Tag Archives: shopping

My Year of Saying “Yes”

As the girls creep closer to turning one (6 weeks, OMG!!), I’ve started to reflect on what impact our new party of five has had on me. How I’ve changed. What I’ve learned, unlearned, let go of, and lost. Not only have I grown two beautiful little girls and helped shape a seriously funny little man this year, but I’ve also done a hell of a lot of growing myself.

One of the things I have always found difficult is asking for and accepting help. I suck at it at work (and am often reminded to delegate tasks) and I suck pretty badly at home too. Aside from organising a cleaner to come fortnightly after we had Toby, I just prefer to get on with things myself because I know they’ll be done the way I like it. I’m a control freak and I make life harder for myself because of it.

As soon as I found out I was pregnant with the girls I was overwhelmed with advice to get some help for when the babies came home. Every time my in-laws Skyped they would ask if we’d started looking for a nanny yet. I had absolutely no issues outsourcing the toilets and mopping, but when it came to getting help with the kids on non-daycare days I was hit with a massive case of mummy guilt.

“I should be able to look after my own kids!”

“Loads of other people do it themselves… some of them have more than three kids.”

“I’ve managed multiple major projects at work, I can do this.”

Of course I tried. I failed. I tried again.I had some success in the morning, but then the wheels fell off after lunch and I’d start message-bombing my husband to see how early he could be home to rescue me. My three little people literally sucked the life out of me. I’d like to say there was a defining moment or epiphany, but there wasn’t. It was just a big fat reality check and acceptance that I either accepted the help offered, or I ran myself into the ground.

Learning to say “yes” to help turned out to be one of the most empowering and humbling things I’ve ever done.

I’m not the most outgoing person in the world, so I find the attention that twins bring hard to deal with at times.  But I still need groceries, or to aimlessly wander a shopping mall once in a while a week.  I’ve had wonderful strangers offer to carry my pile of nappies to the Aldi checkout and said, gratefully, “yes”. I’ve accepted offers from people to feed my girls while I eat my lunch. I’ve had some amazing conversations with strangers with grown twins, a gorgeous older Chinese lady who was utterly fascinated by the girls and just wanted to talk and play with them, and an older couple in the supermarket who loaded my trolley contents onto the belt while sharing the story of how they found out they were expecting twins while in labour (!!!)

We got a nanny. She is awesome and the kids adore her.  It definitely took a few months to let go of my control hangups, but I”m now completely comfortable surrendering motherhood to her for a few hours while I run errands or meet a friend for lunch. The Threenager adores her and every week she teaches the girls a new trick. This week, they learned cuddles on demand. I melted as she said, “cuddles” and the girls took turns snuggling into her chest.

Having help on non-daycare days saves me from feeling like I’m always “angry mum”, or mum who always says no. It gives me the opportunity to spend some quality one-on-one time with the Threenager at the movies, Pokemon-hunting at the park, or having a cosy cafe lunch.  And the Threenager gets to go on exciting adventures to new parks, the beach or the zoo, that carting three kids to would otherwise put it in the “too hard” basket.

My multi-tasking skills have reached Ninja Master level.  I now boast the ability to negotiate daycare pickup while carrying two babies, a Threenager’s hand and his school bag. But recognising the logistical limitations of this, I also have no hesitation in parking up in the carpark and calling the daycare teachers to bring him out to the car if the afternoon has been curly. Or if I just can’t be bothered getting both babes out of the car.

I’ve started going to our local baby rhyme time on Tuesdays, and big kids rhyme time on Thursdays. Religiously. It’s a bit chaotic and we’re always late, but it’s a regular outing we all look forward to. I’ve met some great local mums, and the girls get lots of extra cuddles and play time.

Having a baby can be isolating. And it’s one of the few aspects of parenting where I feel that isolation is doubled at times because there are two babies. It’s incredibly easy to spend the day at home because the faff involved with organising and getting two babies (or all three) is overwhelming. Even pulling the gigantor pram out of the car to go for a walk can seem too much some days. That one is obviously not helped by a neighbourhood with no footpaths, and 30+kg of pram and baby to push around…

But my year of saying “yes” is getting me out the door. It’s forging new friendships. It’s led to conversations with strangers that have filled me with warmth and happiness and will stay with me for a long time. And it’s helping rebuild some of the bond that was lost with the Threenager when the girls came along and I was too busy to give him everything he needed.

Now I just need to learn to put away the washing people have kindly folded for me, instead of refolding half of it so it’s the way I like it!

 

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Good Buys vs Goodbyes

I stumbled across a spreadsheet this morning of  “Must Buys for Goodlet” – our shopping To Do list of what we thought we needed for a new baby. It’s funny to look back on what you “think” you need, versus what you actually get the most use out of.

Muslin Wraps
I bought way more of these than we actually needed, and completely the wrong type for what we needed them for. All of the wraps we bought were way too small (about 1m sq) and didn’t have enough fabric to wrap Ol’ Houdini tightly enough to prevent him from wriggling his arms free. Thank goodness for the “already parents” who bought us packs of large wraps (Living Textiles wraps were awesome) for the early days, and Love to Swaddle zip up suits for when he got bigger. I can’t speak highly enough about the Love to Swaddle suits – SO easy to put on & change a nappy without having to unwrap & rewrap. And all those small wraps? They found new lives as pram shade cloths, light blankets and bandana bibs.
VERDICT: Good Buys: Large wraps & zip up suits   |   Goodbyes: Wraps 1m sq and under

Baby Rocker/Swing Goodbye (for us)
Your baby will either love, or hate the baby rocker – and Toby was definitely in the hater camp. He hated the music, he hated the swing, he just wasn’t into it at all. Which was a shame because it was WAY easier to put him in the rocker in the bathroom while I was showering, than it was to wheel the pram in there. Thankfully ours was borrowed, so no money wasted there. If you can, do the same and get a secondhand one off eBay or Gumtree if your babe is in the lover camp.
Fun Fact: Some babies will poo without fail on these things. I know mothers who call them their “Poo Seat”. True story.
VERDICT: Goodbye (for us)

Scratch Mittens
We had about 3 pairs – most of which came in gift packs from relatives. The most  use they got was when Toby hit 4 months and started to squeeze and scratch the crap out of my chest when feeding. Hang onto a pair for this fun period.
VERDICT: Goodbye

Baby Wedge
Oh, what a waste of money this was! Thank goodness I only paid about $10 for it on a group buying site otherwise I’d have been really annoyed. When Toby started rolling in his cot, we thought, “Hey, the wedge will put an end to that!”. Wrong – he rolled over it and onto his belly within 5 minutes.
VERDICT: Goodbye

Baby Carrier
For us, a baby carrier has been a must. But I wish we’d waited until Toby had arrived and done a bit more research before we bought. I’ll start with our Goodbyes. We got a secondhand Baby Bjorn from eBay. It was fantastic in the early days, but only really until the 3 month mark. Once Toby hit 4.5-5kg I found the weight distribution was just all wrong, and it started to kill my shoulders and upper back. Back into the box it went. We were given a Mini Monkey sling as a gift and, oh how I wished Toby would like it. But it wasn’t to be. Every time we tried to get him into it he’d scream, so the Monkey was banished to its box as well. The hero in our baby carrying experience has been the Manduca. Similar to the popular Ergo in design, the Manduca carries the babies weight across your waist, minimising the strain on your shoulders and upper back. The baby sits with its legs either side of your body, which is great if like Toby, your baby likes to kick its legs constantly while you’re walking.
VERDICT: Good Buy: Manduca   |  Goodbyes: Baby Bjorn and Mini Monkey sling

Cloth Nappies
We bought a dozen cloth nappies (Bambooty & Itti Bitti) at a pregnancy expo with the aim of using them for a few changes a day to save on the amount of disposables we were using. We used our first one when Toby was 5 weeks old and by 8 weeks, we were in cloth full-time. Once you’re set up (about 18 nappies for one baby), and have the fit sorted, they really are just as convenient as disposables. We picked most of our stash up during sales, and got a bulk lot of secondhand (but in great condition) nappies on eBay. If you want to give them a go, I highly recommend jumping onto a Facebook Buy, Sell, Swap page (here, here or here) and giving a few brands a try. They’re all a little different, as is every baby shape, so it will probably take a few purchases before you find one that works well. Cloth nappies aren’t for everyone, but we’ve definitely found they make our lives easier, Toby’s bum cuter, and our impact on the environment smaller.
A word of warning however, buying cloth can become quite addictive thanks to limited edition prints and the desire to start matching nappies to outfits and occasions…
VERDICT: Good Buy


What are your baby Good Buys and Goodbyes?

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