Do you hear that?

Did you know the clock behind me ticks rather loudly? It's annoyingly loud, really. This is the first time I've noticed the ticking since we acquired the clock about three years ago. It's the first time because, after dropping off the gremlins and kissing Mr. Maven goodbye, I am celebrating the very first weekday where there is nary a testosterone-laden individual in the house.

This is, quite officially, the first day I am all by myself.

And I am quite thrilled about it.

I tried to hide my glee while I was getting everyone ready this morning. I put on my best poker face and stuffed the excitement way, way down into my belly, which made me quite full, so I was able to hold off on eating breakfast. I now know that emotions are great appetite suppressants. Maybe I should try to feel more of them instead of drowning them out, one caffeinated gulp at a time.

Do I look happy? Because I am. 

I didn't fool the mighty gremlins, however. Halfway through breakfast, Gutsy was on to me.


No pictures!


It might have something to do with me taking his picture with an enormous "it's like I just won the lottery!" grin on my face.

Meanwhile, Spawnling decided to create a bit of mess in my very clean, freshly-painted kitchen before I loaded him up in the van. How sweet of him. 

What kind of havoc can I wreak in the next four minutes?

And then, as if he knew I needed a little reminder why I should celebrate and not mourn that my babies are all in school twice a week...

Mission accomplished.

Thanks, dude. And you're right: I will not miss that whatsoever for the next six hours. 

Thus today, I am not sad. I am not nervous. I am not wishing the sound of cartoons was blaring from the living room, drowning out not only my creativity process, but that ticking clock. I love the clock. I embrace the clock. I celebrate the damn clock. 

And now I am going out for breakfast. Enjoy a fabulous Monday. I know I am!

Why I'm Not Too Keen on Daycare


Today, I took Spawnling to Ikea. It's not a place where I regularly frequent as of late for several reasons, not the least of which that I try very hard not to be an allen key toting consumer whore. Look, with three kids under my belt I'm sure there are rumours of other types of whoring in my life, so why make things harder on myself? It would be nice to leave at least my consumerism unsullied.

Still, I was drawn to the magical promise of uninterrupted coffee and browsing. With Spawnling being three, potty trained, and of the required magical height, he now qualifies for an hour in free daycare the Ikea ball pit. And what does that mean for mommy? A type of freedom I don't often experience during the day: Alone Time.

Except I wasn't alone, because I met two other stay-at-home-mom friends there and we all unceremoniously plopped our preschool-aged boys into the germ haven at the store's entrance before purchasing some cheap, shitty coffee at the store's exit. We started to wander aimlessly. We had an hour. One complete, beautiful hour to look forward to, where we knew our children were safely behind plexiglass with some energetic, undoubtedly childless young man to keep an eye on them.

We made it through 15 minutes before the pager went off.

Do you have any idea how long it takes to walk through an Ikea? The place goes on forever, even if you happen to know all the shortcuts (which we did). It was like a giant obstacle course full of strollers (almost sideswiped a toddler in the restaurant), shuffling old ladies who stop to look at everything (and I mean everything), and a concerning number of career-aged people who seem to not have a career to go to on a Thursday morning yet have a cart full of Swedish lots-of-assembly-required products. I think I may have broken a sweat as I sped walked, in high-heeled sandals, toward what I was sure would be a sobbing Spawnling who missed his mommy.

It wasn't. It was a nonplussed Spawnling's friend who wanted out of the chaos and into our would-be adult time. Spawnling saw me and waved, grinning wide before diving into the balls again.

We sat in a fake living room with a rocking moose - yes, I said moose - just out of site from the ball pit. We were there for perhaps ten more minutes before we heard "Spawnling's mom?"

It was the happy ball of energy employed by the European megacorp who was calling to me to come get my son. Spawn had also had enough of coating himself full of disease and wanted a slice of that rocking moose action.

Well, it was a nice 30 minutes.

It's funny, because I don't usually leave my kids with complete and utter strangers. Heck, I've never even put them in daycare. The closest we've come before the age of five is part-time preschool. I have trust issues that have apparently taken over thirteen years to work through.

And just as I'm starting to get into the mindset of maybe putting my youngest gremlin into a new preschool for two days a week in the fall so I can get some contracts done, I see a major daycare faux pas. I have dubbed it:

DayScare

(Like that? You just add an "s." I really am that creative. Does that intimidate you?)

You may not know that your child is in DayScare. You may think that he or she is in the hands of responsible, hands-on professionals. And you may be right. I certainly hope you are. On the other hand, you may have your child with one of the four scary dayscare providers I saw at the park two days ago. I can tell you right now at least 20 parents have no idea they're not getting top quality care for their money.

These dayscare ladies pulled up their minivans, unloaded a herd of children, let them loose in the park, and sat down at a table.

When I showed up, the little darlings were running wild, pushing other children to the ground, hitting and kicking each other, dangling dangerously off a play structure meant for older kids. One of my friends showed up with her son, who was then shoved abruptly down the slide by one of the dayscare kids. He tumbled all the way down and was hurt pretty badly. My friend asked who this child belonged two in both official languages, yet nobody responded. Not one of the dayscare divas even bothered to glance over. My friend ended up talking to the boy herself about how there is no pushing.

This went on for about two hours. The other parents and I had to hover around our children constantly to make sure they didn't get hurt by the kids left to run wild.

Look, I'm not coming down on childcare workers. I was one (and will never be one again now that I'm well on my way to becoming a world famous author and sex symbol), and many of my friends take other kids into their homes for a living. But the difference is that the providers I know personally actually work for their pay by, you know, paying attention. Making sure the sweet pumpkins don't trample each other. Teaching empathy and kindness. When you spend 40+ hours every week with a little somebody, you don't just make sure they're fed and watered.

I get that it's an exhausting job. Heck, that's why you couldn't pay me enough to do it anymore. The scariest part about daycare is that it's a bulk business. In my community, the only way to make any decent money at it is to take in as many children as possible, feed them as inexpensively as possible, and hope to god they don't smash your flatscreen with a wooden train. I didn't make a killing because I would only take in two full-time kids at once. I don't pride myself on being the world's best business woman (just the world's most awesome woman).

But now that I see you can just dump them in a park, turn your back to them and drink coffee with your friends, I see that I had it all wrong. Why did I put myself under so much pressure to do a good job when I could get paid the same amount to do nothing at all?

So, in short, it took a lot for me to let my gremlin go wander into the ball pit under someone else's supervision today. He did not get hurt, he had a lot of fun, I enjoyed my 30 minutes, but I was a little relieved to have him back by my side after what I saw at the park this week. Hopefully I'll regain some trust in time to enrol him in preschool.

Or maybe I'll just bring my laptop to Ikea twice a week and work there. The coffee sucks, but there is a Starbucks right across the street.

Every Sunday should end with Big Dick

Yesterday, I took some "me" time. I'm not talking a couple of hours, here. I'm talking a full day.

To myself.

With no children.

I love children - especially mine, although I'll tell you I prefer other people's because they don't whine "Mom! Mom! Mommy! Mommeeeeee!" at me. But a Maven needs a break every now and then, lest she twitch herself into a coma from the stress of daily child rearing.

Thus, last day's morning, I put down all the tools of gremlin taming: camouflage clothing, spray bottle, army net, chain gloves, and my trusty bottle of chloroform, and went off in search of a place that contains little to no people under the age of majority.

Just as I was about to get a lap dance, Fantasia was kind enough to inform me that there is a happy medium when it comes to the kid-free environment. So I thanked her, stuffed a $5 bill in her g-string, and went out for brunch instead.

The Bitches - what the four lovely ladies and I who brunch every couple of months have jokingly called ourselves - met at The Buzz, a downtown restaurant that serves the most amazing morning food. I'm sure they serve amazing other time foods as well, but I wouldn't know. I was too busy scarfing down eggs florentine to ask to see the evening menu. There was great conversation, lots of laughs and far too much coffee. I also learned that some people say 'eggs over lightly' instead of 'over easy,' and that serving staff in Ottawa have no clue what they're talking about.

After brunching with the Bitches, I headed to the maul to brave Sunday shopping crowds for no other reason than I didn't have my boys with me. Frankly, I can handle just about any crowd when I don't have to play 'recover the missing three-year-old.' I didn't buy a thing, as I don't need anything. Well, unless you count a larger television as a 'need.'

Ask me again once my copy of Avatar comes in next week.

Next, I sat across the table from a beautiful friend and drank the best damn americano I've had in a while. Why was it the best? Because I wasn't drinking it in between breaking up fights, picking up pastries that have fallen on the dirty restaurant floor, dealing with crying about said dropped pastries as I usher a sad gremlin to the counter to buy another one I can't really afford because they're incredibly overpriced, passing my iPhone to the child in question so he can play a game while eating his new pastry, and wiping off the sugar and gunk and crap off the screen after all is said and done, wondering if it will work properly again and cursing myself for ever thinking that was a good idea.

It's not like I don't enjoy my children's company most of the time, although I'm sure it sounds that way from the aforementioned scenario. It's just that there's a lot of stressful kid-related stuff going on in our house right now, and I've been feeling worn right down to the bone. Synonyms for this feeling: completely exhausted, emotionally spent, absolutely drained, and about this close to losing my everlovin' shit.

So it's no surprise to me that Relaxa, the goddess of mothers' time off, would have me lock my keys in the van in the Starbucks parking lot when I never, ever do that normally. And with my husband having just arrived with the gremlins at a museum halfway across the city with the only spare set of keys in his pocket, I would be "forced" to spend more time with my coffee friend, and even meet her dad.

This is where the big dick comes in.

Oh, get your mind out of the gutter, already. Big Dick is her dad. Little Dick - or Richard - is her brother. And here you thought I was being a pervert.

Heck, if anyone might be a bit of a pervert, it's Big Dick. He was by far the most hilarious octogenarian I've ever met. From the moment I stepped into his house unannounced while awaiting my spouse, he made me feel welcome. He said he had a great story to tell - sexual in nature, of course, like all the best stories are - and talked about how he wanted to decorate the upcoming 'couples alone time' room in his wife's nursing home with a decor acquired partially from a sex store and partially from a funeral home.

And now I know where my friend gets all her crazy from: Big Dick. Enough said.

Eventually, my gremlins had enough of the museum, I was rescued by Geekster and his spare set of keys, and I came home. But not without a solid seven hours where I was reminded what it was like to be The Maven, and not Mom - just for a little while. A couple of hours off is nice, but the stress of doing this mom thing full-time only starts to melt away before I need to go home and immerse myself into the sea of chaos once again. Having a good chunk of time - something I haven't had in a while - was a sorely needed.

The batteries are recharged (emotional batteries, not sex toy batteries. Your mind and the gutter need to stop meeting like this) and I'm feeling significantly better about my world today. Less anxious, more patient, and ready to pick up that spray bottle again and get back to parenting.

...Excuse me? We're not supposed to use a spray bottle? When did that happen? Next someone is going to say nets are a bad idea, too. What is this world coming to?! I'm off to get my chloroform.