It’s not long to go until Baby Dear, my new ‘book baby’ is out there in the world – I hope to have the cover on the blog very soon (it’s brilliant, thank you, Bloodhound Books!). Meantime, I’ve been thinking a lot about babies… how you worry about them… all the funny and wonderful and heartbreaking moments you go through with your children. Here’s Surviving Parenthood, a post I wrote a couple of years ago – two of my own most hair-raising moments as a parent…
Itโs often said, and itโs true. You need nerves of steel to be a parent. All those little day-to-day situations you have with kids โ Put your shoes on, pleaseโฆ no, we canโt take the catโฆ because itโs raining and youโll catch cold barefootโฆ please leave the cat aloneโฆ okay, your wellies, thenโฆ the cat does NOT want to come shoppingโฆ I donโt know where your other welly isโฆ will you PLEASEโฆ no, you canโt just hopโฆ
Weโve all been there. Itโs not just patience you need, itโs something akin to endurance. My best hair-raising moment with son 1 was the time we went to Spiez here in Switzerland for a weekend with my aunt and uncle, on holiday from England. Son 1 was about two at the time. You can picture the scene: a quaint little alpine town, the lake in front with a backdrop of glorious mountains, chalet-shaped hotels with geraniums dripping from window-boxes, and crowds of multi-culti tourists wandering along in the sunshine. Son 1 and I stepped out onto our first-floor hotel room balcony; he shoved his head through the bars to get a better viewโฆ you can guess what happened.
Ten seconds later I was dealing with a stuck and screaming toddler while a growing crowd gathered below, offering helpful suggestions in at least six different languages. The advice ranged from โButter his earsโ to โCall the fire-brigadeโ. My husband had taken the car to the hotel car park some 200m away, and returned through the crowd under our balcony. Once inside, however, he cannily solved the problem by turning son 1 upside down and sliding him out. The crowd cheered and clapped and went on their wayโฆ
It was almost two decades later when son 2 raised my (rapidly greying) hair to a similar extent. The scene now: at home, twelve noon on a Thursday in the summer hols. I was writing in my office room when son 2 appeared in the doorway. (This was unusual; he didnโt normally get up so early in the holidays.) Our conversation went something like this:
Son 2: Umโฆ you know those metal tops you get on beer bottles?
Me (engrossed in my text): Uh-huhโฆ
Son 2: Does it matter if you swallow one?
Me (he had my full attention now): Tell me you havenโt swallowed a metal beer bottle top?
Son 2: Umโฆ I have.
Me: WHEN did you swallow a metal beer bottle top?
Son 2 (leaning forward to peer at the clock on my computer screen): About nine hours agoโฆ
Fast-forward to the end of the story โ Son 2 was a day late joining his friends in the Ticino. And in case anyone ever needs the info, it may or may not matter if you swallow a metal beer bottle top. Son 2 was lucky. (And many thanks to the Swiss Medgate telephone advice service, a local GP, and the endoscopy department at Mรผnsterlingen hospital further down the lake.)
Of course, itโs all so worth it. Bringing up your kids must be the one of the most life-enriching things you can do. Looking back on the last twenty-plus years with my two, there isnโt really anything Iโd have preferred to miss out on. You learn so much, you make so many memories, and thereโs such a lot to look back on and laugh about together.
But you do need nerves of steelโฆ

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