03 November 2012

10 things that are hard to do when you're a mom


Hi darling Milla.

It's Mom. 

We had an interesting (read: tiring) morning at (godawful) Cresta and so I'm a little grumpy. Here, just to make myself feel better, is a list of 10 things that are hard to do when you're a mom:
  1. Try on an outfit in YDE, if your kid is with you. The pram doesn’t fit into any of the change rooms, and if there’s a wheelchair-friendly change room it’s either locked or used for storage.
  2. Pop into the quick-shop at the petrol station when there's a sleeping child in the car.
  3. Move easily from floor to floor in a shopping mall, without heading to one or other remote corner for the lifts. Prams are not escalator-friendly. Or, rather, escalators are not pram-friendly.
  4. Push a trolley, if it isn’t the one with the baby thingy on top. Because, if you’re pushing the trolley, who’s gonna push the pram?
  5. Not be grateful that the screaming kid in the parking lot isn’t yours. This time.
  6. Explain to your toddler why she can have juice but she can’t have a sip of your Tab/wine/gin and tonic/[insert toddler-inappropriate drink here].
  7. Not justify your pineapple hair, biscuity pants, crumb-laden car or scribble-filled moleskine with the ubiquitous ‘I’m a mom’.
  8. Remember to turn off Mister Maker when the baby leaves the room, so that you don’t land up absently watching it/get too lazy to find the remote she’s hidden somewhere in the lounge.
  9. Not make yourself feel better about your (my) five extras kilos by calling it (yes, 18 months later) ‘baby weight’ and dismissing it wholesale with, ‘Oh well. I’ve had a child.’ [So has Heidi Klum. Four times.]
  10. Resist the temptation to make your child watch America’s Next Top Model with you because a) it’s 5am, b) there’s no sex or violence in it and c) you can’t watch Jog the Frog’s action songs again without killing someone.
But this morning you said, 'Love you Mommy.' Who needs YDE, the quick-shop or a 6-pack?

Love Mom x

23 July 2012

Our favourite things - July 2012

Hi Milla.

It's Mom.

Odd choice for a one-year-old
I have justified (to myself) the fact that I've not blogged in two months by referring (myself) to all the talking we now do in person. 

You have a lot to say. In so many different, amazing words. And I've been concentrating every second of spare time on those conversations. So there you have it: my excuse.

But I love this meme. So, let's do it again:

Favourite expression
Yours: 'Naughty boya' (referring to Reacher the Cat, your friend Amber and just about anyone else.)
Mine: 'This kid is a flipping genius.' (Yep, I'm one of *those* annoying moms.)

Favourite piece/s of clothing
Yours: Handbags (mine), boots (yours)
You even eat the green bit.
Mine: Headbands (I'm getting lazier as I age, and refusing to 'do' my hair for work)

Favourite hobbies
Yours: Reading
Mine: Reading, mindless TV-watching, Pinterest

Favourite drink
Yours: 'Dooce', sparkling water, anything out of a grown-up glass
Mine: Coffee. Strong. Black. 

Favourite food
Yours: 'MATO!' (tomatoes; this is not just bordering on obsession - it's full-grown fanaticism)
Mine: Pizza (I'm going through an I'll-eat-anything-fattening-so-bugger-my-rapidly-increasing-waistline phase)

Favourite snack
Where's Mr Hada?
Yours: You say 'nack' a lot (you have my appetite, and Dad's): matoes, sugarsnap peas, coco pops, 'stawbys'
Mine: Crap (see Favourite food above)

Favourite apps
Yours: Old MacDonald from Kids' Song Collection
Mine: Pinterest, Gautrain, Standard Bank, Discovery

Favourite TV shows
Yours: Lazytown? (Whatever you were watching at Raphy and Ben's house on Saturday)
Mine: Downton Abbey (yep, again)

Little curly-top, aka your 'jewfro'
Worst activity
Yours: Having your hair dried - either manually or with the hairdryer
Mine: Admin. Invoicing. Filing. 

Latest discoveries
Yours: 'No biting; only kithing'.
Mine: That unpolished nails are actually quite cool

Latest achievement
Yours: Where do I start? Talking. The stairs. 'Reading'. Packing things away.
Mine: Discovering that I love motherhood more than ever and more than I ever thought possible

Favourite place in the house
Yours: In the garden. Hands down. Looking for 'hadas', 'ehplanes', woowoos' and 'beds' (birds)
Mine: In my bed. Ideally, alone. Minus flailing octopus. And sometimes, minus Dad.

Favourite toys
Yours: Any 'mote' (remote), any 'aybet' (iPad)
Mine: My magic mouse

I love you. To distraction. 

Love Mom x

08 May 2012

The Night of the Long Knives

Hi Milla.

It's Mom.

Shit - you are cute. You've just (thanks for nothing, Yaya) started shaking your head and saying 'No, no'. Gawd help us all. And despite the fact that I am sick as a dog, with long knives in my infected throat, you kept me up all night as I tried vainly not to breathe my lergy-ridden germs on you. But I still love you.

This (Tsingy Nature Reserve, Madagascar) is exactly how my throat feels.
New words (in addition to 'No'):

1. Peeping
2. Amal (animal)
3. Opa (Gerald)
4. Tatabyebye
5. Wow!
6. Hey?

You loved our (very brief) sojourn in the bush last weekend, especially watching the elephants from the deck and going on your first game drive - or 'kiddie ramble' as Ranger Brett called it. You also made up for not-so-wonderful behaviour on the drive home by being an angel the whole way there.

So that's something. I guess.

You, gazing at the ellie at our water hole.
The ellie, avoiding eye contact with you.
Be-hatted and well-behaved on the Land Rover.
You didn't blink when the lion roared. But you pointed and said, 'Woowoo'.
I know this angle makes your head look big. But it isn't in real life. Okay, it is. But so is mine. We're a shop-in-the-men's-section hat pair, you 'n me.

This weekend we also learned that you are very easily soothed, regardless of the size of or motivation for the tantrum, by an iPhone. Any iPhone. I'm proud to say that Blackberrys don't do it for you. But woe betide us all when your skills extend beyond pushing the Home button to de-activating the key lock.

And there's one final lesson I learned from you this week: you're a real little Aries.

I usually don't believe in this hunka-runka astrological tomfoolery, but Natasha - my niece - is an Aries and boy, does she know her own mind. When she was little and she was told to eat her dinner or leave the table, she'd get up and leave the table. If it was the naughty corner or peas, she'd take the naughty corner.

So, a few nights ago, we're in the bath and you're repeatedly yanking your penguin bath toy thingy off the wall and throwing it (water and all) onto the floor and bathmat. I'm getting increasingly gatvol and eventually, I say, 'Right - that's it. No more penguin for you. Say tata, penguin. Penguin's gone!' And you smile disarmingly at me, turn around and merrily wave tata to the penguin. Bloody hell. The nerve.

I love you.

Love Mom x

28 April 2012

Why I feel utterly let down tonight

Hi Milla.

It's Mom.

You're one year and twenty-six days old today (I checked my iCal) and, bizarrely, I've been feeling increasingly sad about my birth experience. Yes, you were the ultimate outcome and yes, you are my life's greatest joy and most beautiful, brilliant achievement - but the few hours before you arrived were among the most traumatic I've ever had. And I need to think it through by writing it.

So, please bear with me.

1. I feel let down by my antenatal teacher and her posse of lactation and other specialists. 

Dad and I took the classes so seriously and, at the time, they made me feel so much more prepared for what was coming. I even wrote to Tina Otte afterwards, to thank her. (Not to mention dubbing her 'Tina the Terrific' in this very blog, which now makes me want to howl with pain...)

How scared I was. How blind. How desperate for any knowledge at all. And how wrong of her, and the industry at large, to never once tell me that no lessons could prepare me. To look me in the eye and say: 'These are my opinions. They aren't the rules. And no matter what you hear, the only thing you can be prepared for is how unprepared you both are. And that's fine. Do what works.'

I lapped up the breast-feeding propaganda and the natural birth pressure. I decided that drugs wouldn't be part of my 'birth plan'. Nor would forceps, vacuums or anything else 'unnatural'. I was ready to do battle with the clinic sisters over formula top-ups. I had my birthing ball pumped up. And I silently judged every other expecting mom who told me of her scheduled Caesar and/or her intention not to breast-feed.

Tina, you told me that everyone can breast-feed. That's a lie. Not everyone can. And the fact that I couldn't, because my small breasts and little breast tissue meant unbelievably low milk volumes, made me feel abnormal and damaged. It made me struggle and battle and half kill myself to pump 10 measly millilitres of milk a night, when I should have been holding my baby instead.

2. I feel let down by my gynecologist, who I referred to in Feb 2011 as 'Jivvy the Genius'

We'd worked so hard, Dad and I, to build a rapport with Boris Jivkov - starting with leaving my old gynae because Boris had a reputation for being pro-natural birth and the old guy was a Caesar king. We even put up with the 90-120 minute waits in Boris's reception area, every time, because he had such a great manner and seemed to care so much and really talked to us. Both of us.

But all that means nothing when your gynae makes holiday plans for the weekend before your scheduled induction and doesn't tell you. Or doesn't get his staff to tell you. Or doesn't get the midwives he recommended you use to tell you.

It means nothing because, when you do go into labour, two nights before the induction, and you fail to progress after 10 hours, and your baby turns to face up, and an emergency C-section is needed, and you're rushed into theatre sobbing at the loss of your imagined birth experience and stoned out of your mind on the pethidine that you should never have agreed to take, you see a glowering face there that you don't recognise, and she doesn't recognise you either, because she's Dr Bothner, a locum, and she is in a real hurry to get your CS done so that she can get to a bar mitzvah, and she's never seen you before, and still hasn't, a year later, because she never made eye contact. Not once. Not even when she snapped off her gloves and fucked off.

Boris, how wrong of you not to get Sandy or Reggie to give me a call - or actually, bugger it, to give me a call yourself - to let me know that you'd be going away and that, if you happened not to be in town if I did go into spontaneous labour, you had a plan. And the plan's name was Dr Bothner.

3. I feel let down my my midwife, who fell asleep during my labour. And who hurt me. 

This little element of the story begins with a friend of mine. Let's call her C. She fell pregnant a few weeks after I did, and - around 13 weeks into her pregnancy - began calling me for advice. One of my first tips was to use Boris. She did. One of his first tips to her was one of the same he'd given me: if you want a natural birth, use a midwife. He recommended a few, but I chose Marilyn Sher - his preferred one.

And so did C.

C went into labour a few weeks early, which happened to be the night before I did. And the result of that was that, by the time I phoned my midwife to tell her labour had started, she'd already been up for 12 hours with C - helping to deliver, via vaginal birth, a beautiful and tiny little girl. Marilyn had a few hours of sleep, and met us at the Parklane, where she subjected me to the most excruciating agony in the form of an internal exam, that I remember now as far, far worse than the contractions at their very worst.

But then, she kept leaving the room. In fairness, my progress was slow. I dilated only one centimetre in four hours. And after the two epidurals failed and the pethidine was administered, I was in and out of consciousness. But Dad had to keep going out to find her - and waking her up to see to me. I felt abandoned even then, in my state.

Baby girl...

I'm so sorry to harp on about what an ordeal this whole thing was, when you are what came from it. When you make it so worth it. But I am only now beginning to realise that it has traumatised me so severely that I feel sick to my stomach at the idea of going through it again.

And that makes me very sad. Because if the people I trusted so blindly to be on my side; the 'team' Dad and I were so smug about, had really been there for me, everything may have been different.

I may still have had the emergency Caesar, but I'd have felt less of a failure for it, and I'd have given up on the battle to breast-feed much, much sooner, and I'd have been less shocked by the strange OB, and I'd have felt supported and cared for by my midwife and maybe I might not have had such severe post-natal depression.

And I think the reason I'm thinking about all of this now is because I'm writing for Living & Loving, about things like hypnobirthing, and I'm hearing and reading the birth stories of people who describe theirs as 'beautiful'. And I'm meeting moms with three and four children, and wondering, 'How could anyone go through birth more than once?' And tonight my heart feels bent and slightly broken.

But I love you. You are worth it. I love you. And tomorrow when we see each other again, you'll smile at me and my heart will feel better. Just like it does every day.

Love Mom x

20 April 2012

Our favourite things - April 2012

I'm borrowing this blog meme from Tanya of Dear Max. I love it.

Hi Milla.

It's Mom.

You're a year and 18 days old today. It's bloody freezing outside. And, in the 30 minute gap I have before your first Clamber Club class, I'm gonna record some of our favorite things right now.

Favourite expression
Yours: 'There' (yes, still)
Mine: If I'm being honest, it's probably 'F**k'. But there's also a lot of 'Are you with me?'

Favourite piece/s of clothing
Yours: Socks and shoes - mine, Dad's, yours, those belonging to strangers
Mine: Scarves

Giving Amber a wagon ride
Favourite hobbies
Yours: 'Riding' your pink bike and reading Playtime Peekaboo
Mine: Pilates, walking with Auntie Mon and Amber, reading

Favourite drink
Yours: Whatever we're drinking
Mine: Is that really a question? Gin and (sugar-free) tonic.

Favourite food
Yours: Chicken viennas, peas, rice. Okay, whatever we're eating.
Mine: Sashimi, carpaccio, tartare

Favourite snack
Yours: Fruit
Mine: Fruit


Favourite apps
Yours: Moobaa
Mine: Camera+, Flipboard, Fancy

Favourite TV shows
Yours: You're not very into TV, but... Mythbusters? And Bananas in Pyjamas and McBoing Boing.
Mine: Downton Abbey (and, if I'm being honest, CSI Las Vegas)

Worst activity
Yours: Having someone else brush your teeth (you like doing it yourself)
Mine: VAT returns - and sometimes, fighting with you about your teeth

Reacher, and the lesser-spotted Dallas
Latest discoveries
Yours: That Reacher's fur is lovely to stroke when drinking your night-time bottie
Mine: Classic FM, coral lipstick, apple-flavoured fizz pops (the extra-large ones)


Latest achievement
Yours: Mastering the On/Off button on the iPhone
Mine: Being 3.2kg from my goal weight - after a year of being a greedy hog


Favourite place in the house
Yours: In front of the poster on my office door
Mine: In the bath, in 'the beed, the beed, the jolly beed' and in the office

Favourite toys
Yours: The blocks from your wagon, your talking caterpillar and Dad's Apple TV remote
Mine: At the moment, my GHD. Before that, 'our' iPhone. Always, 'our' Kindle.

I love you.

Love Mom x

15 April 2012

A photo finish - April

This is the most delicious car seat I've ever eaten.

If you're happy and you know it...

Mom, Mom - make the woowoo come here!

Yes? Is there something I can help you with?

Dad, why in hell does my T-shirt say 'Dude'?

I've taken my sweet time, but now I lurv Hello Kitty.

Hoo boy - the deliciousness...

Hello, my darling Milla.

It's Mom.

What a whirlwind the last few months have been.

You're growing like a little beanstalk (I guess that makes Dad the grumpy giant and me...um...Jack...?) and getting more adorable by the second.

And, so I don't forget anything...

Some milestones:

1. Running (No, not walking. Running. At speed.)

2. Saying 'good girl', 'Lolo' (Lourancia), 'Yaya', 'cock-cock' (as in -a-doodle-doo), 'moo', 'more', and a few other things - but not flippin' 'Mama'; at least, not when looking at me. May I remind you, dear girl, that I was in agonising labour for 10 HOURS? Can you say 'Mama'? Please?

3. Putting things into the right-shaped holes

4. Fetching and carrying

5. Going upstairs by foot and not on all fours, if someone holds your hand

6. Hugging

7. Kissing - kind of, with your mouth wide open and in an 'I'm-trying-hard-to-eat-you' kind of way

8. Saying hello and bye-bye

9. Putting your head down when you're tired

10. Playing alone in your cot in the mornings (Thank you, thank you, thank you, Auntie Tanzy, for telling Mom to put toys and a sippy cup in your cot overnight!)

And a bonus one: Eating funny things like olives, squid heads, naartjie peel, marrows, edamame, and - bleccchhh, I can barely type this without gagging; whose friggin' child are you? - chopped liver.

Your birthday

Your first birthday was a huge success. You loved your amazing rubber duck cake from Auntie Vanessa, you were spoiled with beautiful (and educational) gifts, and everyone made a huge fuss.

Also, Mommy and Daddy survived the first year! So we all had cause to celebrate. Pics to follow, for posterity.

Life in general

Mommy and Daddy are good. A bit stressed about all sorts of things and a lot tired, but plodding on and making the most...

1. The big house is:

a) looking utterly magnificent,
b) making Mom and Dad remember why they fell in love with it in the first place,
c) no longer costing billions now that the renovations are done and it's been rented out for a year and
d) as secure as the Reserve Bank, so in the running for potential occupation by us - yes, after all that - in a year's time.

2. The cluster is still home: snug, cosy, friendly, sunny and happy. We love it here. I realised today how very unhappy Dad and I were in the old place, and what a difference it makes to feel completely at peace in your home.

I also realised that the coming winter doesn't scare me as much as the last one. Dad says that this is because I'm not depressed this time round, and he's mostly right, but even the PND twinges I've been having lately are bearable - in this house.

3. I like threes, so I feel obliged to add one more life-in-general item, even tho' my back aches (you're damn cute, but damn heavy), I have work to do, and it's 8.45pm. So let's leave it there, shall we?

May you have wonderful birthdays that are as memorable and special as Yaya always ensured that mine were, and may you work hard to make your loved ones' birthdays special too.

I love you.

Love Mom x

25 March 2012

Chattanooga Choo-Choo!

Hi Milla.

It's Mom.

We're a week away from your 1st birthday (can you believe it?) and you're getting cuter by the minute. You're also talking. A lot.

So I figure that, before you get any older (and start talking back), I need to document some of the utterly adorable things you say.

1. 'Up.' You say this perfectly clearly. And in context. When you want to be picked up, you go up a stair or you get to the relevant bit in 'Twinkle, twinkle...'

2. 'Go.' You say this one in context too - but with Lourancia's accent. So it sounds like 'goh', not 'goe'. Very cute. Especially when you're marching out of a room, after the cats. But possibly something we should nip in the ol' bud (the pronunciation).

3. 'Yay!' This is my favourite. If you do something clever (d-uh, all the time...), I clap my hands and say, 'Yay, Milla!' So you've started saying 'Yay' and clapping your hands. Complete with a waspy private school accent. I love it.

4. 'Ba-ba.' This is your version of the first bit of Baa Baa Black Sheep a.k.a your Go-The-F**k-To-Sleep song. BUT it's also how you say 'bear', 'book', 'ball' and a host of other things that start with 'b'.

5. Right, now I'm just giving a list - cos I'm tired: 'doh' (door), 'deh' (there), 'ta-ta' (goodbye), 'gogo' (Hilary), 'didi' (Cindy), 'gak' (cat) and 'woo-woo' (dog). But no bloody 'mama' or 'dada'. Can you get a move on with those, please? Thanks.

May the next week be filled with fun, laughter, kisses and good times. And then you'll be O.N.E.

I love you.

Mom x

P.S Dad doesn't actually believe that you can say any of these things. The doofus. But you can chew on demand. Flippin' genius.

12 March 2012

This has been a hard day.

Hi Milla.

It's Mom.

I'm going to have a bit of a whinge now. I'm sorry. But before I do, let me congratulate you on being cuter today than you've ever been. Dad and I agree: you are the ultimate deliciousness.

You're walking like a champ. You're able to understand most of what we say, and can bring us specific things - like your socks, your shoes, your book, your duck, your sunglasses, a ball, our phones - on request. You're also talking, and this blows me away. Cos it's real talking. Not babbling.

A week ago, the only word in your vocabulary was 'deh' (there). As of this afternoon, you can also say 'goh' (go), 'boo' (book), 'doh' (door), 'poon' (spoon), 'gak' (cat) and a few others. Amazing.

You're AMA-ZING.

Right, the whinge.

1. We're ... Jew-ish.

And this is a problem now that I'm trying to find you a school. My heart wants a Jewish school for you, because that's what I had, and loved, and what made me feel secure and comfortable with who I am. My heart also wants a Jewish school because I feel horribly, hideously guilty not sending you to one.

But my head acknowledges, albeit resentfully, that the oft-lauded Jewish education of old is not what it once was. There are better schools out there. Better-run, better-financed, better-equipped, better-staffed schools.

The fact that I probably can't afford one notwithstanding, and aside from the very real fact that I should have put you down when I peed on those (two) sticks... and not waited til now.

Anyway, bottom line? There are two pre-schools on the shortlist. One, a Jewish play school and pre-school nearby; the other, a multi-faith Montessori pre-school. I've provisionally registered you at both. I need to visit more schools, clearly, because I want a mix of them. I want the best of both for you.

Alas, there's only one primary school on the current shortlist. But my odds of winning the Euro Lotto are higher than those of getting you one of five coveted places at this particular establishment, as you're not a sibling of a current student, nor am I an alumnus. So, here I go again, darlin'. Lookee, lookee.

2. I'm feeling sensitive.

Twitter was a twitchy place for me today. There were under-currents and tensions and innuendoes, and while I'm usually super-chilled about those sorts of things, I took them very much to heart today. I've decided to lay my cards on the table in future and to take the risks inherent in saying what I think.

3. I'm feeling PND-ish.

So, I've been better for ages and ages. The meds work, I'm loving motherhood (even working motherhood), and I'm more or less back to the old, mad, energetic me. Except that I have the odd daily bout of sadness. Of heartsoreness. Of pre-panic-attack-twinginess. Nothing actually comes of them, and they're not helped by my chronic inability to eat properly or get enough sleep, but they are there all the same and they're taking it out of me. I'm depleted. There's not enough of me left at the end of the day.

4. I'm feeling guilty.

At this moment in time, I don't want more children. I wanted my perfect little girl. I got you. I adore you. And you're all I want, need and - if we're being honest - can handle :) So I'm not in the market, so to speak, for another birth or another baby (I loved being pregnant, so I'll gladly do that bit again.)

Is there something wrong with me? A lot of the moms I'm friends with, even those who work and are utterly, utterly exhausted, are gearing up to gear up for #2. And when they ask if I want more children, and they all ask, and I say No, it's all they can do to thinly veil their absolute horror. Some even tell me that it's 'cruel' to have only one child. Bullshit. I had a great life. But that requires its own post...

So, there you have it. Mommy's four whinges for Monday 13 March 2012. It was 72 months (six years) yesterday since Dad and I became a couple, and sadly, this has been a hard day. But now I'm off for dinner and a movie with Dad (you're sleeping over at Yiayia), so it can only improve.

May you have mostly easy days - and be able to handle the few hard days that come.

I love you.

Mom x

11 March 2012

'Support panty thin' isn't thin...

Hi Milla.

It's Mom.

Sunday morning. 9am. You're asleep in Dad's arms, on the couch. He's asleep in yours. It's a delicious thing to watch, but more than that it means an hour or so of free time for me. I've had a strong coffee and run a bubble bath. And guess what I'm doing?

Yup, blogging.

Why the fek is this girl wearing Spanx?
Sitting on the edge of the bed - bath going cold in the other room - and blogging. Because something interesting occurred to me this morning, while I was browsing on The Fancy (my favorite iPhone app and the most fascinating thing ever, for the moment):

The kind of thin you look when you wear granny broeke a la Bridget Jones is not real thin.

I have become (or, if I'm being honest, I've been for a while) the kind of person who looks okay in most clothes but requires the heavy-duty assistance of Woolworths Spanx to look truly streamlined. And that's not okay with me. It's not good enough.

You see, The Fancy is characterised by many, many haut couture photos of, among other things, women is exquisite clothing. And while I'm usually not altogether wowed by fashion in general and expensive, floaty, skinny-person fashion in particular, I've realised that the open back look is quite lovely.

Like this.

But you can't enlist the help of granny panties for your back.

So, the time has come to stop farting about, to re-read my '10 breaths, 10 kilometres, size 10' post, to start eating 3-5 meals a day like a normal person, and to lose those last 3.5 blasted kilos (tho' by now it's probably a nice, round 4kg) sometime before you're old enough to grab my belly fat, shake it and sing 'The Wheels on the Bus'.

Your birthday is in three weeks.

Yes, in three short weeks' time you'll be one year old. Kan jy dit glo?

Aside from the amazingness of that, and aside from the fact that you've been in our lives for a whole year now, making us happy and proud and being funny and cute and clever and generally wonderful, in three weeks you'll be a toddler. Not a baby.

And I'll be a mom. Not a new mom. Just... a mom. A normal mom.

And as I've said many, many times to anyone who'll listen, any baby fat I still have by then isn't baby fat. It's just fat.

However, since there's no way in hell I'm going to have lost those 3.5 (okay, 4) dratted kilos in three weeks, I'm going to focus instead on eating more often, eating more slowly, exercising with purpose - not just because it's in my diary - and not snacking on your leftovers.

Onse Charlize. Circa 1980-something.
I swore I'd never be that mom. Too late, she cried.

And just in case you're starting to wonder how vacuous I really am, you can stop wondering, beautiful child of mine. I am vacuous. Some of the time. I believe it's healthy. A measure of vanity, vapidity and vacuity is perfectly acceptable in a person, provided that they're also sufficiently intelligent to accurately define all three.

May you be mostly a rocket scientist, but sometimes a vain one.

I love you.

Mom x

23 February 2012

April Fool's Day

Is this not the second cutest thing you've ever seen?
Hi Milla.

It's Mom.

I have a little story to tell you, and then a quick update on how unbelievably cool you are, aged almost 11 months.

First, the story.

On 1 April 2010, Mom and Dad had a party. In those days we still lived in the dank, dark cave called Riverlodge, with the jacuzzi we seldom used. So, we invited our mates, bought copious bottles of wine, flung some rubber ducks into the water, dumped a couple of blankies on the lawn and had a jol.

We drank, we jacuzzied, we ate pizza (I think) and then Auntie Katie and I missioned off to buy something from the garage on Conrad Drive. Must have been ice. Anyway, as we were driving back up the driveway towards the house, I mentioned to Katie (in my more-than-slightly intoxicated state) that I was considering not renewing my prescription for the Pill.

This was as much a shock to me as it was to Katie, because Dad and I had been married three years and were laissez-faire about our plans to have a baby. In fact, if I'm being honest, the only thing I knew for sure was how utterly terrifying I found the idea of parenthood. 

But - the decision was made, out there, by the large fern. 

That night, after multiple hours of clean-up, I (soppily) discussed it with your Dad. He was keen, and we were on. We expected it to take 6-12 months to get pregnant (but were convinced I was already pregnant by the next morning anyway) and, in a fairly hands-off sort of way bought a pack of ovulation sticks and got on with it. We didn't tell anyone, tho'.

Dad went away on business (briefly landing himself in a sticky situation; more on that when you're a lot older) and I got on with whatever people-without-kids do when they have free time and are on diet. I can't remember. Anyway, one night I dined with Auntie Sophie and, over sashimi and Coke Zero, told her I felt 'funny'. 

'Get a pregnancy test,' she suggested. 'What for?' I asked. But, on the way home, I got two.

And guess what? The very next morning I woke your Dad at 7am - even though he'd only returned from Cape Town five hours before - and told him I was about to take a preggie test. 

I took one and then, disbelievingly, another. I was pregnant. Well, pregnant enough for two over-the-counter tests to say so, but not pregnant enough for Dad or me... So we went off for a 10am doctor's appointment and a blood test. And by 1pm, Bruce had called with the news.

Remember: this was the end of July 2010. (The World Cup had just ended. Dad and I had spent a few freezing weeks in Sedgies, at The Shack.) We'd started trying on 1 April 2010. And you'll never believe what happened exactly one year later, to the very day... 

I went into labour with you. And you were born on 2 April 2011, at 8.45am. Kan jy dit glo? Exactly 12 months after dumping the Pill, I had you.

What a lucky, lucky, lucky mommy I am.

Now, the update:

It's 23 February. You're five weeks away from your 1st birthday and doing amazing things:
  1. Walking! Four steps and fall-down, but so cute.
  2. Saying 'there' (pronounced 'deh').
  3. Knowing who Milla is - and thumping your chest when you say 'deh'.
  4. Looking up at the light when we ask where it is.
  5. Looking for Reacher when we ask where he is.
  6. Patting your tummy if I say 'scrub, scrub' to you while we're in the bath.
  7. Clapping when Hilary shows you her clip [Ed: What's a vowel between friends?].
  8. Using Dad's MOOBA Animal app on his iPad.
  9. Giving big open-mouthed kisses / trying to eat me.
  10. Getting adorable golden ringlets all over your head. Where did you come from?
You're delicious. I adore you.

Love Mom x

13 February 2012

I don't like kids*.


Hi Milla.

It’s Mom.

*Okay, that headline is deliberately provocative. Sorry.

Something funny has happened to me. Something utterly unexpected and quite cool. But first – a bit o’ background:

I don’t like kids. That’s no secret. I’m just not a kid person. I’ve never been the sort to peer into prams, to clutch tiny babies in my arms, to joyously attend noisy, messy, mommy-cliquey kids’ parties. I’m not wild about having children in my house. Again, they mess. And they scare my cats. (Some more than others.)

I do like kids I’m related to. And the kids of very close friends. Thank G-d. But in a very ‘cool spinster auntie’ kind of way. And the older they get – the closer to 16 if we’re being honest – the more I like them.

‘Why have a kid then?’ you may be wondering. I don’t know. I guess I always believed that some sort of switch would be flipped and I’d turn into Auntie Dina (who is mal about kids). Well, that’s exactly what happened when you were born – but with a catch. I still didn’t like other people’s kids. I adored you.

HOWEVER, ten and a bit months in, something weird is going on. Because as I get more accustomed to kid stuff – the schmutz, the racket, the smells, the cries, the cuteness – I find that I also like a lot more kids than I used to.

  • I’ll pick up a friend’s baby out of absolute choice – not because I feel obliged to.
  • I’ll sniff a tiny infant because he smells so completely yummy and baby-ish.
  • I’ll cuddle a toddler just because she’s chubby.
  • I’ll look into every pram in every shopping mall, and smile at the moms (in the past, I ignored them completely; ‘Shopping malls and other public spaces are no place for children…’)

 I’ll also welcome kids into my home, because what you’ve done to the carpets and couches can’t really be worsened by anyone else’s child…

…and because I don’t mind nappies being changed on my dining room table or my bed…

…and because the cats are used to you and other little people and most importantly…

…because kids make a house feel nice.

What’s also happening, and I acknowledge that this could be because my friends’ kids are growing up and becoming interesting little people, is that the kids I know are (mostly) divine. Sweet, kind, funny, smart. A pleasure to be with. [Jade, this piece was inspired by your Raphael and Katie, by your Liam.)

May you continue to be the delicious creature who makes people love her (even if they’re not really kid people) and who puts her arms up to be held by anyone who smiles at you [Ed: evil strangers with agendas notwithstanding].

I love you.

Mom x

10 February 2012

Joburg and the workaholics

Hi Milla.

It's Mom.

I've been thinking a lot about stress and time management and pressure lately, as part of my SLOW LIVING philosophy for 2012 (which is mostly going well, but which I sometimes forget about).

And I've realised that a big part of being a Johannesburger is being chronically frantic. It goes like this:

'How are you?'


'Omigod - hectic!' or 'So busy I could die.' or 'Exhausted.' or 'Having a manic week.' And on and on...

Capetonians and Durbanites and people from small Karoo towns say things like:

'Good, man.' and 'Doing well, thanks.' and 'Taking it easy.' and 'Nicely busy.'

In Joburg, we seem to be bizarrely proud of existing in a state of perpetual mania. We (and I make this assertion based on myself and many of my fellows, although I acknowledge it's by no means empirical...) can't wait to let everyone know how overloaded we are. We like having no time to breathe.

But - is this any way to live, really? And - does it speak to success? I'm beginning to think not.

Your Auntie Georgi, one of the most capable people I know, once told me that good time management is not about filling every minute with work, but about having empty time to do un-worky things.

(I can't remember the exact words she used, but it was something along the lines of, 'People who are always swamped are shitty planners...' And it stuck.)

Now that we are blessed with you, and since I got mid-way through my pregnancy, if I'm being honest, I feel like I have an excuse to let go a bit. To sit with you on the couch at lunch-time. To finish work at 5pm. To go to a 3pm Pilates class on a Tuesday. And whoever doesn't like it - bollocks to them.

I work bloody hard. [She types, defensively...]

Here's an anecdote:

I told a client (a rabid workaholic and all-round 'traditionally' successful over-achiever) that my offices would be closed from 10 December to 10 January. She looked at me, utterly horrified, and said, 'Oh - a month off. Nice for some people.'

This would have devastated me before, because it implies a measure of doubt as to my professionalism and commitment. But I simply said (okay, snapped), 'Yep - that's why I have my own business.'

I'm learning that true success means down-time. Good time management means open space. A solid business translates into nice, long holidays. And mental health sometimes requires mid-day exercise.

I'm also learning that giving 110% is bullshit. Even giving 100% is bullshit. Because 80% is still an A.

May you have balance rather than mania. And may you be proud of it.

I love you.

Mom x

31 January 2012

Big fat secrets

Strawberries excite me beyond reason. Yeeha.
Hi Milla.

It's Mom.

Auntie Gail, our WeightWatchers Tannie (and the author of the magnificent Big Fat Secrets), suggested last week that we identify a year-long weight/health goal.

All very well - I do this every year. And by the end of January, I've forgotten about it in the rush to scarf a packet of marshmallows.

But the kicker (more info on Gailie's blog, if you want it - tho' Mom knows you can't read just yet) is that you have to make the goal/s public.

Otherwise, you're not accountable.

Yikes.

And since we know no-one really reads Mom's stuff (except Yiayia and Dad - hi guys), and there's no way in hell I'm going to put my fat-fighting goal-setting on Bizcommunity, where I do get read, it's all on you, sunshine.

So...

Here goes...

1. The very first resolution I have ever made and kept, in 30 years, is this year's SLOW LIVING one. So I'm going to start with that, because I'm proud of it. In a serious attempt to manage my stress levels, enjoy my life more and feel calmer and less fraught, I have started to do everything in a more measured, more present, slower manner. Driving, talking, eating, thinking, walking, working. Alles. It works.

Mini goals: Leave the office at 5pm every day. Play on the floor with you. Read. Daydream. Have more empty time. Write in coffee shops. Lounge in bookstores.

2. Before I found out I was pregnant with you, you little bundle of yumminess, I was 0.5kg from my goal weight. I'd love to get back there. TO A SIZE 10. To my pretty jeans. I have 3.8kg to lose. Which, if you amortise it over the 8.5 weeks til your 1st birthday, translates into 470g a week. Now, for me, that's a lot of weight to lose in a week. Which means I have to stick to my 18 points and exercise.

Mini goals: No sugar at night (gives me horrible nightmares). Drink more water (the intention is 6 glasses, but I seldom manage more than 4). Cook more. Shop more. Eat less fat (read: red meat).

3. Right: exercise. I would love, by the end of 2012, to RUN A 10KM RACE. 'How the hell are you going to do that?' you ask, incredulous. I don't know. But I figure that if I walk with Mon once a week (5km) and walk/run with Sarah once a week (5km), I'll get there. I do need a plan though. (Note to self: Ask Gailie.)

Mini goals: Monica Mondays, Claire Tuesdays, Sarah Wednesdays, Sarah Thursdays. A 1km run by Dad's birthday. A 2km run by your birthday. A 5km run by Yiayia's birthday. 

So if we summarise it into a nice slogan - I love that shit - it's:

10 DEEP BREATHS. SIZE 10. AND 10 KILOMETRES.

That's quite enough of that, I think. Time to start my writing.

I love you, my bunny. May you be healthy, wealthy and wise.

Love Mom x