A Good Place to Start

It was my fault we were rushed. My four-year-old son was on Spring Break from preschool and, not being on our regular schedule, I lost track of time. Suddenly, I realized we had minutes to get out the door for an appointment.

Was my son still in his pajamas? At 3:15 in the afternoon? Yes. Yes he was. We do Spring Break right in our house. Except when don’t, because we fail to give ourselves enough time to prepare for a timely departure. By “we,” I mean me. And by “ourselves,” I mean myself. I am the designated adult in this scenario.

I unceremoniously switched off PJ Masks (if you don’t know what that is, count your blessings and move on) and started barking out orders to put down toys and put on clothes. As all parents know, this is a highly effective strategy for managing small children. They respond beautifully to this approach. They care deeply about punctuality, and frantic rushing always produces the desired result.

Parent: “Get dressed right now! We are LATE!”

Child: “Oh, I understand. Let me put down this fun toy and focus on the task at hand. Anything you choose for me to wear will be perfectly acceptable. Let me be as cooperative as possible to compensate for your lack of time management skills.”

If only. I expected my son to care that we were late, which was totally irrational because he doesn’t actually comprehend the meaning of the word “late.” I know this, because I’ve asked him.

It was, of course, a shitshow. I struggled to control my frustration. The more I tried to impose my will and wrestle him into his clothes, the more he resisted.

Finally, he was dressed and we left the house.

In the car, I talked to him about what had just transpired. I was on a roll, being all kinds of parental. Laying down the law. “When I tell you to do something, you do it.” And so on. He started to say something. I cut him off.

“I am talking. You can talk when I’m finished.”

When I was done talking, I said “Okay, what did you have to say about not getting dressed?”

I was feeling a little smug and magnanimous. Such a progressive parent I am, giving the child an opportunity to express himself. This is, after all a benevolent dictatorship.

“Well, Mommy, what I had to say is…you didn’t say ‘please.’”

“What?”

“You didn’t say ‘please.’”

Dammit. I went over the scene in my head. He was right. Not once did I say “please.” We were late – my own fault – and I started issuing orders.

There is merit to the argument that he’s the child and I’m the parent and he should do what I say, when I say, period. But he’s also a person. And I’m a person. I don’t want someone to abruptly insist I stop doing the fun thing I’m doing, immediately switch gears, and do a not fun thing, just because they can’t tell time. If I want to raise him to be a considerate person, isn’t it incumbent upon me to treat him with consideration?

I said, “You’re right. I didn’t say ‘please.’ If I had said ‘please,’ would you have gotten dressed?”

His response was clear and firm: “Yes.”

I said okay and let it go. I was skeptical, but it was time to move on.

The next day, I had an opportunity to test the hypothesis. I said ‘please.’ He looked at me with an obvious flash of recognition, and quickly complied with my request. It was clear he knew I’d heard him.

I know saying “please” won’t always work. I seriously doubt it will even work most of the time. Still, it seems to me that, as a general life rule, “please” is a good place to start.

Sometimes, we get so caught up in the intensity or stress of a moment that we forget the basics.

Ask instead of tell.

Listen.

Say “please.”

Things Get Different

I have done a thing.

I quit my job.

It sure would fit the narrative of this blog nicely if, on the heels of the “Square Peg” posts, I was leaving my job to go on some great quest to find my true calling, wouldn’t it? Real life rarely works like that, though, and that’s not what’s happening here. I’m leaving for the most mundane, but also the most compelling, of reasons. I left my job because it’s the right thing for our family.

For four years, we slogged it out with my full-time job and my husband’s grueling work and travel schedule. We thought, as new parents naively do, that things would get easier as our son got older. As it turns out, things don’t get easier. Things just get different.

They stop being babies and become real people with their own personalities and needs. Like most children, our son needs structure and routine. He was born into campaign life, though, which allows for neither of those things.

We did the best we could for four years, cobbling together care with daycare, then full-time preschool, and the assistance of a nanny service. Many of my friends said, “I don’t know how you do it.” Well, here’s the thing…I couldn’t do it anymore. We needed a course correction.

I didn’t hate my job at all – far from it. I was growing listless because I’d been doing the same thing for a long time, but I had fantastic bosses. It was a nice place to work. I’ll probably write more about the experience later, but not yet. I’m still sorting all that out, in a good way. Leaving was hard, even though I was confident in my decision.

I am three days into my stay-at-home-mom gig, and it’s clear I will lose my shit if I don’t find something to do with myself. Oh, I have plenty to do. I’ve got closets that haven’t been cleaned out since the first wave of morning sickness hit in June 2011. (I did start cleaning out my closet today, thinking it would only take a couple of hours. I was so wrong. So very, very wrong. I got overly ambitious and emptied the entire closet onto my bed before I realized this endeavor would require days, rather than hours, to complete.) But I need something that is my own, independent of parenting and domestic obligations. I’m not sure exactly what that’s going to be yet. I keep going back to the movie Say Anything, and the immortal words of Lloyd Dobler:

“I don’t want to sell anything, buy anything, or process anything as a career. I don’t want to sell anything bought or processed, or buy anything sold or processed, or process anything sold, bought, or processed, or repair anything sold, bought, or processed. You know, as a career, I don’t want to do that.”

I am seriously thinking of trying to make something of my party-favor and gift-giving obsession. And I’m going to keep writing. I see this time in my life as an opportunity to, as Elizabeth Gilbert says, follow my curiosity. We’ll see where it leads me.

In the meantime, I’ve got to shove the contents of my closet over to my out-of-town husband’s side of the bed so I can get some sleep. If you need me, you can find me under a pile of too old to be stylish, but not old enough to be vintage, handbags.