Friends With Training Wheels.
The problem with blogging while you're in emotional flux is that you start to write and realize you're questioning everything you think and say. "Am I being defensive here?" "Maybe I'm transferring here...." "Maybe I'm glossing over my emotions?"
So all you can do is I don't know. Not post?
I've been looking forward to the day both my kids would be in school every single day since I found out I was pregnant with Madison. I saw those two pink lines and first I thought, "Wow, the pill really can fail." and then I thought....well if I hurry things along they'll both be in school every day when I'm 32."
I even put school supplies on my baby shower registry.
Max starts kindergarten on September 6 and all last year as I tried to keep up with the frenetic pace of Flogging Baby I dreamed of the day I'd have 3 hours to work every single day free of guilt. Guilt because Max watched way too many hours of television in order for me to meet my quota each month.
I'd be lying if I didn't tell you I get a little thrill when thinking about the afternoons of freedom awaiting me in just over a month. But, something very bad has happened. Something I didn't believe possible.
I am crying when I think of summer being over.
At Max's preschool I made friends. Friends who I love and need in my life so much. I used to feel sad all the great women I've met through this website didn't all live on one single block in well maintained homes where we all had the same tolerance for loud stupid music blaring for all the world to forcibly listen to. (This tolerance would be: zero.)
I often felt, through my years with the MOMS Club, that I was a misfit in this place. Motherhood looked different in other places, why couldn't I find mothers more like me?
And I found my friends and I don't mean to rub your noses in it, because I know so many of us are still feeling lost amongst the mothers in our vicinity. But I feel so lucky to know these women. I need them as much, actually I think at this point I need them more, than I need the internet mothers I know.
Since our kids have been in preschool together for the last two years, we've seen each other almost every day. At preschool pick up and car pool pick up. We've had weekly playgroups and we've had girl's nights in where I shared more of myself than I ever have with real life people besides Logan, we've had family nights where we talk and laugh and our kids play and then nights out where we have fun like adults.
I'm not very good at intimate relationships. It's amazing Logan and I have been able to forge the relationship we have. It points to both my honesty with myself and even more so, his extreme patience with difficult women.
I've often called my friends my "friends with training wheels". Sometimes, during conflict with someone or another I feel like I bring Helen Keller to the table, flailing about, to their Anne Sullivan trying to give me the gift of communication. ("It's 'Water' Helen! W-A-T-E-R!")
(As an example: Me: "I just don't know how to tell you when I don't like something you've said. Tell me how I can do it without hurting you." Her: "I don't know....don't personally attack me?" You mean that's not 'helpful'?)
("That's right Helen! It's a doll! D-O-L-L!")
One night early in the summer Leslie talked about how it's not going to be the same in the fall. All our kids are going to different schools and/or attending different kindergarten sessions (some gluttons are sending their kids to AM (insane!), while other lazy people (me!) are sending their kids to PM).
At first I told Logan how sad I was for Leslie and Andrea who both still have 2 and 3 smaller kids at home even though they're oldest kids are starting kindergarten. The other three of us are sending our youngest kids to school, which is like entering a whole new world of living. I was still busy thinking only of the 3 hours I'd have every day to myself.
For the ones with younger siblings at home, they still need as much support because it's hard being at home with little kids all day. It's physically exhausting and emotionally draining. At least it was for me and I only had two little kids at a time.
That night (where we stayed up until 2am on a Thursday talking about, you know, everything) when Leslie brought up how different everything will be next year I tried to contrast Leslie's talk about it being 'different' with how it won't be different. I said we'll still be able to get together as families. We can still have girl's nights. We'll have playdates on half days and vacations.....
But then I started to cry because it will be different and different is scary.
We've all been running in a hundred different directions this summer and it's already different. I'm trying to keep breathing but sometimes, when I let my brain go I start to flail ("It has a name Helen!").
I'm not very good at making friends. It took me nearly seven years to find these friends and I'd like to think the training wheels are working and showing me how to reach out to other people. I know all my friends are great at reaching out and just being who they are and attracting people to them.
I put a helmet on and knee pads and wrist guards and without the training wheels I drive my bike directly into the nearest tree. So I retreat to the safety of my crossed arms standing alone praying for the safety of The Circle Drive.
I was feeling bad for Leslie and Andrea who still have little kids to entertain and take care of all day. But what I realized is I'm also feeling bad for me because I'm afraid of being left behind.












