While posing in perpetual Awkward Facing Dog, I slowly crouch, like a cave woman, in a position that screams, "I have made FIRE!"; soap in eyes, I blindly search for my washcloth. I consider my choices of body wash. I could use something fragrant with scrubbing beads that smell of empty promises to replenish and restore my skin currently serving a life sentence of dryness without possibility of parole. Instead, I grab the 3-in-1, no tears baby wash knowing that the best hope of completing this shower with moderate success is to allow my limbs to serve as soap sprayers and the vinyl mop strips found at the local car wash. My soapy seconds are recycled onto the hair, face and body of the uninvited guest at my cleanliness cotillion.
This is your shower on drugs.
On Sundays, I shower solo. On Sundays, while the world is praising their God or wearing foam fingers in celebration of their preferred suited victors, I am searching for any excuse, short of shaving, to stand for just two more minutes, completely alone, upright and perfectly still under water that has not been heat checked and rechecked for baby level Defcon-5 temperature appropriateness.
Then, something happens. Guilt creeps in like a guilt-mongering guilt-o-meter measuring my guilt at an all time high. Because, when your time is never your own, having a moment alone feels odd. And, tucked inside the happiness of having it, I start to plant and water that small seed of questioning in my core. Do I deserve this time? When, just downstairs, children are hungry and crying and asking and asking and asking, should I give this up too? For the greater good or to administer the perfect crust removal?
No.
On Sundays, in the chaos of preparing for a new week, I find peace, restoration and humanity in my 15 minutes of watery solitude. My church of the Lady of the Indoor Plumbing and her patron Saint of Ives.
And, a choir of Dove soap sings Hallelujah.
And one day may we all shower to our hearts content, using all the hot water as they prepare to clean up for weekend plans. Vengeance is ours, Mama!
ReplyDeleteCue les mis, I dreamed a dream...
DeleteAwesome. The funniest and truest thing I've read in years. I wish when my kids were little we'd had the internet, all those years I thought I was alone, an obviously poor mother who could have children considerate enough to let me bath alone, pee alone, sleep alone, BREATHE alone.
ReplyDeleteThank you! Never alone....moms are a fierce tribe. Happy you found this post. xo
DeleteSad news is these weekly alone showers start to feel like a vacation, huh? Throw in a grocery store trip without the kids, and we've got a full-out blissful getaway going on. Keep enjoying your weekly escape!
ReplyDeleteTarget alone is about as good as a decent bottle of wine or a date with the husband. Standards drastically lowered since 2006.
DeleteThis *is* what it's come to, isn't it? We're given a brief shower, sprinkled with guilt, to call our own.
ReplyDelete"patron Saint of Ives" = choked on my coffee. Hilarious and true, all of it.
It really and truly is. If I start drinking in the shower, can I call it communion?
DeleteI think that should be considered communion. I second your motion.
DeleteThis is so true, I also shower alone on Sundays. It's like were together at church feeling guilty about the parishioners we've locked out.
ReplyDeleteI'm in good company. In the name of the shower, the soap and the holey washcloth...Amen.
DeleteAwkward Facing Dog. I think that's how we conceived my son.
ReplyDeleteNamamaste. I'm also a pro at Falls Asleep Standing Up.
DeleteI also look forward to my solo shower, sometimes also if I'm really lucky, a solo bath.
ReplyDeleteWhen we bought our house, I thought it was no big deal that we didn't have a tub. Several years and children later, I realize that I need a tub.
DeleteIf I didn't shower alone now, my kids may be scarred for life! :D But then, they're 5 and 9, so they definitely don't need to see my naked body! :P
ReplyDeleteI will now commence dreaming of the day when I scar my children. :)
DeleteDitto the above comment! LOL My one year old likes to play in the shower, and it's easier if he is in there when I am so I can keep an eye on him. But the Quasi moto thing - yeah, I get it. Hoping for a bigger shower in our new house!
ReplyDeleteIf you DO get that bigger shower, can I move in? Temporarily to permanently?
DeleteBahahahaha!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Katie! Glad you got a kick out of this. xo
DeleteI love that I'm not the only one who sometimes has to use the baby wash! Loved the post!
ReplyDeleteOH, I am in good company. If only I smelled as good as the baby does after she uses the same soap. Why does she smell like baby and I smell like desperation?
DeleteOver here it's, "We don't have a penis. We have a China!" Ahhhh, the joys of Motherhood. Thanks for reading!
ReplyDeleteThat is hilarious!! And so true. We must find a purpose for the mommy guilt that has been embedded deep within us. Then we will market it and get rich.
ReplyDeleteHoly crap! That was a good idea. Somebody write it down!!
I want in on the bottling of mommy guilt serum. It could be called guilt be gone and it will smell like the beach and that artist you dated your freshman year of college. Yeah, we are going to be rich. Like, private jet rich. Making it rain.
DeleteI have 2 a 3 yr old boy and a 4 month old girl so I make my son shower with Daddy because a few months ago he saw me run from shower to bedroom to get dressed (ya know all wet and frigid cold-like) and I heard this come from his mouth "ewwwww yucky!".
ReplyDeleteI just about lost it. So I asked him why he said that and he said "Cuz you nakie. Thas yucky mommy."
Husband cracked up laughing and I started my manifesto lol.
I literally laughed out loud! And hard! Thanks
ReplyDeleteWhen my daughter was littler she would walk into the bathroom when my husband was showering, perch herself on the edge of the separate tub, and chat with him through the sliding glass doors. I could usually hear her through the bathroom door. Usually she would share tidbits about her friends or rat on her brother while my husband would utter things like "uh-huh" or "Is that right?" while lathering, rinsing and repeating. But every once in a while I would hear my daughter compliment her dad on something he did right in the shower, along the lines of (said in an encouraging tone): "Good job washing your butt, dad!" There would be a pause, and then my husband would say, "Um, thanks." And he would keep on showering and chatting with his little girl. That is how I know I married a saint.
ReplyDeleteI remember doing that with my 2 older ones while I was pregnant with my youngest. After seeing a picture of myself with that planet sized pregnant belly, I cannot, for the life of me, figure out how I managed that.
ReplyDeleteWhen I originally commented I appear to have clicked on
ReplyDeletethe -Notify me when new comments are added- checkbox and now whenever a comment
is added I get 4 emails with the exact same comment.
Perhaps there is an easy method you are able to remove me from that service?
Thanks a lot!
Also visit my weblog 7Ers news - 7Ers uniform
Greetings from Hoofddorρ, Netheгlanԁs.
ReplyDeleteMу name's Rachele and I want to ask: do you have a spam problem on this blog? I'm a
blogger toο аnd I'm wondering how many people have the exact same problem. Some of us have created some nice techniques and we are looking to exchange ideas with others. Why not shoot me an e-mail if interested?
my website :: redes-e-servidores.blogspot.com