a good nap, spoiled

I probably need to do some self-examination to truly get to the bottom of these feelings, but as the mom of two preschoolers, I cling to the quiet of naptime like a life-preserver. Parenting small people requires every ounce of patience and energy I have, and I begin to run low after a few hours. I need a respite in the middle of the day to gather my reserves and recharge a bit, to refill the patience and energy tanks so that I have more to give in the hours before bedtime. And on days when my kids won’t nap? I feel actual rage. It’s like I can feel them actually stealing MY TIME away from me, and I start to feel desperate– how will I find more patience and energy to last me until bedtime?

I should have known as Etta Jane drifted off in the car on the way home from the daffodil festival that we were borking any chance of an actual nap. But visions of some quiet time on the couch to read danced in my head as we attempted to put both girls down for a nap after their short car snooze. I went back in twice to get them back into bed. I handed them books and begged them to just lay there and be quiet. But eventually it became clear that the nap  rocket was not leaving the launchpad. I pictured my husband going in to work at four. I wondered what I was going to feed us for dinner, something that seems to occupy at least 75% of my brain most of the time. I wondered how in the heck I was going to make it to bedtime on current patience and energy levels. I got mad.

“Why don’t you leave and go somewhere and let me take them?” my sweet husband offered. Blinded by my desperation for the nap time that wasn’t happening, all I could feel was trapped. “Where would I go? There’s nowhere for me to go!”

I heard him telling small people to put their whiny voices away, heard him finding them shoes, and as he led them outside where he had planned to spend naptime working on the garden, I snuck away. I sat on the couch and tried to gather some patience and energy. Small people soon returned demanding snacks, so I fixed them a cheese stick–no, cwackers!–no, the orange ones!–no, the ones she has! I got exasperated and raised my voice to ask them to OH MY GOODNESS JUST SHARE WITH YOUR SISTER THERE ARE PLENTY OF SNACKS, WHY DON’T YOU EVER ACTUALLY WANT THE ORIGINAL THING YOU JUST ASKED ME FOR?

I realized maybe I needed a snack and some quiet time too. I fixed myself some cheese and crackers. I retreated to my bedroom with a book and the cat, who I am worried about lately because he’s been sick, who keeps getting put on the back burner because life is sometimes so very hectic with small non-napping constantly-snacking insanely-picky preschoolers running around.

I ate my snack and read a chapter and enjoyed the fact that the cat is such a quiet, lovely companion. I felt the patience and energy meter start to creep up, just a hair.

Soon a small white-blonde head bobbed in next to my bed. “I sowwy mama. I sowwy I made you mad by not shawing wif my sister.” I melted. “I’m sorry too, baby. I’m sorry I got so mad about the nap and the snack. I love you very much.” I read two more chapters as my little sprites wandered in and out, catching worms with their daddy outside, pausing to come in and try on some of my necklaces, wandering back out again. I appreciated the sound of their stompy little kid feet in the hallway, snuck some kisses on top of soft hair warmed in the spring sunshine. I helped Etta wash her hands and returned to my perch. I helped them find “the widdle bubbles” and then returned to my perch. I got out my laptop and felt moved to write this post, confessing my sins to the page, releasing them as I typed. The brittle edges of my bad mood began to soften. I forgave them for not napping, forgave myself for being tired and impatient. To be a mother, for me, is to have to forgive myself at least seven times a day. Thank heaven grace abounds. I’m still growing, too.

6 Replies to “a good nap, spoiled”

  1. Don’t blame yourself. All mothers are jus humans. I also blame myself sometimes for rising my voice, for not having patience and so on. But I guess, children must know, that we have emotions too. Your girls know that you are the best mother ;)

    Like

  2. Oh my goodness, you are not alone in the ‘rage’ department. I can remember being so shocked at myself for the amount of rage I would feel when my little guys would nap at the wrong time, not nap, be interrupted during a nap, nap so much they wouldn’t sleep later, or when one would nap but the other wouldn’t!

    Liked by 1 person

  3. I know that rage well. My girl still naps pretty predictably but on the days she doesn’t? I’m never the best version of me on those days.

    Like

  4. “WHY DON’T YOU EVER ACTUALLY WANT THE ORIGINAL THING YOU JUST ASKED ME FOR?” Word. And the replacement snack *must* be demanded in as whiney a voice as possible. It can’t possible just be “actually mamma, I changed my mind. I’m getting myself an apple.” It’s “NOOOO MOOMMMMMMM!!! I NEEED the OTHERRRRR THING!! You know, the thing you just put away/made for yourself as the only thing you’ve eaten all day/ the thing we just ran out of!” This is where my rage lives.

    Like

  5. My friend, Anne Cameron Barklis posted this today, “Luckily, while our beloved mother Dr. Ruth Cameron was at work, we were raised by a very wise woman, Ruth Hayworth. She spoke a truth that I repeat to myself often: “Child, you either need something to eat, or you need a nap.”
    That pretty much covered it.” (Anne’s mother Ruth was a pediatrician in our small town.)

    Like

Comments are closed.