It's Spring. We're Awake. (Courtney McKinney-Whitaker)
When you have an 8-month-old, "awakening" has a
whole different meaning from the lovely reawakening of nature in spring. For
us, this year, "spring's awakening" has been my baby's tendency,
since she turned six months in March, to wake up every morning at 2:30 and
sometimes also at 5:30. It also refers to her sudden refusal to nap. What
happened? She was right on track, sleeping through the night, napping twice a
day, and then it's just Nope, nope, nope,
no nap. I'm going to fight it with everything I have, and I would also like a three-course meal at 2:30 a.m. now, okay?
My journey to motherhood was not easy, and I know how
annoying and superior and self-centered the mommy club can appear when you're
not in it, and I still want to slap people who say their books are their
children. There are tons of similarities—I myself have even written about these
similarities—but it is not the same thing at all. Books can be your legacy, maybe, but children are a whole
different ballgame. With extra innings, as my mother would no doubt argue,
based on the number of times per month I call her in (usually temporary)
crisis. There's also no chance anyone is going to give you a medal for raising
children, unlike books, which sometimes do win awards. THE LAST SISTER, for
example, tied for the 2015 IPPY silver medal in historical fiction. (I was
wondering how I was going to work that in. Seamless, no?)
Unlike THE LAST SISTER, my daughter will never sit quietly
on a shelf while I write my next book, nor would I want her to. That would be boring
and weird for both of us, plus shelf space is at a premium in our house and
reserved for books. (Who are these people who have shelf space for knickknacks?
I don't understand.)
So my task now is to figure out how and how much and when I
can write with an active baby who doesn't love naps and is going to crawl any
day. But the good news is that there have been so many other times in my life
when I've thought I have no idea how this
is going to work or how I'm ever going
to get all this work done, and some of those times have been in the last
eight months and every time, all the work has gotten done. I have learned how
to do it. (Example: When I was in college, I didn't have time to write
longhand, so I taught myself to compose on the computer. That was hard, but
second nature to me now.) So I trust that it will get done this time, too, and
once we get back from all the (first-world problems) traveling we have to do
this summer, I am going to look into childcare options.
Fear not, Courtney! As I recall, crawling and eventually walking = tired baby. Tired babies like to nap more.
ReplyDeleteOh, that is great to hear! I just wish we could get on some kind of schedule. I love a schedule, but I have a feeling V may be more of a free spirit.
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