Monday, February 8, 2010

When gremlins strike

Fifteen weeks of development.  Fifteen weeks.  Something to celebrate?  Not this time.

For the past week, I've been having the dreaded pregnant headaches.  I had a few when Amos was snugged into my belly, but these are more frequent and achy.  It truly feels like Marmot is stabbing me in the skull.  I imagine a little softball-sized baby standing over me with an icepick, not unlike the gremlin in Twilight Zone: The Movie that terrorizes John Lithgow on the wing of the plane. 

Stabby stab stab goes the little softball-sized gremlin, while I stare in horror from seat 13A.

For that reason, I'm a little (okay, a lot) cranky when the headaches strike.  I've missed some great outings because of them.  I drape myself across the couch with a hand over my forehead in very much a "woe is me" kind of way.  Noise, any noise, yes, even that one you are making right now over there SO STOP IT RIGHT NOW!, is bothersome.  Daylong headaches:  they should be a defense in murder trials.

A tiny dose of Tylenol and a wee dram of coffee seem to help, but I'm not willing to go beyond that, as I'll be tarred and feathered by the parenting community and pointed at menacingly by the uterus cops for poisoning the gremlin that is stabbing me in the brain.  It's really unfair, this pregnant business.  Napping all day in a comatose manner seems to be the only cure.

So, anyhoo, another one struck me today.  After taking my standard "woe is me" position, Amos decided to go about his usual toddler business with the noise and the movement and the clanging and the banging and the stomping and the general madness.  I wasn't a happy camper.  I said various things that I'm not proud of, such as, "Get off this couch!  Go away!  Leave!  ARGH!"  Phil, being the wondrous man that he is, decided to take Amos down to the basement, where Amos has a carpet-padded dungeon of delights filled with toys and plenty of room to run around like a madman.

I was grateful, mind you, but the gremlin was making me do and say things that were not under my jurisdiction.  Amos was still running around up here and causing me stress, so I said, "Just GO AWAY!"  

I immediately felt bad.  Really bad.

Then Amos said, "Okay, I'm going away now," in just about the cutest, most mother-killing voice I've ever heard.  I died on the spot.

After recovering from my death, I asked Amos to come over.  I apologized and asked for a kiss.  He giggled and whispered, "Heheh, okay," and planted one on me.  "I'm going to the basement!"  And off he went to have fun in the toddler dungeon.

I called after him, "Have fun!"  Then I rolled back into "woe is me" to lament about my bad mothering.  He didn't seem affected at all, but I added one check mark to the imaginary Wall of Parenting Shame that stands beside me.

Perhaps if I confess these times that I take out headaches and aggravations on my son, then I won't progress to Defcon Mommy Dearest stage.  I won't end up in the garden at 3am, slicing the roses off of their stems while Amos watches in horror.  I won't scream, "NO MORE WIRE HANGERS!!" or give his gifts to orphans while I smear lopsided lipstick across my face.


He is likely, however, to walk around our home saying, "I know how to make drinks for all my uncles."  That one is NOT my fault.  Blame it on Phil for buying me a gag set of "childrens' books" entitled such things as "Baby Mix Me a Drink."  Amos already knows how to make a gimlet, an old-fashioned, and something he calls a mardardita in da blender.

Somewhere, Joan Crawford is smiling fondly at us.


12 beautiful people muttered something back:

Phil "From Da Basement" said...

First off, it should be pointed out that while Amos knows how to make a margarita in da blender in theory, we don't actually let him use the blender. Yet.

Also, while I stood at the basement bar and did my work (Yes, WiFi in the bar, perhaps we'll open in the afternoons for the home-working crowd?), Amos played quite happily with the many toys strewn about. And we ran around, which is an acceptable break from my work because it's good cardio and helps keep the overall health insurance rates low because I'm staying at least fit enough to chase a two-year-old in circles.

So, in conclusion, he's probably not too scarred from our various parenting miscues.

tiddleywink said...

YOUNG PAT. Would you care for a martini, Mr. Babcock?
BABCOCK. No, thank you. (He breaks off, startled, as he sees the hari-kari painting.) Maybe you'd better order me one, Sonny.
YOUNG PAT. Dry or extra dry? (Babcock is about to reply, but stops open-mouthed to watch Young Pat as he takes a martini glass with great finesse, breathes in it and dries it snappily with a cocktail towel. The boy holds the glass up to the light and squints through it approvingly.) Please sit down. I'll make 'em like I do for Mr. Woollcott. (From an ice bucket, he drops some cubes into a pitcher; then he pours in a great quantity of gin and stirs.) Stir—never shake. Bruises the gin. (Babcock nods mechanically. Young Pat uncorks the vermouth, pours a smidgen into the glass, swills it around by rotating the stem then empties it completely.) Would you care for an olive? Auntie Mame says olives take up too much room in such a little glass! (Babcock shakes his head, and takes the glass. The Banker takes one sip, then turns to see Auntie Mame coming down the stairs demurely—complete with braided coronet and all the aplomb of a Scarsdale matron being played by Jane Cowl. She blanches at Young Pat's alcoholic gambit, but makes a lightning recovery.)
AUNTIE MAME. Why, Mr. Babcock, what an honor it is to have you in our little home. (She draws him aside, confidentially.) Though I wonder if it makes the best first impression on a sensitive young mind to see you drinking during business hours.
BABCOCK. But—but he—
AUNTIE MAME. Don't you worry, I won't breathe a word to the Knickerbocker Bank.
BABCOCK. Now, just a minute. Where did that youngster learn to mix a—
AUNTIE MAME. (With dignified hauteur.) Mr. Babcock, knowledge is power!

erinholm said...

Okay, so I haven't yet finished reading. I was, however, struck to say that while I was pregnant I did not give up caffeine in the least. By no means am I recommending you do the same. I'm just sayin' both of my boys were overdue by at least a week and amply-sized (8.14 & 9.3 - and long). Once (when I was obviously preggers), the salesgal at Starbucks asked "Decaf?" (I felt a little like) she thought I was ordering whiskey shots. Now, I do have to say, without caffeine, my body/nerves are more turtle-inclined.

erinholm said...

Oh, and nary a headache. And, I haven't seen Mommy Dearest since I was approx. 8. I'm a little frightened to re-watch it.

Karin aka perpstu said...

Oy. Have a cup of coffee! I didn't give up coffee and ended up having to be induced to get my little pumpkinhead to leave my body. 7 pounds, 7 ounces and healthy as a horse. If a cup of joe a day helps rid you of the nasty headaches, then by all means partake!

I hope you feel better soon...

'Loe is me... said...

Has it ever crossed your aching mind that you're Zeus and Marmot's name is Athena?

Good luck with that.

Joy said...

I very much enjoyed your story, thanks!! AND, oh, I hated the pregnant headaches! Blah! But acupuncture helped. Really. :)

Tracey - Just Another Mommy Blog said...

Been there. Done that. Still makes me cringe. Still find myself snapping when I don't want to, and I don't have pregnancy to blame.

He'll be fine. You may be the one who suffers the longest!

imaginary binky said...

Phil "lives under the stairs" - I wonder how much we could make with our suburban basement speak-easy...


tiddleywink - You made me giggle. HARD.

imaginary binky said...

Erin - I think that pregnant hormones would have given you the right to reach over that Starbucks counter and start devouring every caffeinated drink and pastry they had within reach. Then wipe away the crumbs, shake your head like that dude in "Jacob's Ladder", and walk away muttering. At least, that's what I would do.


Karin (perpstu) - Oh, believe me, I've been having plenty of the coffee drink. One cup a day with a Tylenol seems to do the trick. If it turns my future kid into a Beatnik at a coffee house poetry slam, then so be it. Heh.

imaginary binky said...

'Loe is me - Great. Now I'm going to obsess about how the Greek gods are punishing me, and over how little I remember of them from my English classes.


Joy - Acupuncture, you say? Hmm... I'll keep that in mind if this continues. If it goes like last time, then the headache issue should resolve in a week or two. At least, it BETTER. *shakes fists*


Tracey - Ah, yes. I think this should be called "Suffer the Little Parents". It feels even worse when I sound like my mom as I release the crankiness on my son. Good to know that I have soul sistas out there.

Nina said...

It has been a few weeks since this post, so I hope you are feeling better. Headaches totally suck.