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| Two clearly not tired twins. |
I am writing this blog post at 8:20pm, having just told the twins that if they don't go to sleep they can't go to parties this weekend (because they won't have energy, not because I am a terrible parent threatening not to take them to parties as punishment for not going to sleep, but also maybe I'm that as well.)
For the past many(?) years I've felt pretty optimistic about time. I've generally felt like there is enough time to do lots of different things and experience a fun and full life of varied activity and interest.
Last October I trained and ran a half marathon. I did a weekend camping and mountain biking trip when 12 weeks pregnant with the twins, while Ezra was 4 and Lily was 2. Even last year I went on trips around the UK for work.
Maybe life with 4 kids under 7 is just that much easier than life with 4 kids under 8?
Right now, all of it seems impossible.
I was trying to figure out why I feel so time-poor at the moment, and it's entirely the sleep. Everyone used to be asleep by 7:30. Now everyone is generally asleep by 8:30. I know it's just an hour, but it turns out that I only had 2 hours of leisure time a night, and reducing that by half is a pretty major hit to my own time satisfaction.
Maybe I don't remember this sleep transition for Ezra because it happened when Lily was 1. And I don't remember it with Lily because I was pregnant with the twins.
Or maybe one just blocks out bedtime nightmares as soon as they are done, although that's intensely annoying because how can I gauge how long this goes on for?
I know I used to be a goals and interests and hobbies person, but I am feeling deeply disinclined to all of it at the moment.
- I'm in a job that's fine, I don't feel like trying to build a career in any way right now
- I wish I had more time for sport
- My diet is fine/average. I eat basically the same foods for 4 days a week and then eat boring kids meals on the other 3 days
- I have no holidays coming up
- The house is gross or clean, and there are projects on the someday list, but I don't feel like investing energy in them at the moment
- I am 100% so behind on photo albums, I'm not sure if I've now missed almost a whole year of Lily's life?
- The kids are in activities they like and doing different fun stuff



This is Lisa. Whenever bedtime is not going well, I feel a sense of dread and sadness because you are dealing with challenging circumstances when you are just so so done with patenting. I have very little patience for bedtime shenanigans. So I feel you! We have lost about 30 min of us time in the last year. It’s tough and it’s only going to get worse as the kids stay up later. Sob. Hang in there. I was at an OTF class last month and I was next to a couple. We were 50 minutes/around 7:15am into the class and the wife asked ‘so where is Owen?’ It seemed like Owen was a teen that slept at a friends house. There may come a day where we are hours into our day and maybe don’t know where our kids are. Can you even imagine????
ReplyDeleteI think you nailed it - I feel that exact same dread/fear right when I have the fewest mental resources/energy for it. And also, if at 5pm I'm feeling OK and optimistic, I almost know that by 8:30 I'll be drained and blah, which then means I never really get a chance to think about anything bigger than getting to the next bedtime.
DeleteYeah teen world is mind blowing - they walk places alone! They want to "chill at home"? They sleep... a lot. Crazy.
For me at least, one of the most draining parts is that the things that the kids want to do (like go to a park) get very old, very fast. It takes a lot of energy out of me to engage at a park and, at the age your kids are—especially the twins—CONSTANTLY be monitoring them so everyone stays unhurt. It's not exactly "fun" to go to the park most of the time. Someone needs to use the bathroom, someone gets hungry, someone falls and scraps their knee and starts crying and there are no Bandaids so blood gets all over their clothes and all over you because you're hugging them. And then you get back from the park and their fun tank is filled but you're exhausted, have to unpack the car, AND STILL have all the adult things to do like prep dinner and clear out backpacks and run a load of laundry.
ReplyDeleteI am on the other side, largely, of this stage of parenting. It's still exhausting, but in very different ways. There is something positively delightful about knowing a child can walk themselves to the bus stop or to a friend's house. You will get there, I promise.
Right now my biggest challenge is the sheer amount of time we've spent together. I am someone who craves alone time and typically get at least some each day. Um... the last time I was truly alone for more than 10 or so minutes was over a month ago. Rachel, this is not enough alone time! Many days in the last month, we've all been sleeping in the same room. EEKS.
So, yeah, parenting is a lot. Too much, sometimes, if I'm being honest.
I hope bedtime shenanigans taper out for you. It is truly the hardest time of day to be wrangling kids. And, I'm sure it's 10x harder because there are two pint-sized humans in the same room who disrupt the other. Hugs of solidarity.
Wow, your color coding really kind of sums it up! I feel for you, as I am not an evening person and pretty much after 5 pm I start to decline and so having to then make dinner, out kids to bed and then try to get my own me time then would be exhausting. I'm sure also house time eats into this time pretty frequently.
ReplyDeleteIs your Mom there now? Can she take on a little more responsibility when she is? Even just one more once a week slot for a couple hours would probably work wonders!
I think you've spotted part of the problem - my mom is not here now, and I think we may need to offload some kids onto her for weekend downtime when she is here . That should help!
DeleteLosing evening time is huge! My kids are older/there are only 2, so I'm not nearly as time crunched but in the last year their bedtime and my bedtime basically became the same time and it was terrible for a while because it felt like I had no 'me' time.
ReplyDeleteThe bottom line is you and Andy need some more hours with kid coverage of some kind! Not forever, just the next 1-2 years. I really think by the time the twins are 4 or so it will be much better.
I know child care is $$$--In my case the kids get an hour of screens after dinner and I use that as my 'me' time. Could you do a Saturday afternoon movie or something, and use that for peloton time, a nap, reading a book etc?