling with guilt most of all and when I read you, it just made me feel better and I thank you for it. I even shared your post on facebook as a way of saying: “This is what I’m feeling like right now and this person that I love to read happens to feel the same, I feel normal!” 🙂
    Then I read your new title today and I felt bad for the pressure you must have felt. There’s no need to explain. You’re a mama! You’re doing the best you can as a human raising a young child. It’s hard work, full of trying moments even when you’re passed the teething stage. Thanks to you we are reminded of that compared to the always perfect, happy mommy bloggers out there. Seriously sometimes I need to take a break from them because it puts pressure on the rest of us. Life is not like that.
    There will always be worry worts, like our mothers 🙂 but that’s ok, you don’t owe them an explanation except maybe your mother if she’s insisting 🙂 To express yourself in the middle of a crisis will always be alarming to some but if it’s what you needed at the time to lift some pressure off without giving too much details, so be it! Your fans stand by you and among them, the mothers of little ones certainly didn’t need any explanation. We get it. 🙂 I don’t run a blog (yet) but I really rely on facebook when the going gets tough to cut me some slack, cry for help or give myself a break from the isolation that parenting can create. Also, this should help, it came right in time for me! Read, laugh and feel the relief just a little bit 😉 http://www.huffingtonpost.com/steve-wiens/let-me-be-the-one-who-says-it-out-loud_b_3209305.html

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  42. lee near atlanta, ga Avatar
    lee near atlanta, ga

    I sometimes have the chance to check your blog.
    I don’t remember how I found it.
    I don’t know what this post is referencing.
    I am the primary caretaker of my four year old.
    Now it makes sense, yes?
    I have no idea if you read your comments or not but I wanted to offer my support in parenting a young one more or less on your own for a lot of the time. It is wonderful and exhausting. entwined and constantly. I remind myself that the days are long but the moths are short. (And I used to loathe a cliche or a platitude.)
    I wouldn’t dare to offer you, a perfect stranger, advice, but I would say that id I had a blog I’d mitigate the negative comments with a nice dose of reality. On the off chance I had the time to read the comments. Then I’d cook my son a decent meal, try to nourish myself in anyway possible and sleep as much as the situation allowed.
    Best of luck and thank you for taking your time to do what you do for your family and the rest of us.

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  43. Elizabeth Avatar
    Elizabeth

    Thank you SO much for this. I’ve been reading your blog for years, and this is my first comment. I’m a stay at home mom to the sweetest and beastliest 16 month old boy, and I completely understand how you feel. In fact, your blog makes me feel so much better knowing that I’m not alone. I read last Friday’s post and sighed with relief that I’m not the only mother who has tough weeks.
    Hugo is beyond precious! And what a fantastic mother he has!
    BTW: Loved the breakfast post; same exact issues over here. I read through all the comments and got so many great ideas. Please don’t stop sharing about Hugo!

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  44. Aline Avatar

    Who got so worried about what you wrote? It MUST be people without kids. For me, as a mother of a 2 year old this was the most normal thing I ever read. And I am thankful for your honesty. That’s why I don’t read mommy blogs because they are all like “and today we spent the day collecting cotton in the organic cotton field behind our house and then we went home and spun the cotton into yarn and then we knitted all the clothes we needed for the winter, right after my 9 months old and I worked on our alphabets and numbers and it was a perfect day, like every day in our life”. Yeah, right.
    Being a mother is hard. And I have a wonderful daughter too but she also didn’t nap for longer than half an hour for the first six months of her life. Then she started taking two normal naps. Thank god. I don’t know how you do it.
    I found myself a nanny when Linnea was 9 months old. She has a baby herself and she is a kindergarten teacher, so I feel very comfortable with her. I have her once a week for five or six hours and it’s been such a relief. I am self-employed (I am photographer) and also only get to work when my daughter is sleeping or when I have a nanny but often I’d rather work when she is sleeping because I really need these five hours. If you don’t have help, like family, around it’s impossible otherwise. I mean, before I had the nanny, getting my teeth cleaned at the dentist was a major stressing point for me because my husband had to completely change his schedule around and I’d still have to have my teeth cleaned at 6am.
    Anyway, you are completely normal, people are just not used to mothers actually speaking the truth. But honestly, show me a mother who never cried out of desperation at the end of a particularly hard day and I show you her two full-time nannies or her live-in-mother/cleaner/housekeeper.

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  45. Luisa Avatar

    Great link, thank you.

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  46. Luisa Avatar

    Very true! And so glad to hear you guys found a nap schedule that worked. It gives me hope!

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  47. Luisa Avatar

    That is really such good advice…and so hard to follow! But it’s so true.

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  48. Luisa Avatar

    Rabenmutter! Yes, isn’t it a crazy term? I do think things are relaxing a little bit here, and I certainly don’t feel pressure from my circle here about not getting help with Hugo, but German society is still built up on the premise that a parent (almost always the mother) stays home with the children – through elementary school, since it ends at 1:00 pm here!

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  49. Luisa Avatar

    check! get some sleep! x

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  50. Luisa Avatar

    congratulations!! those first months are so crazy. I promise you that you will one day look back with a glimmer of nostalgia, even if you don’t want to actually go back in time! 🙂

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