When my hubby and I started talking about having a third child we laughed at the thought of there being more of them than there are of us. We discussed the problem of having one more child than we have hands, one more child than we even had bedrooms for, and yet....here we are, and we wouldn't have it any other way.
Is the jump from two to three that big?
Yes. Maybe not Evil Knievil jumps the grand canyon big, but big.
Just because there are more animals than keepers in our household doesn't make it a complete zoo. But, add to the sheer number of small humans in my house, the fact that one of them has severe food allergies, and that throws a few more balls into the air to juggle.
The Squeaky Wheel
We have all heard the saying, "the squeaky wheel gets the oil." Meaning that if one of your children is screaming from the bathroom for toilet paper, one is hanging perilously from the top of the loft ladder and one is quietly painting themselves with nail polish, you hide in the bathroom until your husband gets home. No really, you grab the kid from the ladder before you have to add a trip to the ER to your daily "to list" because a long wait on the pot or a little added sparkle to the floor won't undo your whole day.
So when your children outnumber you (or you and your husband) you play the squeaky wheel game. Who needs me most? Who will live without me for the next 5 minutes?
For anyone with kids there are not too many times when their wheels don't need oiling. They need feeding, clothing, bathing, tutoring, disciplining, rescuing, answering, moderating, playing, loving, hugging, soothing, kissing, boosting, and most of the time that is before 8:00am.
When one of your children has additional needs as far as their health, they tend to get the most focus. That one kid whose wheel is constantly squeaking. Over the last year, that child has been my Monk. The hubs and I have had to learn so much about caring for a child with food allergies, eczema and asthma. I will admit that there isn't many times of the day that some aspect of this doesn't weigh on my mind.
So where does that leave the other two?
Trust me that each of them offer up plenty of opportunities for oil, and lately their needs may have resulted from a lack of being the squeaky one. How do you balance? How do you ensure that each of them gets their fill of mommy time and knows that they are loved. How do you choose which wheel to oil when one is breaking out into hives, one can't get the help needed for long running behavioral problems and the last is hardly ever squeaky but wants nothing more than to sit and cuddle with you for hours?
This is where I have found myself over the last weeks. And the answer is that you become the last on the list and dole out as much attention as you can spare in those short and few waking hours that we are given. You ignore the state of your house, maybe don't cook dinner for a few nights, and understand that everyone will live through a week (or two) of school with wrinkled uniforms (or shirts with no buttons. Yep, that happened.)
Enough To Go Around
When you begin to consider having more than one child, there is a question that we all ask ourselves. Will I love this next child as much as my first? It is horrible to admit but we all wonder somewhere in the far recesses of our brains. We love or children so much that spreading it amongst multiple kids just seems virtually impossible. We make it happen though, and some magical force Grinchifies our hearts to grow with the addition of each new family member.
While it becomes second nature to share and spread the love, there is one thing in our lives that we all need more of but can't seem to get...time. And that is where things get complicated. Taking the time to give each child what they need can take more than 24 hours each day, and that is before you go to work, make dinner, wash the dishes, clean the clothes. You get me.
There is not enough time to go around to focus on just one child to the extent to which we all would like, but I can only hope that sharing a mommy, and learning to help themselves on occasion (like making sure there is toilet paper in the bathroom before you go potty!) will help them each to become a bit more resilient in life.
I try to find a balance, and I have a feeling that I will be working the scales back and forth for the rest of my life. I have three beautiful children who each need me in one way or another, and I am thankful for being needed, being wanted and being loved by them. Even if it is for 27 hours a day.
And know that it is an exercise in futility to get them all to smile at the same time. |
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