Finding Ninee » Sharing our parenting and special needs stories with heart and humor.

Parenting: The Unexpected

When I became pregnant with my son, I spoke to friends, doctors and read a bunch of books about what to expect. I read books about sleep, milestones, development, and what might happen to my body. I learned that sushi and deli meats are bad for pregnant women. That walking is good, but only if you’re not put on bed rest. That at 20 weeks gestation, my baby was about the length of a banana.

Turns out, there’s a bunch of unexpected things that the books don’t prepare you for. Some bloggy friends and I were recently discussing the gems that we didn’t expect. While common sense prepared us for the joy of getting peed on during diaper changes, needing to always have a change of clothes for poop explosions, and 2am feedings, we were not prepared for bodily assaults, toys in our beds, or dry-humping.

So today, I’m presenting our (first for me) group post on Parenting: The Unexpected. Each of us has written a paragraph and are collectively sharing our stories about the strange, funny, and occasionally disturbing things that come along with parenting.  Here, I’ll go ahead and kick it off for you.

Parenting: The Unexpected

Kristi of Finding Ninee

Prior to becoming a mother, I thought I knew love, and realized that I had no idea what it truly was until I held my son for the first time.  I wasn’t expecting how my heart would grow when I first heard him laugh, or found myself standing over him while he slept. I wasn’t expecting the intensity of my emotions.

Turns out, there are other things about parenting that were unexpected as well. Following are a few snippets from conversations recently had in my house. Ones that none of the parenting books prepared me for.

  • “I’m not giving you a shoulder ride until you put your pants back on. I don’t want your penis on my neck.”
  • Me, after a tickling session went wrong and ended with my son accidentally headbutting the bridge of my nose: “I think it’s broken. I saw stars and heard a crunch.” Hub’s reply “Nah, I think if it were broken, it’d be bleeding.”
  • “Breasts are not for ‘beeping’ or ‘boinging,’ okay?”
  • “Mommy’s shirt is not a Kleenex.”
  • “Ouch! You can jump on the bed. You cannot jump on my stomach.”
  • “Is that poop on your finger?”
  • “No, I’d rather not eat your booger. Thanks, though.”

So, yeah. While osmosis and parenting books prepared me for the fact that I’d get peed on, pooped on, and catch vomit in my hands, not a single one warned me that my kid would accidentally break my nose, offer me his booger as a snack or want a shoulder ride while not wearing pants.

Now, please enjoy the lovely voices of  Jean, Jen, Katia, Sarah, Stephanie, Rachel, and Sarah! (This post is pretty epic, which means it’s kind of long. But if you read through to the end, there will be a prize for you!) <—- credit for this line goes to Stephanie. I just kept it here because I like it. And her.

Stephanie of Mommy, For Real.

A friend of mine told me last week about an unsavory incident she experienced during a game of peekaboo with her toddler. While my friend obediently covered her eyes, her two year old daughter put her tongue in Mommy’s mouth. Ew. See, these are the things we have come to expect as parents. There is no dignity; our basic human rights are violated on a daily basis. If you were to observe these events outside the context of parenting, there may be cause for alarm; perhaps it might even be appropriate to panic and alert the authorities. Can you imagine, in a bizarre Quantum Leap sort of scenario, finding yourself in one of the following disturbing scenes?

  • You wake up in the morning, startled, because someone has put a knee to your throat.
  • While you are laying on the floor stretching, somebody suddenly sits on your face.
  • You discover that another person’s urine has somehow dripped onto your foot. Now it’s inexplicably on your elbow.
  • While working in the garden, you suddenly realize that a small person is licking your leg.
  • After failing to respond appropriately to the proclamation that “A bear is coming!” (note: the correct response is to gasp, “Oh no!” and hide under your bedsheets) you receive a skull to the pubic bone, knee to the boob, and foot in the face.
  • While preparing oatmeal for the family breakfast, you notice that someone is dry-humping your leg. (To clarify, it’s not your husband.)
  • While reading a bedtime story, you are suddenly, without warning, subjected to an overly aggressive Eskimo kiss against your will.

Should you find yourself in one of these situations, stay calm. There is no need to dial 911. You’re just a parent.

Jean of Mama, Schmama

jeanI wasn’t prepared for all the little things when I had children. Living with a kid means living with toys, and anything more complex than a rattle comes with little annoying pieces. After bringing the toys into the house, eventually (and in my house that really means immediately) the pieces scatter. These toy crumbs appear everywhere and stick around like dried snot on a kid’s face.

Lately, our ever-present toy crumb has been the tail with the stick. Tail with the stick (TWTS) is blue and it belongs to a fish. TWTS travels around our house mysteriously and lands in the most unlikely places. TWTS was in my bed. As I got comfortable one night, my foot touched something under the sheets. “OH SHIT!” I yelled, thinking I kicked a mouse or a bug. No, it was TWTS. I saw it in the silverware drawer. TWTS occasionally enhances my car’s Garbage Chic by hanging out on the floor. I feel like I’ve thrown TWTS away ten times already.

Soon I will make it a point to get rid of TWTS and push it to the bottom of the trash where it will not be found. Inevitably, that’s when someone will ask where the toy crumb went. “MOM! I need TWTS so I can get the squirt gun to work.”

It is only certain that a toy crumb has disappeared forever when it is requested and when we finally know its purpose.

Jen of My Skewed View

My Skewed View by Jen Kehl

All I ever wanted when I grew up was to be a mom. Don’t get me wrong –  I am not the soccer mom/room mother/girl scout leader type mom. I wanted to be the mom from That 70’s Show. What I didn’t realize was there was gonna be a life between 0-16. And, although I’m pretty sure that my son will be the guy whose house you want to hang at, I never thought of the type of personality it would take to be the guy that everyone wants to be around. No one ever warned me about the things the cool kid might do, like this:

  • Almost burn the house down by making a torch; shoving paper towels in an empty paper towel roll (lighting it on the stove while I had my back turned) so he could see in the dark dungeon.
  • Spontaneously mimic the sound of a fire engine siren perfectly. When all is calm and quiet. And your back is turned. Same sound and same volume. Causing temporary deafness.
  • Shatter a glass door to pieces with a sledgehammer because it was fun.
  • Force his mother to make videos of him singing/making how to videos/performing in shows. EVERY. SINGLE. DAY.
  • Make a rope swing from the second floor balcony and swing around the kitchen when unsupervised for 5 MINUTES.
  • Lock a babysitter out of the house.
  • Tie a babysitter up with caution tape and sit on her until I get home.
  • Try to french kiss his mother
  • And I would stake my life on this one: Pretend to smoke and use an old Zippo lighter to light that fake cigarette or pipe whenever someone his parents want to impress comes to the house. And then offer him one too.

Motherhood is not at all what I thought it would be, and frankly I was completely unprepared to raise a boy. But now that I’ve settled in, I’ve gotta say that it’s pretty awesome and I wouldn’t have it any other way. 

Katia of IAMTHEMILK

katia

Ouchies and stickers. Two things I was not prepared for as a parent.

I mean boys and ouchies go together hand and hand, we all know that, right? I just wasn’t expecting so many of the ouchies to be mine. One Year Old expresses love through biting. 4 Year Old expresses frustration with kicks. Both throw things to express happiness, disdain, agreement, protest, uncertainty and every other emotion in the book. Enter my right eye.

I’ve decided to write this post when my right eye was on some sort of a karmic repentance journey absorbing extremely ouchy gestures of love and fury less than a week apart. They say love is blinding. They’re right. So are kicks. So my right eye was an evil dictator in a previous life. Does that it mean it doesn’t deserve help this time around? When I called the eye clinic to explain what had happened, the receptionist on the other side of the line tried to sound understanding, but I was making it very difficult for her: Your one-year-old GRABBED your eye?! Yes. Exactly. And then my four-year-old accidentally kicked it. Oh.

Ouchies and stickers go together (visit any pediatrician’s office to find out) but not if you’re mama. My stickers show up unexpectedly and they’re everywhere. Last week I was leaving home to attend this year’s first parent BBQ at 4 Year Old’s new school. I made an effort. I was wearing makeup, a dress shirt and a blazer. On my left hand there were two stickers: a blue car and another car saying “feel better”. I’ve noticed them. 3 hours later I’ve noticed them again. It was right before bedtime. Oh well.

Sarah of Left Brain Buddha

leftbrainbuddha.com

I am one of those lucky women who didn’t really have morning sickness. A few brief weeks of queasiness in the first trimester, and then I was fine. I thought I had escaped the nauseating moments of motherhood. Sure, I had babysat as a teenager, and I even worked in a daycare center for several years, so I knew about diapers, and spit up, and boogers. But I also knew about hand sanitizer. Armed with Lysol and Purell, I was ready to take on the gross inconveniences that would necessarily accompany the sweetness of my baby.

However, I never expected these nauseating, revolting, and downright repulsive experiences:

  • I never expected diaper explosions that seemed to contain more cubic volume of poop than could actually fit inside my child.
  • I never expected the extreme revulsion I would experience each time I used the “booger sucker” to remove more cubic volume of mucus than I thought could actually fit inside an infant’s head. I would have rather picked poop out of my baby’s hair with my bare hands than remove snot. Thinking of it even now turns my stomach. Speaking of which…
  • I never expected that a two-year-old could vomit with such force that chunks of regurgitated pineapple would land on me, in the driver’s seat, while my daughter puked in her carseat behind me.
  • I never expected to be in a doctor’s bathroom, my daughter perched on the toilet, my hands holding a urine sample cup underneath her, my bare arm ACTUALLY TOUCHING the center part of a public toilet, while my hand and fingers got splashed with my daughter’s pee.

Sometimes, there’s just not enough hand sanitizer in the world. I never expected that.

Rachel of The Tao of Poop

rachel

 

Confession: My baby was not the happiest baby on the block — despite reading Harvey Karp’s book, The Happiest Baby on The Block. With a name like that, who wouldn’t want to believe the hype? And, let me tell you, with a newborn crying for hours at a time, I was desperate for a prophet, even of the false kind. Enter Dr. Karp on his white horse (mixed metaphors appropriate for a new mom deliriously trying to stop her baby’s cries). His timing was impeccable. I opened that cardboard box from Amazon like I was unearthing the Holy Grail.

I embraced his 5S tenets like they were truths. I shushed, swaddled and swung Claire on her side, while she refused to suck a pacifier. The result: Lots of shushing and swinging coupled with endless hours of inconsolable crying. To add insult to injury: I personally vacillated between two different equally miserable states of mind:

1) Anger at the know-it-all Dr. Karp for preying on my desperation and duping me into spending $9.00 on his lousy book, which actually has the audacity to call itself “fool-proof.”

2) Anger at myself for being the only fool mother who was either a) duped by Dr. Karp, b) couldn’t figure out how to successfully implement these elementary techniques or c) the only idiot on the planet without the happiest baby on the block.

I realize that so many parents swear by this book (Jean). Personally, my time spent with Dr. Karp was similar to some of the dates that I had with bad boys in my twenties – full of promise with not a lot of follow-through.

Looking back, Dr. Karp wasn’t to blame for my reaction to his book. My expectations were. If I were writing a “What to Expect” book, it would have a super long title. One like: “Don’t have expectations about what your baby is going to need. Babies are generally alike, but they are also individuals, like us. Some of us like strawberries and squash, just like some babies like swaddling and shushing. Moms want to be prepared. We want to have answers and solutions, but sometimes there aren’t any. As cute as babies are, they often refuse to be tied up neatly with a bow (or to be swaddled).”

That would be the title and it would include two pieces of essential advice. 1) Trust your mom instincts and 2) Eventually, babies stop crying anyway.

There you go. Now, where’s my nine dollars? Oh, wait; I don’t have the title “Doctor” before my name. My mistake.

Sarah of The Sadder But Wiser Girl

The Sadder But Wiser Girl

Nowhere in any of those books I read was a chapter entitled “It’s All Fun and Games Until Someone Loses Their Glasses”.

When my daughter was a toddler, she snatched them off my face, threw them on the floor, and broke them. Two pairs. Might I add two pairs broken in similar fashion in two different grocery stores. My son? On several occasions in grocery stores he smacked my glasses off my face accidentally. I don’t think I owned a pair of glasses that were intact until my daughter had reached the ripe old age of two and a half.

Nowhere was there anything preparing for the physicality of motherhood.

Of the whole glasses thing.

Or the whole fact that I was unable to walk or turn my head after having my second child.

Or that lying on the floor was in fact a hazard when my daughter used me as a hurdle and kicked me in the head half a hundred dozen times. You’d really think I’d learn after the whole hundred times.

Or the whole licking thing, which is something else entirely, because my older child has licked every surface in the state of Iowa.
Those books? I read them until my husband forbade me from reading them, because I took every little thing that happened seriously. I must admit I was prepared for breastfeeding and illnesses and stuff like that. But the glasses and the licking stuff? Not.So.Much.

Did you read all the way through or did you skim? So, there’s not really an actual prize. But if you read it all, there is the fact that you’ve most definitely been thoroughly entertained, and you can follow all these fabulous peeps on Facebook, too! Thanks for joining us for our very first group post- we hope you liked it! <—- Also from Stephanie. 

Facebook Pages

Mommy, for Real
Mama Schmama
My Skewed View
Finding Ninee
IAMTHEMILK
Left Brain Buddha
The Tao of Poop
The Sadder But Wiser Girl


  • don - Holy smokes, that WAS long! Ha, a nickel for every time I’ve heard that and oh, that’s what she said? What?

    Sorry, this was great and I’ve not had my Ridlin yet. Perhaps I need to get together some dads to do a similar post! Dads are parents too you know!September 23, 2013 – 9:27 amReplyCancel

  • Kristi Campbell - Don,
    I know, sweets. Dads are parents too. I’ll write a post like this with you anytime. Just sayin. In case you’re sad and stuff.September 23, 2013 – 9:33 amReplyCancel

  • Janine Huldie - No one prepared for a colicky baby on the first try out or nights that turned into weeks of going without any sleep. I must say that was the tip of the iceberg, but when I think back I always remembered foolishly thinking we would just know what to do and how to do it. Yeah, I was naive and foolish. Even now, I have my moments where I think, “Did I handle that right?’ So, no parenting doesn’t come with an instruction manual and many days I am just so winging it. Great new series and look forward to more on this.September 23, 2013 – 9:40 amReplyCancel

  • Kristi Campbell - Janine,
    I think you’re handling it just right. There’s no instruction manual – we just have to trust ourselves!!September 23, 2013 – 9:47 amReplyCancel

  • Kathy Radigan - I wish I had these when I was pregnant and a new mom!! Loved each and every one of them!! And, not just because so many of the great ladies here are some of my favorites!! Motherhood can be very lonely in the beginning. For me it wasn’t until I started getting other mom friends who were going through the same thing I was that did I really start to feel like I was getting the hang of the mothering gig!! Thank you all!! xoSeptember 23, 2013 – 10:07 amReplyCancel

  • Undiagnosed but okay - This freaking made my morning! I want my $9 back, too Rachel. Although only because I am the only idiot on the planet who never could figure out that damn swaddle. Each of you did a fabulous job! I see another theme in our future 🙂September 23, 2013 – 12:30 pmReplyCancel

  • Jean - I support your refusal to have a penis on your neck. My son is willing to be clothed but most of the time tries to get by without wearing underwear. We can go from decent to “penis on neck” too quickly without underwear as a middleman.September 23, 2013 – 2:05 pmReplyCancel

  • Tamara - I did it! I made it to the end!!! I didn’t skim either. I thought I might skim to avoid the vomity parts, but I didn’t. I’m a vomit-phobic and I got pregnant and had children. I deserve free money for that.
    The poop and boogers and penises on necks? Not phobic of those.September 23, 2013 – 5:19 pmReplyCancel

  • Lanaya | Raising Reagan - This was so funny… I read it over at Rachel’s place.
    No one wants a penis on their neck …EVER!

    ¤´¨)
    ¸.•*´
    (¸¤ Lanaya | xoxo
    Raising-Reagan.comSeptember 23, 2013 – 6:15 pmReplyCancel

  • Mama C. - This is freaking HILARIOUS. I am laughing so hard, it’s criminal. I swear,Kristi, I think I may be dilated to 8 right now. One good sneeze, and I may have my daughter right here in this LaZBoy, and if I do, I’m naming her after you.September 23, 2013 – 11:33 pmReplyCancel

  • karen - OMG.. I love this…I know…all the things I’ve read did not prepare me for having a wild and loud boy who loves to jump, kick, growl, scream, and hit. It’s been a fun ride though and I’m looking forward to what more things Dino will teach me.September 24, 2013 – 12:25 pmReplyCancel

  • Rachel - I don’t think common sense prepared me for 2AM feedings!September 24, 2013 – 10:28 pmReplyCancel

  • Colleen @ MommieDaze - Oh, boy! I have a million of those things I never thought I would say. Like, “We don’t put batteries on out butt!”September 27, 2013 – 11:32 amReplyCancel

  • Kimberly - Ahem…thanks for the invite hookers.
    These are hilarious though and I can relate to so many of them. Seriously, there needs to be a book about all of the things you should really expect, like poop launching.September 28, 2013 – 10:22 amReplyCancel

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