Tag: parenting

  • Children’s Parties: Brazilian Edition

    Children’s Parties: Brazilian Edition

    What are they going to do for the 2nd birthday?

    We can learn a lot about our own culture by having to explain it to outsiders.  What specifically outsiders want an explanation for is telling and then having to explain why can lead to great enlightenment.

    For example, as an American I have fielded quite a few questions about guns.  I’ve learned that to the rest of the world our obsession with firearms makes us look like batshit crazy people hellbent on our own destruction.  Also, no American expat has ever convinced another person that a civilian needs a grenade launcher to potentially fight off a government that has missile launching drones.

    Of course every culture has its idiosyncracies.  Americans must account for a love of lethal weapons, and I’d like to ask my Brazilian family and friends to explain the Brazilian child’s birthday party.

    (This is a totally legit transition.  An American gun range and a Brazilian child’s first birthday are, for me, equally intimidating environments.)

    This past weekend, we attended the birthday party of my daughter’s classmate.  My husband, daughter, and I all stayed the duration, from 5pm to 9pm on Sunday night.  There were about 60 people in attendance.  The three tables of decorated sweets and cakes on display throughout the event were perfectly arranged.  The personalized favors were lovely.  The party space had a climbing wall, a bungee-trampoline thing, a three-story playground, a rope walk suspended above everyone’s head, and a ball pit.  The trays of fingers foods, soda, and beer swept by with impressive frequency.  The boy was turning three.

    To be fair not every Brazilian family does this and many cannot afford to do this, but the party I have described is typical of middle class families.  It’s not something worthy of a reality TV show.  It’s completely mainstream.

    I have been to a few 1st birthday parties and they all had more guests than my wedding.  I understand that Brazilian families tend be large and stay in the same city where they were born.  It is very likely the birthday girl has ten cousins living close by. Ok. I understand that at a young age, it’s appropriate to give an invitation to everyone in the preschool class.  I’m totally on board.  But why their parents? Why do I have to feed 15 of my kid’s classmates, plus their moms, dads, and siblings?  My child doesn’t know little Rodrigo’s grandma. And why your boss and work colleagues your kid has never met?

    My nephew’s first birthday had around 100 people.  He spent almost the entire party hanging out with his grandpa in the car.  The poor kid burst into tears every time he got carried toward the commotion.

    I question the value of of a birthday party that the honoree is terrified to attend.

    Some beautiful things for the janitor to sweep up…

    And why spend so much money and time on the elaborate decorations and sweets?  A two year old doesn’t care if the candy is personalized and color coordinated.  For guests, those cute wrappers, ribbons, and bedazzled boxes are merely impediments between mouth and candy.  Once the birthday song is sung, it’s Lord of the Flies.  The smoke is still wafting up from the candles and the dessert tables look like a pack of Labradors was set on them. The kids are aggressive too.

    Ok, I’m being mean.  This is actually perfectly reasonable behavior considering the kids have been made to stare at these tables of sweets for three hours.  All the desserts are beautifully laid out upon arrival but DO NOT TOUCH them until after the candles are blown out!!  Scheduling a party at dinner time and making kids stare at cupcakes for hours is straight up torture.  I’m pretty sure it’s illegal under the Geneva Convention.

    I know some of the moms do everything themselves and I bow to their superior design and art skills. Every child’s party I’ve been to has been beautiful and if they were for a 15th birthday or graduation or even just for older kids who could remember it and not burst into tears at the sight of Great Aunt Roberta, I wouldn’t have any questions.  But I can’t help asking when I attend a three-year old’s birthday, who is this party for?

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  • The Super-Awesome, Amazingly-Exotic Expat Life

    The Super-Awesome, Amazingly-Exotic Expat Life

    The daily rainbow in Brazil.
    The daily rainbow in Brazil.

    When I’m back home in Atlanta, I try not to mention that I live in Brazil.  The opportunity presents itself with surprising frequency, usually when a sales associate asks if I’d like to sign up for a rewards card.  I decline saying “I’m just visiting for the holidays.”   Nine times out of ten, at least in the state of Georgia where people still practice things like small talk and friendliness, the person will ask “Oh, where do you live?”  Then I’m stuck.  “In Brazil,” I answer, and I’m at the counter another five minutes as I tell my story and confess that I have not in fact learned to speak Spanish.  Though I have learned the local Portuguese.

    I can’t blame people for their wide-eyed excitement and curiosity about my life.  Americans are under the impression that life south of Texas or north of Idaho or on the other side of an ocean is more…something.  More exciting.  More dangerous.  More romantic.  More barbaric.  More luxurious.  They’ve seen movies set in these “foreign” countries and read articles like “3 Things Dating Foreign Women (And Marrying One) Taught Me” which tell people what a romantic adventure life can be if they only find a spouse with a different passport.

    As someone who did manage to land a coveted foreign spouse and move abroad, I can state that it’s all true.  My life is more exciting than everyone else’s.  It’s more romantic and luxurious yet still a rewarding, character-building challenge.

    Take my very first meal in Brazil.  I got to eat in the food court of the nearby mall.  My future husband took me and it was incredibly romantic.  The din of the other customers drowned out our voices, so we could only stare into each other’s eyes.  Because I arrived in the midst of remodeling the apartment, I had the opportunity to tour all the best hardware stores in Rio de Janeiro.  The thrill of shopping for toilet seats abroad really gets downplayed in expat blogs.  The only thing in Brazil that rivals shopping for toilets is getting finger printed for a visa at the federal police.  The ink smells like jasmine.

    Living in Brazil has also given me the opportunity to learn a new language.  It’s a fact that everything is sexier in a foreign language. Doesn’t matter which language.  They’re all sexier than English.  Here are some of the local Portuguese phrases I learned in my first months here.  Encanador.  Plumber.  Conta corrente conjunta.  Joint checking account.  Seguro de saúde.  Health insurance.  Absorvente interno.  Tampon.

    If you are ever lucky enough to visit Rio, I recommend driving from downtown to the suburbs at 5:30pm.  It will give you an authentic local experience.  Turn the air-conditioning off and roll the windows down to really go native.  Be sure to have the GoPros charged because friends back home will want to watch this trek. All three hours of it.

    Anyone leaving the US should do their family and friends the favor of recording every second of their time abroad.  They’ll thank you for allowing them to live vicariously through you.  After all, life outside the United States is one long perpetual vacation.  Nobody goes to the grocery store or a “job” in foreign countries.  The people serving coconuts on the beach here in Brazil? Robots.  All of them.  Where do you think Walt Disney got the idea for the Hall of Presidents?  He stayed at the Copacabana Palace in Rio.  Actual Brazilian citizens don’t work and if you’re fortunate enough to get residency neither will you.  People who live here just go to the beach and gym everyday.  I haven’t had to run an errand since I arrived in September of 2006.

    Having a child abroad with a foreign spouse (Yes, even in Brazil my Brazilian husband is the foreigner.  I can’t be a foreigner because I’m American), it only adds to the drama and glamor of the expat life.  I’m writing a screenplay based on my experience of visiting the US consulate to prove the maternity of my child.  I’m hoping Ridley Scott will direct and it will star Angelina Jolie (as me), Antonio Banderas (as my husband), and Jack Black as the unwieldy and misunderstood stack of paperwork that ultimately saves the day and gets us the US birth certificate.

    Those of us living in far-off, exotic lands know that “living” abroad is exactly the same thing as “vacationing” abroad.  Don’t make the mistake of thinking that most people in the world are busy going about the tediousness of living day to day, with the jobs and childcare and home repairs and laundry that human existence demands.  No, no.  Life outside the US is romantic and electrifying all the time.  In fact, I have another Brazilian adventure planned for this morning.  I’m going on an excursion for light bulbs.

  • Why I Don’t Want Another Child

    Why I Don’t Want Another Child

    My daughter at 3 years
    My daughter at 3 years

    Yesterday my husband, daughter, and I headed out early for a morning on the beach.  We dug a giant sand pit, built and promptly stomped on sandcastles, and failed to convince my daughter stepping on seaweed is not the absolute worst thing in the world.  We followed this with fish stew and fried bananas on the beach.  In the afternoon, there was a skype call with grandparents, tutus, and puzzles, and a thirty minute tantrum during which my little ballerina spit in my face.

    When I finally crept out of her bedroom at night, I collapsed on the couch thinking “I will never do this again.”

    There it is.  My true feelings about parenthood.  I love my daughter.  I also love myself.  And I cannot spend any more of my one lifetime parenting a small child.

    Despite being born with a uterus, I never dreamed of having children.  In high school through my early twenties, when I imagined my future it never included children.  I pictured travel, politics, law, publishing a book and going on tour, or accepting an appointment as a US ambassador.  Babies never made an appearance.  Then I got married and in my late twenties, I began to think that a child might be nice.  Also, my husband is sixteen years older than I am and given women’s tendency to outlive men, I’d rather not be alone for the last twenty years of my life.

    Wanting a guaranteed companion in old age is a pretty selfish reason to have a child.  But aren’t they all?  I’ve never heard of a couple having a child because the kid asked to be born.  “I’ve always dreamed of a big family.” “We need someone to carry on the family name.”  “I just love babies.”  All selfish reasons.  Yet society reacts with hostility to a person who decides, “Yeah, I had a kid and I really don’t like parenting a baby. I won’t be doing it again.”

    Of course, I’m not just a person deciding I don’t want more children.  I’m a woman declaring I’d rather spend my Sunday afternoons reading as opposed to stringing macaroni necklaces.  I searched for other posts about women with one child by choice, and every mom wrote about her family feeling “complete” with just one.  One child just “feels right.”  Not one mother said, “It was hard.  I struggled.  And I’m not doing it again.”  Well, I’ll say it.  The last three years have been a struggle and I’m not going through it again.

    My daughter was born seven weeks early by emergency c-section after a placental abruption.  She spent 28 days in the NICU.  Her stay would have been shorter but she developed a food allergy at 2 weeks-old which caused loose, bloody stools at every feeding and meant I, the breastfeeding mother, had to begin eliminating things from my diet to isolate the cause.  I eventually removed all dairy, soy, peanuts, nuts, eggs, tomatoes, and berries from my diet but traces of blood and a poopy diaper every two hours continued for 7 months.  I clearly remember sitting at a Mexican restaurant, surrounded by my entire extended family and their plates of cheesy, processed deliciousness, while I ate my skinless chicken breast between two crumbling slices of homecooked, dairy-egg-soy-free bread.  On the plus side, I dropped to under my pre-pregnancy weight in three months.

    Since her homecoming my daughter has rejected the idea of sleeping in her own bed.  Not just her bed.  In her early months, she rejected swings, vibrating chairs, strollers, moving strollers, car seats, swaddling, and every means of soothing except a parent’s arms. And when I say “reject”, I mean she would scream until she couldn’t breathe, and it would take fifteen minutes of rocking to calm her back down.  At 3 and a half, she still doesn’t sleep the whole night in her own bed.  At least now, she will wake up and walk to our room and not just scream waiting for us to come.

    Her separation anxiety is so extreme, I have spent exactly one night away from her since she came home from the hospital.  It happened this January, while we were visiting my parents.  We prepped my daughter for days.  Mommy and Daddy were going away for a couple of days but she would be with Gramma and Grandpa.  There were chicken nuggets, new toys, and Legoland.  My husband and I kissed her goodbye at 6pm.  She cried from 2:30 to 7:30am and was back with us after 20 hours.  It’s been two months and still every story she plays out, with stuffed animals, Legos, or Littlest Pets, involves a lost parent.

    I haven’t even mentioned her tantrums.  And I won’t except that my dad witnessed one and described it to my brother this way: “Whatever you’re imagining, however awful…it was worse.”

    I’m not writing all this to convince anyone of how hard I’ve had it.  My daughter is happy, healthy, and growing.  Despite being a preemie, she is now on the median line for height and weight.  Her teachers send home glowing reports about what an active participant she is and what strides she has made recently with sharing.  When I ask her teachers about the tantrums, they acknowledge her fits are extreme but not abnormally so, and they are occurring less and less often.  It’s clear she will outgrow them.

    My point in listing my greatest parenting challenges (so far) is to say that as tough as these years have been, they could have been worse.  Much worse!  A second child could have health complications or developmental challenges that make my daughter’s early life a three year vacation. My marriage can’t take that.  My sanity can’t take that.  I can’t take the risk!  In the choice between a sane mother and siblings, I think we can universally agree a sane mother is more important for a child’s development.

    In the most private recesses of my mind, I think that I am simply too selfish for a parent.  While pregnant, I thought that hormones would flip some martyr switch that biology had surely hard wired in me.  It didn’t happen.  My dreams, interests, and personality remained mostly unchanged. I would throw myself in front of a bus for my daughter, but I still find coloring and crafting tedious.  I’m making play-dough spaghetti and wishing I could get back to my book.

    I do see a light at the end of tunnel.  I see a turning point, a threshold, an event horizon approaching.  We recently took her out Stand-Up Paddling for the first time.  Fun was had by all.  She’s asking to revisit the sea turtle center, making up stories, and composing songs off of the top of her head.  I’m seeing flashes of a person, one I can’t wait to know and think I’ll have a few things in common with.

    I definitely will not be repeating the past, but I am genuinely excited about the future.

     

    Brilliant blog posts on HonestMum.com

  • The Novelty of Beach Life

    The Novelty of Beach Life

    Baby at the Beach
    Beach Comber From Birth

    Growing up in Atlanta, I got to be part of that great American summer tradition, the annual family beach trip.  Depending on the beach, my brother and I could look forward to between 4 and 6 hours of Wee-Sing-Silly-Songs cassettes, gas station candy, and fierce battles for control of the middle-seat armrest.

    We usually ventured to one of a handful of beaches: Panama City, Florida; Daytona, Florida; St. Simons Island, Georgia; Hilton Head, South Carolina.  Some on the Atlantic and some on the Gulf of Mexico but all had an abundance of cooked white flesh and thick southern accents.  It was paradise!

    I remember the thrill of the first palm tree sighting.  My brother and I would then count the palms in growing anticipation until we finally glimpsed a flash of ocean between a Texaco and a McDonald’s.  After checking into the hotel, we’d spend the next five days coated with sand and sunscreen jumping waves, riding boogie boards, and hunting for seashells.  Often grandparents came along and sometimes aunts, uncles, and cousins.  There was always a family putt-putt outing, which some of us took more seriously than others.  Inevitably, the week ended, and we would say goodbye to the beach for a year.

    I now live three blocks from the beach.

    I can wake up any day of the week and decide to skip writing in favor of paddling around the bay spotting sea turtles.  It. is. amazing!

    My daughter has been going to the beach regularly since before she discovered her hands.  The list of foods my girl will eat is short but includes white fish, salmon, shark, and tiny fried shrimp.  Fried shrimp with the shell and legs still on them.  The girl won’t part her lips for a carrot but she pops little shrimp in her mouth like chocolates.  We frequently have some version of this conversation on Saturday mornings:

    Me: “Should we go to beach today?”

    Husband: “I don’t know.  We went the last few weekends.  I think she might be getting tired of it.”

    Me: “Hey Little Bit, do you want to go to the beach?”

    Kid: “No, I want to stay home and play with my toys.”

    Yes, my daughter will turn down going to the beach in favor of staying home to play with her Littlest Pets because she has no idea how lucky she is and no appreciation for the months of waiting that I had to endure when I was her age to get to the beach.  Preschoolers!

    Because of these different life experiences, my daughter will probably never understand my obsession with ocean-based hobbies, specifically that she master one or several of them.  Some parents dream of their children graduating from the ivy league, I dream of my daughter being a competitive sailor or windsurfer or deep sea fisherwoman.  (That last one is lower down on the list.)

    Given the novelty (for me anyway) of growing up next to the beach, imagine my joy when my girl started swim class and LOVED it!  She has no fear of water, which makes supervising her around the pool more stressful, but is an important first step to becoming a world champion free diver!

    A couple of weeks ago, we embarked on phase two of my master plan.  Stand up paddle boarding in the bay!*  We went as a family and spent the morning spotting green sea turtles in the bay.  It was a success.  You can see in the video below.  My daughter had so much fun, we all went back out yesterday and the heavy grey clouds and constant drizzle didn’t deter her one bit.

    Watching my daughter yesterday on my husband’s board, leaning forward through the rain with a smile on her face, I thought “I just might have a seafarer on my hands.”  At least I hope I do.  All she needs now is a willingness to use sunscreen.

    *If you’re ever in Vitoria, Brazil, I highly recommend a morning of SUP.  We rented our boards from Loop.  They have windsurf and stand up equipment for rent. The bay is filled with sea turtle, fish, and the occasional ray leaping from the water.

    Whatever-the-weather-both-small

  • Live and Let Parent

    Live and Let Parent

    This morning my husband was walking past the bookshelf and spotted a recent addition amongst the rainbow of spines. (Yes, he is that observant.)  “Breastfeeding,” he murmured out loud, taking a closer look.  He turned to me and said “Do you really need 200 pages on breastfeeding?  Isn’t it pretty straightforward?”  A few months ago I would have thought the same thing, but then I started reading pregnancy sites and the endless stream of personal anecdotes in the comment sections detailing difficulties with everything from breastfeeding to nose clearing.  Now, I’m pretty sure 200 pages is not enough address all the ways breastfeeding can go wrong.

    It’s complicated.  I’m not just talking about breastfeeding.  I’m talking about raising a baby.  Last night, I spent an hour researching diaper creams.  I’ve looked at swaddling blankets versus sleep sacks.  Pacifiers before she’s one month old?  What temperature for the bath water?  Do visitors need to wash their hands before holding her or is hand sanitizer enough?  If I give her peanut butter before she graduates from high school will she die of an allergic reaction?  And these are only the questions about physical development.  Never mind the ones about intellect and character.

    As I develop an appreciation for how complicated raising a person is, I find myself becoming more and more tolerant of other parents.  Recently Salon featured an interview with the creator of the website “Too Big for Strollers.”  The name is literal.  The site is a collection of photos of kids who are probably old enough to send text messages from their own cell phones being pushed around in strollers.  From the tone of the site, its creator (clearly the Salon interviewer too) thinks putting a four-year-old in a stroller is what terrible parents do if they want to raise a lazy, entitled, and self-centered human being.

    When I saw the pictures, I thought “Isn’t an older child in a stroller better than a lost child?”

    The majority of pictures on the site seem to be taken in crowded amusements parks or cities, places where strapping in a kid perfectly old enough to walk but young enough to distractedly wander away is not a bad idea. Maybe overboard but not a terrible lapse in judgment.

    I have also been in the presence of a hot, tired, and hungry kid.  If they haven’t used this creature at Guantanamo, they’re missing a out on an extremely effective torture method not banned by the Geneva Convention.  I have dreams of being the parent who looks at her child after the 80th complaint of tired legs and serenely says, “You are too big for a stroller,” but I know they’re just dreams.  I’ll cave.  I can only take so much whining and screaming.  I have a breaking point.  Be it a day out running errands or a 9 hour plane ride, I already know there will be circumstances in which I will cater to any demand as long as it keeps her quiet. And mommy sane.

    Turns out the woman who created that site and the one who interviewed her are both childless!  Figures. It’s so easy to think there’s a clear “right way” when you are not the one who has to do it. I’m a pretty critical person but I’m now trying to give other parents a break.  As long as someone is feeding his child and not bathing it with bleach, I’ve got his back.  At least I’m trying to, because parenting is complicated.

    So to the Mom I passed on the street holding the hand of a 4 year old using a pacifier, I understand.  Maybe it was the only way to get through your errands without constant screaming.  So no judgment without context.  That leopard print unitard, though?  That’s just tacky.

    UPDATE May 2015: It looks like Laura Miller, the creator of the tumbler site Too Big for Strollers, gave it up shortly after her interview in Salon.  Apparently, there were A LOT of angry parents who didn’t like someone without children passing judgement on them.  And on a personal note, I recently tried to get my 3 1/2 year-old daughter to start walking the five blocks to school. It lasted two weeks. Dang, that girl can put up a fight.  She’ll overthrow a dictator someday.  We compromised on a tricycle that I can take over and push if necessary.  I’ll try the walking again on her 4th birthday.