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Encouragement Holidays Parenthood

10 Things I'm Grateful for Since Becoming a Mom

By Kelly McGill

It’s the season of giving thanks. I like to think I don’t need a special time of year to remind myself to be thankful – it’s never far from my thoughts that I am blessed with good health and a loving family.

This year I got to thinking about some other things I’m grateful for, that are extra precious since becoming a mom:

1. Sleep

I’ll start with the most obvious. Show me a parent of young children who doesn’t yearn for long stretches of unbroken sleep at night.

I miss sleeping through the night like a vegan misses cheese.

My daughter is – astoundingly – 8 months old now, which means I haven’t slept through the night in about 11 months (a third trimester bladder wins over sleep every time). That said, there was one night a couple of weeks ago – one sweet, blissful night – when my wee ginger princess slept from 7 pm until 5 am. I slept 8 hours that night. 8 HOURS, PEOPLE! I was completely disoriented when my home girl finally squawked.

But oh. Was I rested! I wish I could say that was the start of a new chapter in the sleep story for my sweet cherub; alas, it was not. We’ve been hanging out 2-3 times a night since then. But I am ridiculously grateful for that string of unbroken hours of sleep.

They give a tired mama hope.

2. Hot tea or coffee

Lukewarm coffee is gross. But caffeine is caffeine and a tired mama can’t be too picky.

My kids seem to have a sixth sense as to when my coffee is at the temperature for prime drinking enjoyment. That’s when my son decides he’s dying of hunger and can’t wait a nanosecond longer to eat lest he combusts, or my daughter poops with such force that her diaper, pajamas, and every toy, blanket, and cushion within 3 feet of her needs to be changed, washed, or sterilized. And the dream of enjoying a hot coffee quickly dies.

3. Available cashiers at the grocery store

Do you know what’s worse than waiting in a long line to check out at the grocery store? Waiting in a long line with young kids.

As soon as movement stops and we are in waiting mode, shit gets real in my cart.

My son pokes at everything within reach – even the stuff in other people’s carts – and my infant daughter reminds me that there is no fate worse than standing still.

When I get to the checkout and see a cashier wave at me to indicate that her lane is open and ready, it’s all I can do not to hug her and blubber big heaving sobs of gratitude into her shoulder.

4. Time alone in my house

Pre-kids this is something I took for granted in a big way.

Being able to flow from one activity to another on a whim. Taking long naps or baths or both. Seeing a task through to completion in one sitting. Talking on the phone. (Just kidding. Who does that anymore?) Texting, guilt-free. Crafting. Writing. Cooking.

Post-kids, I am always in standby mode. At any given moment, one or both of my children might need me, so I find it difficult to fully immerse myself in whatever it is I’m doing. I mean, it’s hard to relax in the bath while worrying that I might need to jump out of it and streak naked through the hall to a crying child.

So when the husband declares that he is going to venture to the park or the grocery store with both kids, the sun gets brighter and the angels sing and this mama appreciates every second that she is solo in her home.

All two times it has happened.

I might need to invest in one of these

5. Clothing with pockets

Me, trying to get down the stairs in the morning: baby girl in one arm, phone tucked precariously into the waistband of my pajamas, one used bottle being held against my neck with my chin, another tucked into an armpit, spare hand holding the hand of my son.

Last spring on sale, I found a cozy winter nightgown that has a big kangaroo pocket across the belly. So I bought 4 of them. And I wore them all summer long. Because of the pocket. But most clothes don’t have pockets that can hold more than a phone.

6. Dinner planned by anyone but me

I don’t mind cooking. I quite enjoy it, actually. But I loathe meal planning. And I do mean loathe. I am left to do it alone (yes, I’m throwing you under the bus here, Husband). I have to take into consideration the needs and likes of: a picky vegetarian (me), a carnivore who usually gets home from work after the rest of the family has eaten, and a 3-year-old who, if he had it his way, would eat nothing but peanut butter and jam sandwiches and blueberries for the rest of his life.

If someone – anyone – would just hand me a meal plan that made everyone in my family happy at the same time, I would gladly – nay, gleefully – cook that shit up.

7. My friends with kids

Parenting is by far the strangest and wildest adventure I have ever been on in my life. Thank heavens for all my mama friends right here with me!

They get it when I talk about how heavy and all-consuming the responsibility can sometimes feel. It’s those same people who can relate to the intense joy that comes with being a parent. They understand the relationship strains, the total exhaustion, the abrupt change in priorities. My mama friends know how long the days can feel with little ones underfoot, but also how shockingly fast the time goes.

The connection and support that I get from my mama tribe has kept me afloat during some very dark days. Their collective knowledge, experiences, and encouragement are better than anything I could ever hope to find on Google. I am eternally grateful to have them in my life.

8. My friends without kids

These gems. They show love to my littles, but at the same time, they are beautiful reminders to me of the person I was pre-littles.

Even though whole months sometimes pass, during which I am too consumed by the tornado that is motherhood to reach out and say hi, they are always there for me, ready to pick up the conversation right where we left off.

You know who you are, ladies. I hope you know how much I adore you.

9. Good weather

We’ve had a lot of rainy days lately. Do you know what rainy days mean to a parent with two little ones?

Mess. They mean catastrophic mess.

Without the option to go outside and burn off preschooler energy, my son becomes a human tornado, spinning from one activity to the next, leaving a trail of destruction and MESS in his wake. I like things a certain way. (Hello my name is Kelly and I am a control freak perfectionist.)

When I see rain or bitterly cold temperatures in the forecast, I want to curl up in the fetal position and hum ‘Twinkle Little Star’. But those looonnnnnnnng days trapped indoors due to bad weather do make me extra appreciative of the days we can get outside to play and explore.

As long as it is relatively dry and unlikely to cause any part of us to turn black with frostbite, we will spend time outdoors. Oh yes, children, we will.

10. Quiet

Life with kids can be loud. Oh. So. Loud. Sometimes the noise is joyful – laughter and singing and make-believe play. And sometimes it’s not-so-joyful, like when my son’s face abruptly meets the hard kitchen tile. Or when my daughter notices that she is not in Mama’s arms. Oh the noise that ensues then.

I don’t think I appreciated silence enough before I became a parent. I didn’t even notice the silence. But now I do. I notice it and relish every moment of it, no matter how short-lived it is.

What are you grateful for?

Pop 'em in the comments below!

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