Sunday, 30 November 2014
Sunday, 2 November 2014
First Night
The ward is all quiet now
The lights are down low
The visitors and daddies have all had to go
The mothers are resting
Their babies asleep
One nurse at the station, a watch she will keep
We've had quite a journey
Intense and unreal
I've felt things I never expected to feel
Moments of excitement
Moments of panic
An ending not planned and incredibly frantic
But now it's all over
It's just you and I
I knew you the moment you gave that first cry
I look at you sleeping
So still and so small
I am your mummy and you are my all.
Emma Robinson 2014
www.facebook.com/motherhoodforslackers
The lights are down low
The visitors and daddies have all had to go
The mothers are resting
Their babies asleep
One nurse at the station, a watch she will keep
We've had quite a journey
Intense and unreal
I've felt things I never expected to feel
Moments of excitement
Moments of panic
An ending not planned and incredibly frantic
But now it's all over
It's just you and I
I knew you the moment you gave that first cry
I look at you sleeping
So still and so small
I am your mummy and you are my all.
Emma Robinson 2014
www.facebook.com/motherhoodforslackers
Sunday, 26 October 2014
Supermarket Sweep
I know last time I took you,
I swore it would be the last.
But we’ve only two fish fingers left
and the bread has breathed its last.
I swore it would be the last.
But we’ve only two fish fingers left
and the bread has breathed its last.
Please stay in the trolley,
it really would be better.
I know you want to be helpful
and be mummy’s little ‘getters.’
it really would be better.
I know you want to be helpful
and be mummy’s little ‘getters.’
But mummy’s rather in a rush
to get this shopping done.
This is called a domestic chore,
it’s not supposed to be fun.
to get this shopping done.
This is called a domestic chore,
it’s not supposed to be fun.
Don’t touch that tottering food display
and put back that DVD.
I know you have some money,
but they’re more than 50p.
and put back that DVD.
I know you have some money,
but they’re more than 50p.
That lady does have funny hair
but please don’t point like that.
And, no, we don’t need cat food
as we haven’t got a cat.
but please don’t point like that.
And, no, we don’t need cat food
as we haven’t got a cat.
If you both behave yourself,
I’ll buy you each a treat.
I was thinking just some stickers,
not a lifesize Happy Feet.
I’ll buy you each a treat.
I was thinking just some stickers,
not a lifesize Happy Feet.
Until we’ve paid, it’s stealing
if you start to eat a biscuit.
Oh sod it, yes just open them -
it’s easier to risk it.
if you start to eat a biscuit.
Oh sod it, yes just open them -
it’s easier to risk it.
Yes I can see the woman
with the tiny little baby.
She’s staring at you terrified,
of what’s coming to her maybe.
with the tiny little baby.
She’s staring at you terrified,
of what’s coming to her maybe.
It’s rather hard to keep my calm
as people start to frown.
(Ironic you choose the frozen bit
to have a big meltdown.)
as people start to frown.
(Ironic you choose the frozen bit
to have a big meltdown.)
I want to kiss, mums that give me
‘I’ve been there too’ smiles.
And give us friendly knowing looks
as I belt around the aisles.
‘I’ve been there too’ smiles.
And give us friendly knowing looks
as I belt around the aisles.
Trying to remember
what I must get from the Deli.
Really isn’t helped much
by you crawling on your belly.
what I must get from the Deli.
Really isn’t helped much
by you crawling on your belly.
So NOW you want to get back in
and rest your weary legs?
You’ve squashed the lettuce, crushed the crisps
and sat down on the eggs.
and rest your weary legs?
You’ve squashed the lettuce, crushed the crisps
and sat down on the eggs.
Let’s just go, we’ve got the bulk,
the rest of the list can keep.
No-one’s been ‘round here so fast
since Supermarket sweep.
the rest of the list can keep.
No-one’s been ‘round here so fast
since Supermarket sweep.
Somehow we make it through the tills
and past the security men.
And I crawl towards the exit
crying, “Never, ever, again!”
and past the security men.
And I crawl towards the exit
crying, “Never, ever, again!”
Emma Robinson 2014
Saturday, 11 October 2014
Dear Dad
You taught me how to ride a bike and how to tell a joke.
To make up before the sun went down and that promises mustn’t be broke.
You taught me to be generous but also how to save.
You taught me books are precious things and showed me what was brave.
To make up before the sun went down and that promises mustn’t be broke.
You taught me to be generous but also how to save.
You taught me books are precious things and showed me what was brave.
Not to sulk or bear a grudge, the importance of forgiving,
To never take a sickie and work hard to make a living.
That good friends and your family are the greatest kind of wealth.
(And that ever being rude to mum was dangerous for my health.)
To never take a sickie and work hard to make a living.
That good friends and your family are the greatest kind of wealth.
(And that ever being rude to mum was dangerous for my health.)
And now as my own children grow, I wish that you were here.
With every milestone they achieve and more each passing year.
I wish that they could know you; I just wish that you were there.
I wonder what you’d think of them, my precious crazy pair?
With every milestone they achieve and more each passing year.
I wish that they could know you; I just wish that you were there.
I wonder what you’d think of them, my precious crazy pair?
But then I open up my mouth and it’s your voice comes out.
When I tell them to ‘breathe through your nose’ or “I’m right here, don’t shout!’
I hear you when I read to them (though my voice is not as deep.)
And I often use your Beatles songs to sing them off to sleep.
When I tell them to ‘breathe through your nose’ or “I’m right here, don’t shout!’
I hear you when I read to them (though my voice is not as deep.)
And I often use your Beatles songs to sing them off to sleep.
I make them laugh when they hurt themselves just as you
would do.
The jokes I tell to make them smile were the ones I learned from you.
My arms that hold them, lips that kiss, were the ones you made for me
And sometimes in a smile, a frown, in them it’s you I see.
The jokes I tell to make them smile were the ones I learned from you.
My arms that hold them, lips that kiss, were the ones you made for me
And sometimes in a smile, a frown, in them it’s you I see.
And then I know that you are here, in everything I do.
In every word and thought and deed, your influence comes through.
And I smile and know that you’re not gone, I still have what I had.
I’m the parent that I am today, because you were my Dad.
In every word and thought and deed, your influence comes through.
And I smile and know that you’re not gone, I still have what I had.
I’m the parent that I am today, because you were my Dad.
Emma Robinson (2014)
www.facebook.com/motherhoodforslackers
Tuesday, 7 October 2014
"He gets that from you!"
“I love how
babies look like old people. I saw a baby the other day that looked exactly
like my grandpa, only taller.” (Jarod Kintz: This Book is Not for Sale.)
When you have a baby, one of the things people do is try to work out who he or she looks like. Emphatic comments that they have their mother’s eyes, their father’s nose and their great-grandfather’s eyebrows make you start to wonder if you have produced a baby or a 3D Police Identikit. Nevertheless, you find yourself scanning their face for bits that look like you, your husband or your parents. Any likenesses are particularly poignant when it’s to someone you have lost. When I put a hat on the girl the other day and she smiled up at me and looked exactly like my Nan, it was a precious moment.
As they get older, you realise that it's not just your looks they can inherit. Whether it’s genetics or learned behaviour, the personality traits of you and your partner start to materialise in miniature form. Sometimes this can be cute: my daughter sucking her thumb and twiddling her hair just as I did at her age; my son pacing the floor as he tells you something, just like his dad does; the fact that they both talk incessantly just like . . .
Sometimes, however, your less attractive traits start to manifest themselves. When the boy was about two, I realised that I needed to stop talking aloud to myself when trying to find my keys, phone or handbag when he hid himself in a cardboard box and said, "Where's William? Where's William? Where's that bloody William?"
(In my defence, I wasn't the first to introduce him to that delightful vocabulary. Weeks previously he had been 'helping' daddy in the garden when he appeared before me crying because he'd been sent in. When I asked him why daddy had sent him in he said, "I've been picking the bloody flowers again, mummy.")
Often you don't realise that you say or do something until they start to mimic you. Recently, I reprimanded my son for losing his temper with the iPad and smacking it in anger. Next day at work I found myself doing exactly the same thing to my computer when it wouldn't do what I wanted. The girl was trying her best to fit herself into a dress she had outgrown the other day and ended up pulling it off her head and throwing it across the room saying it was a “stupid dress.” I really must tell her father to stop doing that . . .
Eventually, they try to use your platitudes against you. My admonishments to keep trying and not give up came back to bite me when I told the boy I couldn't fix a broken toy and he replied, "But mummy, you can't say you can't do it until you've really tried.' They also repeat them to each other. Cue my three year old daughter standing, hands on hips, and telling her brother “How many times have I told you to stop doing that?” (His reply, incidentally, was “Four” – he gets his infuriating tendency to state reality from the paternal line.)
Obviously, we both try to claim the good traits ('I was always bright as a child') and point the finger in the opposite direction for the bad (although, whatever my husband tries to tell you, I have NEVER thrown myself to the floor in public because he wouldn't buy me a pair of shoes.)
This continues throughout your life. I think I resemble my own mum more with each passing year. Also my home looks more like hers as I have definitely developed the same taste in furnishings (although sadly the tidy gene seems to have defaulted somewhere along the line.) Since I've become a mother, this metamorphosis has accelerated: her words drop from my lips with alarming regularity: "What’s the magic word?" and “You need to drink more water” and “What you need are a few early nights.”
My own
children’s habits and phases come and go and, as they grow and develop their
own personalities and character traits, I wonder which of their parental
similarities will disappear and which will remain. I live in hope that they
keep their daddy’s blue eyes and thirst for knowledge, my clear skin and passion
for a good book and our shared love of laughter.
Once thing I do know, my daughter will resent
me forever if she ends up inheriting my bum.
Friday, 26 September 2014
Nine Months
I’ve been taking Folic Acid
and stopped drinking any wine.
Your dad thinks it’s his birthday
(we do ‘it’ all the time.)
But little do I know yet,
the job’s already done.
We’ve started our nine month journey
and this has been month one.
and stopped drinking any wine.
Your dad thinks it’s his birthday
(we do ‘it’ all the time.)
But little do I know yet,
the job’s already done.
We’ve started our nine month journey
and this has been month one.
Month Two, the test results are in
but so’s the morning sickness.
I’m desperate already to see a bump,
but there’s just a little thickness.
You’re our little secret just for now,
a glint in Daddy’s eye.
Although I want to burst out loud
and tell every passer-by.
but so’s the morning sickness.
I’m desperate already to see a bump,
but there’s just a little thickness.
You’re our little secret just for now,
a glint in Daddy’s eye.
Although I want to burst out loud
and tell every passer-by.
Month Three and we can see you
in fuzzy black and white.
Our excitement is a cliché;
we show everyone in sight.
“There’s its tiny nose,” we point.
“How lovely,” they all said.
You’ve tiny fingers, tiny toes
(and a rather massive head.)
in fuzzy black and white.
Our excitement is a cliché;
we show everyone in sight.
“There’s its tiny nose,” we point.
“How lovely,” they all said.
You’ve tiny fingers, tiny toes
(and a rather massive head.)
Month Four and now I don’t feel sick
and start to have some cravings.
Which consist of any type of food
if covered in chocolate shavings.
Then it’s time for a special moment
that truly fills me up with joy.
When I listen to your heartbeat
on the midwife’s clever toy.
and start to have some cravings.
Which consist of any type of food
if covered in chocolate shavings.
Then it’s time for a special moment
that truly fills me up with joy.
When I listen to your heartbeat
on the midwife’s clever toy.
Month Five and it’s time for another scan -
the cold gel makes me chilly.
Everyone is staring hard
to see if there’s a willy.
We don’t know if you’re boy or girl,
so nothing pink or blue
White babygros, white vests, white hats
and tiny yellow shoes.
the cold gel makes me chilly.
Everyone is staring hard
to see if there’s a willy.
We don’t know if you’re boy or girl,
so nothing pink or blue
White babygros, white vests, white hats
and tiny yellow shoes.
Month Six: we’re in the final stage
and start to look for a pram.
Your dad is heard to mumble:
“These cost more than my first van.”
This month’s when I first feel you,
small movements in my tummy.
And suddenly it feels so real
I’m going to be a mummy . . .
Month Seven and my clothes don’t fit,
so I browse maternity collections.
Knickers you could camp in
and jeans with extra sections.
People say I’m ‘blooming’;
pat my ever-expanding tum.
(I know that you need padding
but why’s it on my bum?)
and start to look for a pram.
Your dad is heard to mumble:
“These cost more than my first van.”
This month’s when I first feel you,
small movements in my tummy.
And suddenly it feels so real
I’m going to be a mummy . . .
Month Seven and my clothes don’t fit,
so I browse maternity collections.
Knickers you could camp in
and jeans with extra sections.
People say I’m ‘blooming’;
pat my ever-expanding tum.
(I know that you need padding
but why’s it on my bum?)
Month Eight I start to waddle
and I find it hard to bend.
I’m weeing like a racehorse
and I’m eating like his friend.
And If you’ve seen a beetle writhe
when turned upon his back;
You’ve got an idea of how I look
when getting out the sack.
Month Nine and I am desperate.
This waiting game’s a ‘mare.
Attempting any old wives’ tales
to get you out of there.
I’m fat and tired and impatient
with chronic indigestion.
I’ve tried pineapple and raspberry leaf
(but not the other suggestion.)
and I find it hard to bend.
I’m weeing like a racehorse
and I’m eating like his friend.
And If you’ve seen a beetle writhe
when turned upon his back;
You’ve got an idea of how I look
when getting out the sack.
Month Nine and I am desperate.
This waiting game’s a ‘mare.
Attempting any old wives’ tales
to get you out of there.
I’m fat and tired and impatient
with chronic indigestion.
I’ve tried pineapple and raspberry leaf
(but not the other suggestion.)
Month Nine plus one and I feel a twinge
that’s not a Braxton Hick.
I take a bath, switch on the TENS
and get your dad home quick.
I’m scared, excited, happy,
terrified and over the moon.
And suddenly, it dawns on me,
I’ll get to meet you soon.
that’s not a Braxton Hick.
I take a bath, switch on the TENS
and get your dad home quick.
I’m scared, excited, happy,
terrified and over the moon.
And suddenly, it dawns on me,
I’ll get to meet you soon.
The longest nine months of my life
and somehow I’ve survived.
The moment I’ve dreaded and longed for
has finally arrived.
And I try to take a moment
despite the cramp and coming pain.
Because one thing is for certain,
life will never be the same.
and somehow I’ve survived.
The moment I’ve dreaded and longed for
has finally arrived.
And I try to take a moment
despite the cramp and coming pain.
Because one thing is for certain,
life will never be the same.
Saturday, 13 September 2014
I was going to be . . .
I was going to be the parent who never raised her voice.
Who cooked you fresh organic food, bought only wooden toys.
Who cooked you fresh organic food, bought only wooden toys.
Today I’ve screamed a thousand times and threatened measures
drastic.
You’ve had chips, three times this week, and our lounge is full of plastic.
You’ve had chips, three times this week, and our lounge is full of plastic.
I was going to be the parent with a craft box fully stocked.
Tissue, card and googly eyes: a Pritt stick ready cocked.
Tissue, card and googly eyes: a Pritt stick ready cocked.
But I found I couldn’t make stuff; my creations were pathetic.
And glitter makes me want to drink until I’m paralytic.
And glitter makes me want to drink until I’m paralytic.
I was going to be the parent who made your birthday cake.
But after one horrendous fail, I’m now a shop-bought fake.
But after one horrendous fail, I’m now a shop-bought fake.
I was going to be the parent who kept every childhood something.
But I seem to have lost your lock of hair and your baby book has nothing.
But I seem to have lost your lock of hair and your baby book has nothing.
I planned on baby massage, baby yoga, all things artistic.
What you got was: ‘baby watch whilst mummy eats her weight in biscuits.’
What you got was: ‘baby watch whilst mummy eats her weight in biscuits.’
I thought I’d be the parent who loved her child a lot.
Kept them safe, fed them well and cleaned their stinky bot.
Kept them safe, fed them well and cleaned their stinky bot.
But the love I felt when you were born just knocked my off
my feet.
A love that makes me place my hand just to feel your heart’s soft beat.
A love that makes me place my hand just to feel your heart’s soft beat.
I may not be the parent that I first set out to be.
But I’m the parent that truly loves you and forever that I’ll be.
But I’m the parent that truly loves you and forever that I’ll be.
Emma Robinson (2014)
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