Duckling to signet

I’m back!

Hello again everybody, I can’t believe it’s been just over a year since my last chat! To be honest this evening’s read of ‘What’s the Point’ was rather very interesting.  I mentioned above that it’s been around thirteen months since I wrote the fore mentioned ‘blog’ and I’m amazed at how my perception of life has changed. Not quite a swan, but getting there!

As you may, or may not, already know, we are expecting our second baby in July and we are ecstatic!  It’s been quite a tough journey as technically this is our fourth pregnancy.  I was unsure as to whether or not I should write about this chapter of our lives, but miscarriage happens so frequently to women and, as there is no real medical explanation for this loss, many couples are left feeling confused and isolated.  We lost two babies; one in April 2008 and the other in May 2008 and it totally sucked.  I suppose people don’t really know what to say in these situations, I mean, we were the situation and we didn’t even have a clue what to say to each other let alone anybody else!  It’s funny because when you tell friends and family, you don’t really want sympathy; I suppose I just wanted people to acknowledge that the babies were there and have a soul and should be celebrated.

At the time though I was really struggling with the reasons as to why we lost them. What was wrong with me?  Did I do something?  Couldn’t I have any more kids?   And then there’s the guilt.  Guilt for Bethany not having a sibling to play with; the feeling of letting Nicky down, the babies down… the list goes on.  Thankfully, Nicky is my soulmate and he was and still is my rock.  He is the most wonderfully pragmatic person I know and I’m lucky to have had him on my side.  We have both grieved for the loss of our babies and most of the time in our own way, but we have never stopped talking about them and I think it’s important to do that. I still light candles for them at church and I know that they are always around.

I’m 22 weeks pregnant as I’m writing this and feel majorly blessed.  After taking quite a long break from baby making we fell quite quickly and as you can imagine it’s been rather tense this time around! I do though have a child in my belly and so the only way that I can be is positive.  And I’m getting there, slowly but surely.  When I wrote ‘Whats the Point’ I think I was the one trying to pigeon hole myself, nobody else was.  I’ve learned to let my guard down, to take a step back and look at the bigger picture.  Aye ok Nicky needs clean pants, but he also needs me to be financial director, and thats cool, I can do that, because we help each other.  I’ve learned that it’s ok to be a team, that there shouldn’t be set roles – although we both know where we stand – but I’ve also learned that it’s ok to blur the lines now and again.

I know I’ve got a cheek because I haven’t been on here for a while, but if there’s one thing I’ve learned this year it’s to talk a lot and listen more! Don’t bottle it up, share and support each other.  It’s taken me a while to realise but you are the only person that can change your own attitude. Last thing at night before you fall asleep, pick out three things that made you feel good and positive about yourself that day, be it helping an old lady with her shopping or taking your make-up off before you go to bed – whatever makes you feel amazing is worth its weight in signets.

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What’s the Point?

Well here goes; my name is Gail and I’m a 25 year old wife to Nicky, and mother to Bethany aged 2.  Now I know there are probably loads of women out there writing about their lives and husbands etc and blah, blah, blah, booooring – but I’m slightly disappointed to say that I seem to have reached this stage worryingly prematurely.  Not that I’m saying there’s anything that wrong with venting your frustrations and getting that much needed ‘I’ve had enough!’ support from your girlfriends – but I’m only 25: I have a degree; I have a mind, I am an individual – yet why do I feel so inconspicuous?

Now, don’t get me wrong (and it does go without saying) I adore my daughter and would do anything for her and I am in a ‘lucky’ position ( inverted commas, I’ll explain later)  that I’m able to be a full-time mum.  Please don’t think that I’m being ungrateful; I’m still learning and I’m still slightly confused.

So let’s start from the beginning.  I met my husband when I was 16, hanging around the streets pretending to smoke and acting cool, and we’ve been inseperable ever since.  Fast forward a few years and I’m out of uni, gotten engaged and started working towards a career as a chef.  Add another 2 years and I’m there; kitchen manager, decent salary, having the craic, fiancé doin ok, then… pregnant.  To be honest she saved our lives.  Pretty dramatic I know, but we were drinking whatever we earned, fighting whenever we were sober (and that’s rarely),  and so getting pregnant gave our lives a new meaning.  I loved being pregnant; no more 60 hour weeks, no more drinking and finally me and the mr began to get to know each other again and we realised that we did actually like each other.

Anyway, Bethany arrived and wowee:  that was a steep learning curve!  Nobody tells you how hard it is when the visitors stop coming and the hubby goes back to work!   Work being HIS new baby.  Not that he doesn’t adore Betty; he had just started up on his own garden design and landscape business (gardenimprovements.com – just in case he reads this and I haven’t taken the opportunity to plug the business!).  Betty’s the coolest thing on this planet, she is some craic and I fall in love with her more everyday – yet everyday I seem to be questioning my role within this bubble of responsibility.

By responsibility I mean, of course, the day to day running of the house; the bills, the health of the wee one and the hubby, making sure they are both safe, clean and warm – but also the thing that I find the most daunting:  Protection.  In having a family of my own, I am the one that has to protect my daughter from the things that my parents protected me from:  The reality of life – the things that do go wrong.  People die, money sucks whether you have it or you don’t, and it’s slowly hitting home that being a parent isn’t just about putting a plaster on a graze – it’s about protecting that graze from all the dirt that can get into it.

I mentioned earlier (and I did digress a little) that I would explain why ‘lucky‘ was in inverted commas. This is the reactionary phrase I hear from most women, intentionally or not, when they hear that I am a full-time mum.  Even those friends that I made at the ‘new mum’s group’ (all thirty-something career women) still say it now.  Even they seem to have forgotten, now they are back at work, how depressing it is heading out for the milk and bread run every day:  but why do they say that I’m lucky’?

They say, “You’re so lucky to stay at home not having to go to work and earn an income!”, yet they have the opportunity to regain some self belief and get a sense of themselves back… lucky them perhaps?

But am I in-fact lucky? Do I feel lucky?  Well the answer is no, not all of the time.  I would love to get back to my career and contribute towards the daily struggle that the recession has created – however this is where my pursuit falters; where my selfishness surfaces, and it takes all my of might to skim off the scum from the melting pot of this turmoil.

And so that brings me to a bigger question:  What do I do?  As a dutiful wife I seem to be the swan’s legs: paddling frantically whilst the swan takes the glory, gliding along being praised and admired; or I am mum: a wonderful gift that has saved our lives and continues to enrich my life everyday.  Do I try to be more like the swan, that everybody sees, now or hold fire until we’ve finished making signets and save my ugly duckling story for when my family is complete?

And now to answer my ultimate question:  What’s the point?  Well I suppose the point is in looking past the overspill of plates and mugs and cups from the GardenImprovements.com office; the trail of dirty clothes leading from where they were taken off all the way to the bathroom and beyond; the tantrums because “Big Cook Little Cook” has finished and it’s not on again ’til tomorrow.   I suppose it’s  the realisation that without me, there wouldn’t be any plates, mugs and cups, there wouldn’t be any tantrums, which means there wouldn’t be any Betty, and really that’s the point.

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