Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Job Performance Issues

Back after 2 weeks away.  No, I didn't go anywhere, the kids were home for 2 weeks.  Here in Australia there is a break of a few weeks in between terms or marking periods as we say back home.  It's good in that they don't have 3 months off all at once but it's bad in that they have 2 weeks off at once.  I say that not because I hate my kids....no I don't.  Just because I'm not the mushy gushy mom that can't stand being away from Precious Snookem's longer than a few hours doesn't mean I actually hate my kids.  What I hate is the pack of feral creatures they become when they are trapped together.  Oh like for example at home for two weeks.

Every mother (well every HONEST one) will tell you that even though they will walk through fire for their kids listening to the constant fighting, whining, crying, and general bellyaching will make even the most patient saint a psychotic hose beast beast bent on mass murder.   Alright, maybe not all mothers will admit to the last part but I do.

However even living through rough holidays and enduring ENDLESS hours of Adventure Time and listening to those damn One Direction songs - good God, REALLY?  - only a mother is crazy enough to still have nurturing feelings towards the people causing the strife.  I guess it's our version of Stockholm Syndrome.  But instead of caring for our captures we're caring about people who's so reason to get out of bed is to piss you off.

This is not normal, I understand that.  If an adult spent half as much effort lying to me, ratting out a fellow friend, picking fist fights with yet another friend or asking me the same bloody question 15 times a minute, just to hear my voice, I think you'd agree me that severing ties is required.  Or if ties couldn't be severed holding the person in open disdain would be expected.  AT THE VERY LEAST no rational person would expect me to been over backwards with concern for the little twit at the slightest provocation of fear or pain.

Unless you are a mother.  Then all rules are different and you are the bad person if you snap and tell the little cherub in question to piss off.  Yes, yes, I understand that there different rules of engagement with battles with children then with adults but this goes beyond the pale.  Any other kid pull half the crap on me that my kids pull and I'd be plotting against them too.  Just in a kinder, gentler fashion.  No blood, but a bit of public humiliation when I work Canteen.  I know my boundaries.

But my kids....that's an entirely different story.

Yesterday, after 2 weeks of not being allowed out of the same room with Connor, watching her needle and pick fights with her siblings, again listening to that damn One Direction and on and on about her new obsession with Big Bang Theory episodes, we all reached the wall.  At the end of a long day in the CBD and me furiously trying to make grilled cheese sandwiches for dinner - after Sasha ate the cheese I was going to use and serve up dinner to bored and angry kids Connor would not stop asking me which acting voice to use when saying, "What is going on?" (side note - I have NO damn clue where that came from.  She literally walked into the kitchen, stopped between me and the sandwich press and demanded the different ways of saying the phrase.  What.the.Hell?)  and I snapped, "Oh Christ Connor, look at me.  What am I trying to do?"  And my insanely annoying daughter responded with, "I know, shut up and go away"

Being the calm, responsible person that I am, I handled that comment the best way I could.  I burst into sobbing tears.  Not the pretty ones.  The tear gushing, snot-flying, splotchy ones that hiccup out of your mouth and when you try to talk you sound like you're speaking a really guttural foreign language.  Those tears. 

I have never in Connor's life said that to her.  Not once.  But since I have thought I was immediately consumed with the fear that I had scarred her for life with...what...the aura of the phrase?  I dunno, but I knew that I was instantly a bad mother and my poor baby's emotional well being was endangered.  No matter that she would have driven a tee totalling monk to drink these past few weeks and there were times I was hoping Teddy would haul off and crack her one....it didn't matter.  My mere thoughts had seeped into her brain and therefore I was bad.

This right here is how motherhood is different from other jobs.  I have never in my life felt as bad at doing a job as I do most days with motherhood.  I didn't feel that bad when I burned entire batches of popcorn when I worked at a movie theater, not as useless when I screwed up some exam scores for a testing center I worked at nowhere near as stupid when I told people the wrong law when I was a paralegal.  But have my own kid say she knows to shut up and go away?  Yep, grounds for dismissal. 

Only I can't get canned.  I can't lose this job.  So here I was last night, sobbing how sorry I was that Connor thought that and that I never said that and I didn't mean it.  Which of course made her cry because she didn't understand why I would be upset.  Another parenting win.

So if I had to self evaluate myself for the last term's productivity I'd have to give myself a Developing, with room to Improve.  I'm hoping management gives me a bit of sabbatical to reevaluate my commitment to the company.  Some place with umbrellas in the drinks.

2 comments:

Alexandra Cecchini said...

Mothers of teens (or tweens) understand why some species eat their young. I love your blog, although I should probably stop reading it at work - I keep getting the evil eye every time I'm spasming with laughter in my cubicle. Keep up the good work...baby, you light up my world like nobody else! (sorry, had to...)

Unknown said...

Thanks so much for the kind words. They help. I really thought I'd lost all hope the other day. Glad also you think it's funny. I can't see it myself...it's just my life.