Tomorrow is Wednesday, which means
my Home Start lady is coming round. As I sit here on a Tuesday evening, I’m
surprised to find that I’m really looking forward to her visit.
You know when you have a week off
work, and you get to Thursday and suddenly think, oh bugger, I have fewer days
off in front of me than behind, my week off is almost over, I’d better Do
Something? I’ve had that feeling periodically since having S: the feeling that
I’m wasting my spare time, and it will be at an end soon and I should be doing
more, appreciating it more. Of course, I know that eventually I will go back to
work, S will go back to school, we will have less time together, and this time
will seem like a far-off utopia of days gone by – but I tend to get a more urgent
feeling, akin to the sort you’d get if you were going back to work after the
weekend. Just lately, it has occurred to me that this is it: this is how my
life just is now, and it’s not going to change any time soon. We have very
little to fill our days with, and often spend large chunks of time wandering
aimlessly around Sainsbury’s. I’m not going back to real life on Monday; this is real life.
This last couple of weeks has
been really tough. I’ve realised just how much I need S to sleep well, even if
that’s just so that I can have an hour watching TV or doing housework without
having to try and simultaneously entertain her. It’s physically and mentally exhausting
for her to be awake constantly, especially when her lack of sleep means she is
usually grumpy as well. I’ve been doing this on my own for six months now,
without a day off or more than an hour to myself here and there. On the one
hand, there have been several times lately when I’ve been desperate for someone
– anyone – to take S off my hands for a couple of hours so that I could have a
break. On the other hand, the minute she is away from me, I miss her terribly,
and feel horribly guilty for being apart from her.
There’s an episode of How I Met
Your Mother where a little girl brings Lilly a picture of a rainbow several
times, and each time she says “oh wow, what a beautiful rainbow!” and then, the
last time she brings one up Lilly loses her cool and says “seriously, are you
kidding me? Another rainbow? Aren’t you sick of them?” This is what I feel like
sometimes. S cries or gets grouchy over something, and most of the time I’ll go
to her and calm her and chat baby talk at her and play with her toys or cuddle
her or do whatever it takes, for however long it takes, until she’s ok… and
then there’ll be an evening where I’ve been up and down the stairs to her five
times, and I’m starving and about to bite into what is now a barely lukewarm
dinner, and she cries… and the words I utter as I trudge up the stairs are a
little more along the lines of “Another rainbow?”
I was talking to a friend
yesterday about having a night out. The difference between us is that she is
married, so if she goes out her kids are with their dad: they love him, they
feel safe with him. She knows they will be looked after and she has nothing to
worry about, and that they probably won’t notice much of difference than if she
were there. For me, if I wanted a night out I would have to consider leaving S
with someone largely unfamiliar. She has aunties and uncles, and I have several
amazing friends, all of whom I know would do a good job of looking after her,
but she only knows any of them as someone who’s danced around the living room
with her for a couple of hours here and there. There’s nobody completely
constant in her life with whom I could leave her and know she wouldn’t be upset
by the disruption. And, of course, there is still the massive guilt at leaving
here anywhere, with anyone – as if I don’t want her around.
I was toying with the idea of
going to the health visitor to see if she would look into getting me some
funding for a nursery place a couple of mornings a week, just to allow me a bit
of a break and some breathing space from time to time. But this is largely
unrealistic, since S is still mostly breastfed and won’t take a bottle (even if
I could work the ridiculous pump I have enough to get a bottle full of milk for
her). And I know that I would probably spend the entire time she was in a
nursery, sitting at home pining for her and feeling guilty that I’d left her.
Wednesdays are my salvation at
the moment. D only spends a couple of hours here, but during that time she will
largely take over looking after S. She bounces her on her knee, plays on her
play mat with her, pulls faces, sings songs and sometimes spends half an hour
rocking her back and forth until she falls asleep. I do things like catch up on
phone calls to the electricity company or sorting through paperwork. We have a
cup of coffee together and I tell her about my week, and we chat about whatever
comes up. She’s like a therapist and a babysitter in one! Plus, she always
brings milk for coffee, and usually cake or biscuits too.
I am so thrilled to hear this! I am a Home-Start volunteer, with my second family now, and I love to hear that you look forward to your volunteer coming. You should know that our visits to "our" families is also the highlight of our week! xx @kristeninlondon
ReplyDeleteGreat news to hear this.I'm a Home Start volunteer and love volunteering I'm in my second family and It's easy to forget that we can make such a difference doing just a few simple things.Best wishes Sarah x
ReplyDeleteI am also a Home Start volunteer and it's great to hear we make such a difference.I'm currently on my second family and it's great to hear that the simple help we can offer really does make a big difference as sometimes as volunteers it's easy to forget that.Best wishes Sarah x
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