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Bizzy
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Topic: Expectations vs reality! Posted: 11 January 2010 at 2:18pm |
After reading the "what excites you most" thread i was left pondering the reality of the children we have. have your expectations been met?
For instance the mothers who wanted to travel with their kids gave me a giggle. I have just come back from a trip to wellington with my lot and on the way home (by car) i tried to point out things of interest only to be told by Mr 6 "I KNOW!"
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cuppatea
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Posted: 11 January 2010 at 2:36pm |
haha, my Dh doesn't want to go on holiday until the kids have grown up and left home
I think my biggest thing is that i really didn't expect it to be sooooooooooo hard, seemed so easy when I looked after other peoples kids for a few hours.
I also thought I would go back to work but the reality was once Spencer was born I just couldn't bring myself to put him in daycare so we have been skint ever since, which wasn't what we were expecting to be like either.
But in many many ways my expectations have been more than met, the love I have for them both is just overwhelming and the joy I get from all the little things they do, learn, get excited about is amazing.
I didn't think it was possible to be proud of a child telling me they had peed their pants until I had kids.
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Bizzy
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Posted: 11 January 2010 at 2:54pm |
yeah i guess too i never expected bodily functions like peeing and pooing to be such a big part of my life!
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weegee
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Posted: 11 January 2010 at 3:17pm |
There has been only one moment where I caught myself thinking that what I was doing was like my pre-children idea of motherhood. I was walking the dog, wearing JJ on my back, striding along the side of the road and it was that lovely late afternoon light so the sun was low in the sky and I could see our silhouettes quite clearly in the long grass. I thought "yes! That's what I thought motherhood was going to be like for me!"
Other than that, I didn't really have much idea. When I was on maternity leave before JJ arrived I went and bought a whole pile of novels to read in all the down time I was going to have
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Mum to JJ, 4 July 2008 & Addie, 28 July 2010
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fire_engine
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Posted: 11 January 2010 at 3:37pm |
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weegee
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Posted: 11 January 2010 at 3:44pm |
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jaz
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Posted: 11 January 2010 at 3:44pm |
I think mine have, or perhaps I've dropped my expectations as time has gone on. Travelling was a big part of my life and I've taken Brooke overseas five times plus had numerous trips around NZ, camping holidays, trips to the snow and so on. I've enjoyed the simple stuff too like days out at the beach, going to the museum or zoo, getting an ice cream or growing tomatoes from seed.
I think the hardest part is having the energy. I'm not sure whether kids are really draining or if its just life in general. It can be tough when you are tired and they are constantly asking questions or having a melt down. I think tiredness has taken on a whole new level since I've been a parent.
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BugTeeny
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Posted: 11 January 2010 at 4:39pm |
jaz wrote:
I think the hardest part is having the energy. I'm not sure whether kids are really draining or if its just life in general. |
I agree. I think before having kids I was paid to have energy  Now I can stay in my pj's all day if I really really want to.
TBH I didn't really have expectations. I knew it would be a hard slog and exhausting. It was, but now it's a piece of cake (for the next 6 moths, before I have to do it all again!).
I can't remember life without her
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freckle
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Posted: 11 January 2010 at 4:50pm |
From everything I heard and read and from my memory of when my 13 year old was young I thought it was going to be much harder than what it was this time... Sure there have been tired times but on the whole she has really been a breeze so far  and she just makes me sooooo happy (as does my oldest but she's a teenager now and they can be much more difficult and stressful LOL)...
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FionaO
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Posted: 11 January 2010 at 6:47pm |
I'm not sure I had expectations but I agree about tiredness, you are told about broken nights and then about them going but nobody mentions the fact its just tiring whether they sleep or not, I also heard about mothers guilt but had no idea how bad that is or how you can feel guilty about everything.
You also perhaps expect you will love a baby, but have no idea what that means or feels like, and how amazing it is.
DS at Christmas just turned and said mummy to me as clear as anything like he'd always been saying it and I can't remember a better present.
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emz
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Posted: 11 January 2010 at 7:29pm |
Yes and no. I expected it to be hard, but also very rewarding, and it has. I never expected to want to go back to work so soon though as being a SAHM just isn't enough for me.
I've found the constant unknowns a lot harder than I thought, like with Jack being in and out of hospital we never knew if we could commit to doing anything, saving for anything or even bothering to do groceries as the food might go to waste.
Mostly I can't believe how much kids can bring you together but tear you apart at the same time.
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X
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Posted: 11 January 2010 at 7:37pm |
I think the negatives are completely outweighed by being the whole world to another human being. It's like being a superhero-all your kids want is you & they think you are just amazing. And yep, it's the little things that melt your heart-the little cuddles & kisses, the cute things they say just out of the blue, & the immense pride you feel when they learn something new.
I didn't want to have children when I first got married & I am SO gald I came around & decided to have a family. Yes it's hard work & bloody tiring & thankless sometimes, but it's made my life meaningful & magical & I am so grateful. Noting is more fun than children.
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Snappy
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Posted: 11 January 2010 at 7:40pm |
Hmmm, I was only 18 when I had Janaya. I really didn't have any expectations so I guess that helped me. It's like I've always had kids and I've had to grow up "with them" really.
I guess the one thing that I struggled with was not having any friends. Well, I had lots before I gave birth to Janaya, but once she was born and the excitement wore off for them they were off drinking and partying and I was Nigel No Mates. I wasn't expecting that!
When I was pregnant with DS I worried about how I would be able to love TWO children, it really amazed me how I just "did".
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Rachael21
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Posted: 11 January 2010 at 8:31pm |
When I was pregnant I didn't really think much further than the birth so didn't really know what to expect. However I know I didn't think it would be like it is I never expected my whole life to change completely or that I would love the new life better than the old.
I did think parenting would get easier but it has not got easier, possibly harder. I also cannot believe how fast it has gone and how little I actually remember
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monikah
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Posted: 11 January 2010 at 8:43pm |
at this stage things have been totally as expected. obviously there is heaps to come but i got laughed at by so many ppl when i said that having a baby is what you make of it and really doesnt need to be that hard. along with all my rules about him not having TV, loud, flashey toys not taking time off uni or whatever. ppl said that in a small baby reality would be totally different but it hasnt been at all. DS has only just started sleeping through the night and has pretty bad refux but ive never found being a mum difficult and ive managed to stick by all those things easily. i realsie #2 will be a totally different story cos of the age gap but as far as that goes reality has matched expectations.
we are going camping on wednesday so will be interesting what thats like though. i dont think the things ive set up for my kids are that unrealistic. i think they'll have a ball camping, both away and in the back yard and making things and getting dirty.
we still go out heaps and see all our friends and ive never had mothers guilt but i dont have any idea why.
i also used to look after my sisters kids all the time though so im wondering if the previous experince i had with them (not just weekends but for weeks as well) i was realistic about the things i wanted to do with my kids.
it will be real interesting to see how thing go as they get older though. ive never dealt with kids long term older than 8 though so i guess i really have no idea apart from what im faced with already.
wow, sorry for the novel. lol
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fattartsrock
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Posted: 12 January 2010 at 8:33am |
I have it say, I expected that baby)s) would just fit in around me, and was fond of saying that....as in they would come with and do whatever I was doing and my life wouldn't change, that they would learn to be good and quiet etc while I carried on as I did pre baby...
First baby did... to an extent, but once he got to about 9 months or so, it just didn't work that way at all, and I learned the hard way that life with kids means adjusting your life a wee bit. And friends dropped off, invitations dried up a bit and I had to really come to reality that I was a mother now and the only one of my circle so far (and still) and I had a new "normal". Cried alot of tears about it at the time, Of course the arrival of #2 proved that point 1000 fold. There is no way I could make 2 kids fit into "my" life, but by then, I was used to it. sort of.
I didn't expect to look at those with one child so "differently", jealous almost with their almost the same as before lives and feel cross when they complain - what on earth do they have to complain about! It's soo much harder/more tiring/more everything with 2 kids.... over that now, but wow, that was soemthign I didnt see coming!
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minik8e
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Posted: 12 January 2010 at 9:23am |
I think the biggest thing for me was not wanting to go back to work...I looked at the girls and thought - I can't put them in daycare, they're too little. And I don't mind it. I did think DH would step up to the plate a bit more though but he has an ideal in his head and refuses to sway from it.
Other than that...it's been easier than I expected, but gone way faster than I expected as well - time flies. There is also nothing better than being greeted by a huge grin when they wake up.
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Bexee
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Posted: 12 January 2010 at 9:56am |
If I was to be perfectly honest, I'd have to say that at times it is much, much harder than I expected. I was used to being successful at work, in control, and being able to achieve what I wanted as long as I put my mind to it. Work was a huge part of my life, and when that was taken away I didn't know who I was to some degree. Suddenly having my "achievement" be having a shower, or getting a load of washing done was something I struggled a bit to deal with at first. I also had a lot of preconceived ideals about how a baby would work around my life too etc etc. And I've never coped well with tiredness, so that was tough.
In saying that, it's exceeded my expectations in so many ways and being a mum has undoubtedly made me a better person. I've seen hubby in a new light and love nothing more than seeing him interact with our son. I've had to relax more and learn to go with the flow and enjoy the simple things more. And I'm slowly learning not to analyse every little detail in a way to make things the way they *should* be. If he's not sleeping through the night at 5 months then I accept that and move on to some degree!
Seeing how much he's changed and grown and the absolute adoration he has for us as parents beats any achievement at work. And now I know that my "job" is simply to be there for him and love him and that's all I have to achieve in any given day.
I love the way that when we relax, we can do a lot of the things that we did before. We took him overseas at 4 months and he coped so well. That's another thing, the pride at small achievements - how impressed you can be with a successful burp or rolling over.
I never expected to love him so much, or to see what an impact he'd make on my extended family and how much joy he'd bring.
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ElfsMum
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Posted: 12 January 2010 at 10:22am |
Well i am just like most people in that i never expected it to be this hard.. i never expected sleepless nights sometimes..for no particular reason at 2..lol and that he would want Dad instead of me like he has done(wanted me ) for last two years.. and i certainly never expected how many million times harder i would find it being pregnant.. it's been so hard:( and also how i would not even be able to shower without him around till now.. lol and also how i wouldnt relish being a sahm i thought i would love it..
but having said all that and corny as it is.. like today at breakfast when he turned and gave me his cheesy grin when he had finished breakfast..or when he says a new word I am just so proud and the love I feel for him is just astonishing so although having him hasnt met some of my own expectations about myself and life he has lived up to everything:)
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mummyofprinces
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Posted: 12 January 2010 at 10:39am |
It is as I expected it just more tiring and a little boring. That sounds terrible,.... now Jake is getting a bit older, more mobile, chatty and interactive its getting less boring.
I dont anything can prepare you for that first 3 months.... I was a nanny pre baby and it still threw me... At least next time I know that there is a light at the end of the tunnel LOL
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