Tags
#1000speak, Carlsberg Years, compassion, feminism, friends, marriage, self-compassion, work-life balance
Today’s story starts here:
Aren’t we lovely?
But not the point. The point is this is us waving good-bye to life as we both knew it.
You don’t believe it before you get the marriage, house and kids.
People tell you.
But it’s kind of like when people told me it would be expensive to do a university school term in London, England.
I understood. But I didn’t really understand until I ran out of money mid-way through school term.
Regardless of how you order the whole mortgage, marriage and kids package, once you check those three items off your bucket list ….
… life is different.
My husband, during our engagement, had this joke (that he thought was brilliant) about how I was Killing Independent Chris!
I remember knowing at the time that I was supposed to smile and think it was funny.
But it grated.
At one point, as he was delivering this line to a close male friend of both of ours, I remember asking, “What about Independent Louise? Can we hold a wake for her too?”
It was an odd moment. And everyone looked sort of awkward.
Including me.
Because women aren’t suppose to lament their loss of independence in that same way as men joke about, right?
Instead, it’s presented as the ultimate goal. The “all about the gown – OMG those were AMAZING centrepieces day” is marketed to us before we can fully form words as the ultimate female touchdown (complete with happy dance).
It’s how every princess gets to happily ever after.
I am happy.
But the death of Independent Louise was hard on me, once I’d realized it had happened.
The mortgage, marriage, kids stage of my life was like this four-year whirlwind of persistent new and exciting life milestone chart toppers.
YAY! We bought a house!
YAY! We got married!
YAY! Baby!
YAY! Shared mat leave! This is about equal partnership!
YAY! Back to work! We’re totally gonna make this work!
YAY! “We’re” pregnant again! (Thank God! I miss mat leave.)
YAY! ‘Nother Baby! (‘Nother mat leave!!!!)
Yay(?) Back to work! I’m gonna take this itty bitty world by storm! And I’m just getting warm!
Uhh … right, with two kids and day care pick up by 5:15.
We’re TOTALLY gonna make this …
… transition back to regular programming … and readjustment to the realities of our thirties.
What exactly is that again?
For the visual people in the house, I made this collage of our last few years:

House, then kids, while both working, can drive you to drink (naturally, never, EVER at the same time). If you share my goal of not finding long-term solace in the Mommy Sippy Cup, read on!
Figuring out how to make working motherhood and marriage work is hard.
I would still make no other choice.
I love my husband, I love my kids, and I love working.
But the transition to marriage and motherhood and where I am now, while at times exciting, breathtaking, awe-inspiring, wonderful and fulfilling, was also at times a confidence-breaking, frustrating, dreams meet reality crushing, exhausting, lonely and alienating experience.
Finding friends and ways to connect with those sharing your experiences is important to getting through life – at whatever stage you are in and with whatever path you’ve chosen. And, at least for me, with marriage and kids, I found the rules – as well as the time I had to invest – seemed to suddenly change.
Every time I’m invited (with three weeks notice and homework assignments) to a book club, cookie exchange or Arbonne party with the expectation that I should look on any of these as an honestly enjoyable experience and the way I’d like to best spend my increasingly limited free-time, I wonder where it was that I suddenly signalled that I found baking, buying make-up, (which I’ve never really worn), and assigned reading way more enjoyable than, say, the spontaneous outings to the bar of my pre-MRS years.
But I watched many of my female friends embrace and honestly appear to enjoy these activities.
I kept wondering if I would suddenly take to it. But I didn’t.
Don’t get me wrong. I’ve done all the above and found them okay. And some of the best people I know enjoy baking and scouring Arbonne catalogues. If I didn’t feel like I was faking it, I’m sure I’d meet some great people at such events, but instead I found myself wondering if there was anyone at my age and stage who just wanted to go out for sushi and beer.
Answer: Yes.
It took a while to find them and connect, but I now include them within the circle of people who help keep me being me.
This month the #1000Speak blogging movement is talking about connection.
Find out more about them here. See my previous posts here. And link to this month’s hop through their swank button.
We all NEED to connect.
And I’m pretty sure we all struggle with it at some point.
I blog to fill a connection gap.
And besides that?
Six years into marriage and five years into parenthood, here’s where I’ve landed on connection:
- my husband and I try really hard to have date nights, or to at least head out to the front porch after the kids are in bed to have a few drinks and, well, catch up.
- we aim for creating memories and events with the kids and stuff they look forward to doing with each of us. The girls and I have a weekly swim date with granny; we do movie nights on Fridays; T-ball has now become a twice-weekly outing for the whole family; dad takes them dancing Sunday mornings; I do manicures; the folks at Boston Pizza know our kids and my husband’s order etc…
- my husband and I give each other nights out with friends. We’d each be fine inviting the other into our circles and do from time to time, but having our own friends is healthy.
- we cultivate our own interests. He plays football and has a group of friends who all watch NASCAR. I’m involved with my university alumni association and blog. We give each other space to “do our stuff”.
- we eat dinner at my parents’ house every Sunday. They dote on the grandkids; we get a break; my mom cooks; it’s all kinds of awesome. My husband reserves the right to not attend if there is a NASCAR race. My father now follows NASCAR so they can have informed discussion on the topic when he does.
I’d love to tell you this makes it all work seamlessly.
No. But it mostly works. And I’ll take that.
What about you? If you are in the preschool-zombie zone of parenthood, what do you do to find connection with your spouse, kids, friends and yourself? Do you manage it and still keep true to you? If yes, share your secrets!
When we had our first child 18 years ago we committed to 2 dates per month. They can be as simple as going out for coffee, hitting the gym or a lovely dinner. As long as it is just us, no kids! We have only missed 2 months in that time, I highly reccomend it!
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Only two months – now that’s impressive! Agreed it’s important to find the time to be a couple as a couple. Thanks for the advice!
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Other people handle their queerness better than I do, but for me keeping true to myself has been the only thing of this list I have managed. Partnership, kids, career- all fouled up or never started. Keeping true to myself was the first thing, and I could do nothing else before it.
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Outside of keeping true to yourself and connection of some sort, I’d say the other items on anyone’s list vary. My take-away from some of the busier stages in life is that I need to take those moments to make sure I am doing what’s right for myself, during the chaos of doing what I think I’m suppose to be doing for everyone else. My endless surprise is how hard I find that to do at times. So well done for figuring out how to keep that front and centre.
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I love that you’ve found people who help to keep you being you. And I’m really glad that in spite of all those crushed expectations and the way things turned out to ACTUALLY be (and I know, right? SO hard to believe people aren’t just seasoning the truth with large pinches of salt when you hear about ‘how it really is’…) you and your husband are doing things as a team and working together to make life work for BOTH of you.
I’m glad you got to celebrate Independent Louise as well. Keep her – she’s in there somewhere 😉
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Thanks Lizzi – this was a hard post to write because I wanted I didn’t want to make it sound like one long complaint for basically ending up with what I wanted. Which I did – but it’s those times in life where I have those “Oh! I really CAN’T get to do that now that I have kids”, “what do you mean that’s my job now?” and “why isn’t anyone helping with x, understanding about why y is an issue for me or expecting me to just happily do z” where I find I struggle a bit remembering where I fit in my life (if that makes sense).
It’s funny – I read the post out to my husband (equally Dead Independent Chris), basically to make sure I wasn’t horribly misrepresenting him/us and he clearly remembered the “what about Independent Louise” moment too and we had a good conversation about all the above, and how to balance things etc… These monthly posts have actually been really good convo pieces between us – so yet another way YOU are helping me stay connected both on and off the net with people 🙂
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I don’t think I can take MUCH credit, after all, you’re just using a tool which is available to you, but I appreciate the nod, and I’m really glad it IS helping you. That’s a gorgeous and very wonderful thought. I’m also glad that Equally Dead Independent Chris was okay with this and felt that it was a fair post.
And I don’t think there’s a single thing wrong with missing the things you’d become used to, which were part of you, which you’ve had to sacrifice to build life in its current format. But don’t lose them, because they ARE part of you and one day in future they might be able to become more involved parts of you again 🙂
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Sounds like maintaining connections with your children individually, as a whole family unit, with your husband, and last-but-not-least with who you are all remain in your list of priorities. Well done.
🙂
Of course it must not be as simple and easy as all that, so thank God for shared mat leaves.
😉
Excellent post.
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Some weeks I succeed better than others 😉 Which I figure is probably the case for most of us.
I think here, writing it out, was a good exercise for me in enunciating my ongoing goals on each/reminding me why I think each part is important and that I miss any piece if I’m not investing enough there. Not easy to do all of it – but that’s the goal for me.
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No secrets from me. Following the birth of our daughter, I developed a severe auto-immune disease and for a long time there I was struggling to be a wife,mother let alone employed and that really affected my identity. I felt completely lost. I was working for about 5 years part time after that until I had a flare and chemo and haven’t been back for 2 years. My blog is my work and I’m also working towards writing some motivational books.
Everybody need needs to have a reason to live and for many of us, that requires a more complex mix of things rather than work or family etc. We want to have our cake and eat it too.
With most of the talk I hear about trying to balance work and family, I rarely hear anyone mention your relationship with yourself and fueling that. IN the pre-school years, that’s particularly challenging but it is, as far as I’m concerned, a necessity.
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Thanks so much for sharing a bit on your experience here and the thoughtful comment.
On the whole work-life balance aspect, I remember reading what I thought was a great article once about how people aren’t really looking for balance, they are looking for fulfillment. Ie: we look for a fulfilling home life, fulfilling personal connections and fulfilling career. If these ebb and flow at times (ie: less focus on home life to work on a big project at work that you will be proud of and that will make a difference) then that’s fine, so long as there is then work down time where you can refocus on home life, other aspects – ie: time to teach your kid how to hit a baseball, support your best friend during a rough time in their life etc… and that if the “complex mix” that we all search for, plays out in this way and so allows that fulfillment in different areas – although at different times – this might work better than “balance” in that it allows for those great highs, memorable moments, rather than just “making everything sort of work”.
That all said, I think it comes down to each person figuring out what drives them and what defines who they are to themselves, and then figuring out how to carve out a life that gives you what you need on the most important parts.
I’m very sorry to hear about your illness – and can certainly understand how not being able to work would have severely affected your identity. I can’t imagine how I’d feel in the same situation. I hope blogging and writing help/have helped and will keep an eye out for any books you publish.
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What a well-written, refreshingly honest post about something I think almost everyone struggles with, perhaps most notably mothers of young kids. Kudos for being self-aware enough to recognize the dangers of losing yourself in marriage, motherhood and life, and for working to honour YOU! 🙂
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Thank you so much! It is an ongoing challenge trying to figure out where to prioritize personal needs and desires on the seemingly endless to do list that come with having young kids. I think many people struggle with where their needs should rank as compared to the needs of their work place, friends, families and loved ones – but having young kids, and the physicality and dependency of them on you – really took that to a new level for me.
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love this journey!
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Louise!! I wish we lived closer. I know we’d be friends. I would go out with you for dinner (not Sushi though) and a beer or wine or cocktail anytime. I did a Bunco group for a long time and that was fun because it wasn’t really about the game. More about socializing. I never got into book clubs or cookie exchanges or jewelry parties, arbonne parties, etc. No thanks. Not my thing either. We were married 8 years before parenting and it was a giant adjustment to how we connected. We have a similar routine to you. We sit out on the patio after the kids are asleep and have date nights at home. But we also do our own thing with friends. It’s a healthy balance and works well for us. Sounds like you found your groove too. Loved this post, friend!! You need a Connection music follow up post!! I’ve had One Tribe by The Black Eyed Peas stuck in my head since they announce the topic. I even posted a video of it on my blog FB page. Lol.
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Jackie – just let me know if you ever move to Ottawa. The sushi is negotiable 🙂
I think my main – I don’t even know the word here – frustration, shock, bafflement… with becoming and adult woman/mother – was this expectation that I would suddenly embrace this suite of domestic/feminine “stuff” that I’d shown no previous interest in – and then the surprise that so many others actually appeared to do this. I don’t mind cooking, I can decorate a cake and can apply make-up when needed, I just don’t feel the need to coordinate social activities around any of these things which I see as mainly functional necessities.
Glad to hear that you and your husband have a similar balance and also find it works.
As for the music post – funny thing – I actually after posting this went online to see what I would pick if I did one. Then stopped, because I figured I’d already “done it” for #1000Speak after the bullying weekend and I thought it might be repetitive. Black Eyed Peas is a good pick, though. Hadn’t thought of that one…
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Hey Louise! I know how you feel. I was the first of my close groups of friends to go through most of the life-changing events you wrote about, and I found it so wonderful to have a bit of my life that is mine that is not shared with my family. We all really do need to have some aspect of our lives that we can share with each other later. It really does kill your sense of self when all of your experiences are shared all the time.
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I think you summed it up beautifully at he end re: how it kills your sense of self when all your experiences are shared all the time. Agreed! I think it’s beautiful and I WANT to share my life experiences with those that I love, but I want some things that are just mine. And that’s the balance I struggle with at this stage. That, and the fact that when I’m questing for those “just mine” experiences, I’m constantly interrupted by “Mom! The movie stopped again!” “Mom, can I paint?” “Mom, mom, mommy… HI!” etc… endearing, but exhausting.
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Sadly, the interruptions will continue well into their teen years!
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I love how you intertwined your story with this prompt. A great read!
It’s interesting, but as I age (closer to 40 here) I feel like I have finally connected with the real me. I feel more comfortable in my skin, overworked and exhausted of course, but I like who I am and don’t feel like I need to alter me to make me look better to other people. I think my ability to juggle it all and do it well, most of the time and even knowing I am flawed has made me feel more confident. Even when I falter and fail big time I know that most of the time I’m doing ok.
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Thanks Jen! I think my 30s has been an interesting journey in connecting/reconnecting with myself and getting comfortable in my own skin. It sounds like you are there – and my sense is I’m close(ish) – but the level of change from my late 20s to now certainly takes some adjusting – even when I thought I knew what was coming, wanted it and planned for it!
And I’m now very curious how old you think I am, because I think I’ll find the answer flattering given it’s hard to get much closer to 40 than I am! 😉
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Women take on a lot of work when they get married. Which no one ever discusses, because we are supposed to love it and volunteer for it. Men don’t volunteer to do half, at least in my experience. But partnership works, if both keep trying. Connection makes the world go round. Great post.
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Ugh – exactly! For the first bit. Thank you! My current volunteer/parent thing: our daughter’s softball league – she wanted to do it, so we signed up, it’s clearly more my husband’s area of interest than mine, but shift work makes me baseball mom, and I try to figure out how to genuinely be that for the kids (because I’m not) and so I find myself cheering (go Cubs!) while wondering if we can make this work because we also have a preschooler who mainly wants to go to the park and forever swing in completely separate area from baseball. Sigh.
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Tag team with other moms of younger kids. That’s how we all manage. Then at least you are there most of the time. And utilize older kids. I always let my older kids look after other parent’s younger ones. They enjoy it. And so do I! In my case, it’s soccer games. And two other kids. Luckily, mine are finally old enough to look after each other. Bless their little hearts. Your kids will appreciate all this one day. I promise.
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