Mom Moment
10 Things I Wish I Knew Before Having Kids
by Aunt Becky on April 20, 2012 at 7:38 AM
That dumb commercial "having a baby changes everything" drives me bonkers every time it flashes onto my television screen, causing me to scream (at least, in my head), "NO SHIT SHERLOCK!"
There were a lot of things I expected going into the parenting gig -- poopy diapers, jars of creepily-colored baby food, sleepless nights. But there are a select few things I'd never, EVER stopped to consider before popping three kids out of my delicate lady-bits.
Here they are.
- I'd have to hide The Good Stuff. Yeah, you know what I mean. The last chocolate chip cookie? The rest of Mommy's Medicine (read vodka)?
- Eventually, my roly-poly, chubby-cheeked shit machines were going to morph from being a sweet puddle of baby goo into a talking, breathing person who had the capacity to TALK BACK to me.
- I was going to have to explain to my formerly roly-poly, chubby-cheeked shit machines how, in fact, Mommy got ANOTHER baby growing inside her belly.
- I was THEN going to have to explain that, no, my formerly roly-poly, chubby-cheeked shit machine, the new baby wouldn't be exiting via my belly button (bonus points for creativity, though!) and pray like hell that I didn't have to tell them how babies were born.
- I was going to have to share. Everything. Personal space. Sleeping quarters. Clothes. Money. My own dinner. It's one thing to be all, "oh, there, there, kids, sharing is AWESOME," but we, as adults, have learned the truth: sharing sucks.
- I was going to be sick. For over 18 years. Straight. Hand-washing? Not even remotely effective against kid-germs. I'm considering buying a HazMat suit, but that's mostly wishful thinking.
- I would never use the bathroom alone again. Ever. Now, even the cats join me while I take a pee.
- I'd be bored to tears by the games kids want to play. Now I know why my own mother booted me out of the house and locked the door behind me each morning -- I was boring. My kids, much as I love those little germ-factories, are too.
- If you feed 'em, they keep growing. When they grow, they need new clothes. And clothes for an 11-year old don't induce the same type of ovulating that wee newborn clothes do.
- They begin to ... smell. Like their feet smell. While I loved gnawing on my newborn baby's feet, I'm pretty sure that the odor from my 11-year old's feet could sheer paint off walls.
What do YOU wish you'd known before you had kids?
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NatAndCo
AllisonWD
chigirl1228
chigirl1228
GypsyMa76
kjbugsmom1517
TugBoatMama
Mostly I wish someone told me that my days would start blurring into one another.
momtolittleg
That it DOESN'T get easier. It just keeps getting harder, and different. The infant days were a BREEZE for us. Seriously. I was never sleep-deprived or exhausted or tired of changing diapers. Now that she's 4, I'd GLADLY give up the whining, tantrums, bargaining and drama to go back to those days.
livewell
I wish I had known that I would never be able to do WHAT I wanted to do WHEN I wanted to do it!
thumphrey
#7 is so true. I not only have my 2 year old but my dogs and sometimes cats in there as well. Occasionally my 6 year old will knock, mommy what are you doing? That is something I would not like to explain yelling through the bathroom door. Although while in a public restroom in a busy place my 6 year old girl did ask mommy what is that in reference to a tampon. My only defense, we'll talk about it later honey. :-)