But when did welcoming your little miracle into the world segue into a funeral for your relationships with childless friends?
Somewhere
between up-all-night-with-a-baby-who-won’t-sleep and
should-I-do-breast-milk-or-formula, some of us stopped caring what our
career-minded single pals were up to.
Or maybe we were just too tired. Or too shell-shocked, or ashamed, that being home with a baby was way harder than we thought it’d be (what I call the Stay-at-Home Mom Conspiracy Theory).
Whatever it was, it’s a problem.
Because our childless friends are hurting. In fact, they’re mourning the friendships that have been lost.
My friend
Marissa is a news anchor in a top five market. She is fair, dedicated
and authentic. She doesn’t have kids, and she is a very intentional,
quality friend. She wrote me a note about a friendship that ended after
her very close friend had a baby. Here’s part of what she shared with me
(posted with her permission):
I made a concerted effort to go visit her so that she didn’t have to leave her house with her daughter, a stroller, diapers, etc. Even after multiple trips to her house, I still felt something was off. She started half-listening to our conversations, even after I would listen to 35+ minutes of her debating the pros and cons of cloth diapers. (Um, really?) I don’t even know how to give advice on that, other than to go to Google. After a few different instances, I just realized that things that were, at one time, important to US, were now only important to me. She had her daughter and her new family dynamic and nothing else mattered anymore.The thing is: I TOTALLY UNDERSTAND. I know that I’d likely feel the same way: cherishing every moment; taking time for the few rare, quiet times with my husband while he was home from work; using the 30 minutes while the baby is sleeping to take a shower. I get it. But I also felt that I was mourning a friend and a friendship at the same time.I have to tell you... after writing this to you, I feel like I’m being kind of a sap about all this stuff. I consider myself pretty independent and non-needy, but for some reason, this really bothered me. I think it’s because it’s happened with more than one friend and no one really talks about it, you know?
Dear Marissa and other single friends who have been abandoned,
Here’s the ugly truth: We suck at doing it all.
That’s right. The moment the doctor handed me my crying newborn, it all stopped. I was not just Janie. I was Janie, the Mother
of Sullivan. An enormous privilege and an overwhelming responsibility. I
became a mom, and for a time, I didn’t care about anything else but my
kid.
And that meant I sucked at everything else.
My friends. My
former career. My house. My laundry pile. My husband’s needs. My
spiritual life. My weight. My personal hygiene. My own sense of self.
Yes, me. This
normally-so-organized-and-in-control-of-everything woman was now so
wound up with the brand-new, blindingly-amazing, dizzingly-daunting task
of taking care of the round-the-clock needs of my newborn that,
sometimes, I forgot to breathe.
The newborn who
I made certain to feed before we left the house for the grocery
store... where I realized I forgot my wallet. The newborn who wore
brand-new outfits for at least the first four weeks... while I slouched
around in two-day-old pajamas marked with splotches of crusty spit-up.
The newborn who demanded so much attention that I could tell you when he
fed, slept and pooed last... but I couldn’t take the time to look you
in the eyes while you were telling me about your life.
You know what? I was being the best mother I could. And that meant that other things suffered, including our friendship.
I dropped the ball when you least deserved it.
You, who showed
up to our engagement parties, bridal showers, bachelorette parties,
weddings, baby gender announcement parties and baby showers. And each
time, you had a gift, purchased with your single-person paycheck, from
our extravagant, self-indulgent registry. You, who came to the hospital
to see our newborn, and then a few days later, smelled your home-cooked
lasagna all day at work so you could drop it at our house exactly when
we’d asked, at 5:15 p.m.. You, who comments or likes every one of my
unending stream of kid-related posts on Facebook and never complains
that our once-a-week phone convo has turned into a half-assed
once-a-month email.
You, who genuinely loves me.
But here’s the thing: It’s not forever.
Our
relationship has been on pause because of me. I’ve changed. And I’m
having a tough time keeping up with the daily demands of raising babies.
Like exercising properly. Like showering and having decent personal
hygiene. And yes, like picking up the phone and calling you. Just to see
how you’re doing.
We have a real
friendship. But right now, we’re interested in different things. While
you talk, I’m watching the clock because my baby needs to eat in 12
minutes. I don’t realize that you spent 30 minutes waiting on me to get
here because the baby had a blowout on the way. As your hands move with
your story, I’m wishing I had worn a different color shirt that wouldn’t
show the baby spit-up. I don’t notice your fabulous choice of color on
your new manicure (as I tooootally would have before). As you talk about
things at work, I’m distracted by doubts about whether Ferbering was
the right move. But I don’t see the doubt on your face about whether
your contract will be renewed.
Shame on me. You deserve better. And I haven’t been there.
I’m sorry.
We had kids. And became self-focused.
Except, we
actually haven’t been focused on ourselves. We’ve been focused on the
tiny aliens who suck the life, milk, energy, sleep and brain power out
of us. The piercing screams that are our new wake-up call every morning
at 2 a.m.. The tiny hands that are so perfectly-created it brings us to
tears. The bundles of soft skin that have made us realize that life is
so much bigger than us. The little people who are fine-tuning our
patience, grace and tolerance of others on a minute-by-minute basis.
Our children
are the perfect miracles who are teaching us what love is. So that, when
we get it all figured out, we can actually be a much better friend to
you.
So, childless friends, I want to thank you. Thank you for being patient with us.
The other
friends left a loooong time ago. They were over the boob talk and calls
to voicemail. But you cared enough to stay. And you even care enough...
to be hurt. Because we aren’t considering your life.
Thank you.
Thank you for loving us, even when we’re too distracted to show we care.
We do care. You are valuable to us. We need you.
We just need a
minute to get this parenting thing down. And trust me; when we come up
for air, we will be even better friends than we were before.
(And hey, who doesn’t need a friend who gives legit parenting advice and awesome baby gifts?!?)
Original Post;- http://www.huffingtonpost.com/janie-porter/an-open-letter-to-my-friends-who-dont-have-kids_b_5823776.html
Original Post;- http://www.huffingtonpost.com/janie-porter/an-open-letter-to-my-friends-who-dont-have-kids_b_5823776.html
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