The Silence of the Little Lamb

Cannibal Baby 2

The following is based on actual events

My baby likes to eat a lot

A carrot, squash, a pea

But I kinda get the feeling that

Her favorite dish is me.

I caught her chewing on my shoe

I barely held a scream

Then I found her with her fingers in

A tub of diaper cream.

A scrap of paper off the floor

A tiny speck of crumb

But I do believe what she loves best

Is gnawing on my thumb.

This morning right before her nap

She used my leg to stand

Then she sunk her gums into my calf

I must have tasted bland.

She scrunched her nose up in disgust

I thought she might be done

But her eyes were looking at me like

I was a hot cross bun.

I quickly moved to make some lunch

Some veggies, nice and fresh

But it soon became so very clear

She wanted human flesh.

I started getting nervous when

I heard a troubling sound

She was smacking her lips hungrily

And so I turned around.

It wasn’t very cute at all

It wasn’t at all funny

‘Cause it seemed that what she wanted most

Was me inside her tummy.

Much later in the afternoon

I went in for a kiss

But she bared her teeth and bit my lip

Then closed her eyes in bliss.

I almost called an ambulance

I almost called the cops

As my baby sat upon the couch

Licking clean her chops.

This evening when I drew her bath

She seemed so calm, composed

But she followed me across the floor

Just nipping at my toes.

At bedtime I began to sweat

She made a funny squeal

And I’m pretty sure my baby thinks

I am a Happy Meal.

And now I’m hiding in my bed

I’m running out of luck

Cause my baby is a cannibal

And I’m as scared as fuck.

Silencelittlelamb

 

 

Me at a Party: A Cautionary Tale

Polite company usually makes me behave very badly.

I have recently attended a string of events where one is expected to act like a normal person:  children’s birthday parties, (including my own daughter’s), weddings, various types of showers–and I have failed at almost all of them.

I’m infected with this weird strand of social anxiety that causes me to stand awkwardly in the corner with my mouth shut trying desperately not to do or say something weird.  Well.  Until I drink too much.  Which is always. And then i do quite the opposite.  Here is a handy chart I’ve fashioned to illustrate exactly what happens at, oh, let’s say, choosing something completely randomly, a baby shower.

Toilet Man Chart

 

  1. Receive email inviting me to shower.
  2. Spend the next few weeks thinking of an excuse to not go.
  3. Determine that suicide is not feasible.
  4. Get dressed for party with grace and ease.
  5. Change five times because nothing looks good on my warped post-baby body before putting back on the very first outfit.
  6. Show up to the party.  Realize I know only one person.  Immediately get super awkward.
  7. Think of universal topics to discuss in order to make small talk.  Congratulate myself on my efforts.
  8. Promptly forget everything.
  9. Decide after twenty drinks that I am the most interesting person in the room.  Go up to stranger under the guise of making polite conversation. Say something fucking awful.
  10. Stand by cluelessly as poor individual desperately tries to excuse themselves.
  11. Decide after a successful showing that it’s time to go home.
  12. Remember that drinking alone is the best way to make the worst decisions.  Pass out after sending embarrassing texts to various people who definitely don’t want to hear from me.  For example, everyone.

Of course this behavior is not limited to just baby showers and such–I am an equal opportunity embarrassment–but these are the types of events where I frequently succeed at failing.

So anyway, there you have it.  If you want to have a normal, fun, not-weird event, don’t invite me.  You’ve been warned.

 

 

 

 

The Shut Up Banana!

I am a mom, a parenting newbie

I have a daughter, her name is Ruby

Guess you should know that my name is Anna

This is the tale of the “Shut up Banana!”

I first brought her home and she was so sweet

She’d sleep for hours, just wake up to eat

We’d go out to dinner, she would be fine

Uninterrupted I’d drink lots of wine.

Then one day fateful, things started to change

My little sweetie was acting deranged

Out at a restaurant, we’d try to dine

She’d scream and shout, I’d deny she was mine.

At first I tried milk then maybe a puff

A cracker, some bread–things were getting rough

Diners were staring, my face was real hot

When all of a sudden, I had a thought.

Mimosas were chugged, I scarfed down my meal

The big yellow fruit I started to peel

The tears and the snot subsided real quick

When she took a bite, I felt less like a dick.

Bananas are soft, are mush in a cup

Best of all they shut your baby right up

You can have them for lunch and breakfast too

Next dirty diaper will be filled with poo.

Bananas are cheap, you won’t spend big bucks

Don’t pretend they’re dessert–that really sucks

Peanuts and Butter, they go very well

With the magical fruit that saves you from hell.

Take it from me, you just have to try it

‘Nanas make babies be fucking quiet

Soon you’ll be out with screaming Susanna,

And you will recall the “Shut Up Banana!”

*Illustrations to come

Going for a Stroll in the Neighborhood

Here is why I am real-time sitting in my apartment waiting to start shitting my brains out.

Ruby Jane and I were walking around the neighborhood after her music class, when I heard a male voice use “on fleek” seriously in a sentence.  Obviously, my head snapped up so that I could get a good look at the perpetrator, but then my gaze drifted instead to a young woman wearing an incredibly short skirt without stockings and peep-toed high-heels.  As I tried to figure out what had possessed her to wear this particular outfit to trudge through the toxic sludge that had replaced the once crap-tinged snow, I got to thinking that maybe she was doing a walk of shame and I’m all “that asshole should have called her an uber,” and I started getting mad for her.  I’ve watched enough Vanderpump Rules (#pumprules) to know that he probably didn’t call her an uber because he has a ‘crazy’ girlfriend who’s out of town and he didn’t want her to hack his email and see that he had ordered a car from HER apartment at nine in the morning.  Now I was mad for his girlfriend too, and I was so busy being angry about basically being an accessory after the fact to this sordid tale, I had failed to realize I had come across a man on a ladder fixing some scaffolding.

He told me to try to go around, but there wasn’t enough room for us to squeeze by.  So I had a choice: a) turn around and take the long way home or b) risk seven years bad luck for both me and my baby, and walk underneath the ladder.

I was hungry, so I chose “b.”

As I walked underneath the ladder two things happened:

1) I crossed myself (*spoiler alert* I’m not Catholic)
2) I told the gentleman on the ladder that if anything happened to me or my baby, I would hunt him down, which he thought was hilarious and replied “You ain’t superstitious, are ya?  Thanks for the blessing!”

Almost immediately it started to rain, and I thought, “Fuck.  God is pissed at me and he’s letting me know that crossing yourself when you aren’t religious ain’t kosher.” Then a car pulled up to ask for directions, and I thought “Redemption!” and I gave her CORRECT directions, but I was no match for the universe and turned around just in time for a car to spray shit water all over me as it splashed through a shit puddle.  To make matters even worse, I noticed that yet another one of Ruby’s pacifiers had decided to commit suicide and at some point had leapt from the stroller.

We finally made it home and I fed the baby and put her down for her nap.  For my lunch, I decided to cook myself some chicken stir-fry, but, as luck would have it, I’m pretty sure I forgot to clean the tongs I had used to put the raw chicken in the pan before using them again to take the cooked chicken out of the pan, thus creating a hot-bed of salmonella all over my lunch.  So now my stomach is feeling iffy, and I’m just sitting here hoping that if I do shit my brains out, I do it before Ruby wakes up.

All of this could have been avoided if that fucker knew that saying “on fleek” in a non-ironic way is super fucking lame.

Being a Stay at Home Mom has Totally Improved my Relationship

Now that I am unemployed a stay at home mom, I have this amazing opportunity to spend quality time with my baby, watch Real Housewives of Beverly Hills clean during her afternoon nap, and re-up my cooking game.

Last night, I was preparing a delicious gourmet dinner featuring flash-baked Shake n’ Bake and triple-steamed Rice-A-Roni, smugly congratulating myself on my superior housekeeping skills, when in walked J in from his 10-hour bar manager shift.   Here are a few ways he expressed his gratitude for all I’ve been doing:

  1. On my kitchen organization: Oh good.  The steak knives are in THIS drawer. That’s nice, now I don’t have to get up to get them from where they usually are!
  2. On my meal selection: Thank you SO much for not touching that tenderloin in the refrigerator!
  3. On my meal prep: Oh, wait!–did you know that you shouldn’t put non-stick spray in a non-stick pan?  Ruins it. Oh, well.
  4. On my meal prep Part II: DON’T USE THE KNIVES WITH THE WOODEN HANDLES!!!  YOU DON’T KNOW HOW TO USE THEM RIGHT!!!
  5. On the food: Ahhh-choo! Woah, I guess there is ‘a little’ pepper in this, huh?
  6. On my dinner clean up: Can I show you something? *assume it will be a shark video* I want to show you how to load the dishwasher.
  7. On my baby-food prep: How long did you stick the bottle in for the baby? Oh, not thirty-two seconds? ‘Cause…that’s the magic number. You did twenty-five? Huh.
  8. On my dessert: Does your stomach feel weird?  Mine feels a little weird.  No dessert for me!

I was so grateful for his gracious feedback, I decided to wait until he was asleep before I used the back of a plate to sharpen all of his wooden-handled knives, and then let them soak for an hour in the sink before tossing them in the dishwasher.  It’s the sweet surprises that really keep the romance alive.

Flying with a Baby is not as much Fun as Flying with your Friends

Remember when one Xanax, two glasses of wine and a martini still weren’t enough to squelch the burning rage you had towards the baby that was screaming three rows back on the plane?  And that dirty look that you shot at its stupid parents who dared bring their devil spawn on the plane without offering you candy before you passed out in a drug and alcohol induced stupor in the middle of selecting the next terrible rerun of “Friends?”

I really don’t, but that’s only because that last glass of wine usually did the trick.  Of course, I do have occasional flashes of me pointing out a baby to my traveling companions, dramatically rolling my eyes, and then popping another Xanax in protest of the possibility of having to sit next to the little asshole.  Those were the days.

I flew with RJ, who is now eleven months,  without my boyfriend for the first time ever last weekend. I was, shall we say, “unprepared.”  I was, shall we say, in complete “hell.”

I was so very pleased with myself at first.  I was a supermom, I told myself.  Getting to the airport all by myself with my sleeping baby, the stroller, AND my luggage!  What other mom can do that?  A SORCERER MOM?!  No, I had cracked the parenting code, and I had done it sober.

Foolish, I was back then.  So young.  So naive.  Little did I know what awaited me past the first security checkpoint.

I had flown once before with RJ, but I had my slave boyfriend with me who took care of all of the heavy lifting logistics.  I basically had to breeze through the gates, basking in the glow of compliments that were being bestowed upon my then six-month old, who was sleeping soundly like a tiny angel.

Not this time.  Here is a breakdown of what happened:

  1. Took off my shoes and placed them on the conveyer belt.
  2. Lifted my suitcase and placed it on the conveyer belt.
  3. Smiled pleasantly at fellow travelers as I waited in line with stroller still fully in tact.
  4. Baby started to stir.
  5. TSA agent pointed to me.  I waved.
  6. TSA agent shook head and pointed to stroller. Me:ZAU95C2 - Imgur
  7. TSA agent sighed.  Explained I needed to breakdown stroller, and put it on the belt.
  8. Baby started crying.
  9. Realized I hadn’t broken down the stroller since March, 2015.
  10. Noticed line behind me was getting longer. Me:Screen Shot 2016-01-19 at 10.53.13 AM
  11. Impatient business man behind me made 13 year-old girl noise.
  12. Started to sweat.
  13. Baby now at full blown wail.
  14. Closed eyes and wished for death.
  15. Death did not come.
  16. Lifted screaming baby out of stroller.
  17. Eye-darted desperately looking for a place to put baby.
  18. Shoved shrieking baby into arms of disgruntled businessman.
  19. Took out phone to look for directions on how to break down stroller.
  20. *no internet*
  21. Woman in line next to me saved day by knowing how to fold up my stroller.
  22. Forgot about milk in diaper bag.
  23. Tried to jump into scanner to retrieve diaper bag.
  24. Was grabbed by TSA agent and publicly shamed.
  25. Realized hysterical baby was still with businessman.
  26. Thanked businessman profusely and offered to buy him a drink.
  27. Business man thought I was hitting on him. Enthusiastically declined drink offer.

We eventually made it to the other side, where the milk was then tested for explosives, because at that point it was very clear that i was a terrorist.

Of course, finally making it through security did not change the fact that I was about to board a deathtrap plane with an insane 11-month old.  Look, I used to actually enjoy flying.  But much like I used to “enjoy” jam bands, I’m pretty sure it was because it was just an excuse to drink and do drugs.  And now, I actually have something to lose, which makes climbing up to 22,000 feet in a tin can seem incredibly stupid.

I found myself sitting on the plane, RJ still practicing her Slayer scream, next to my sister who had met me at the gate.  I originally was sitting next to a nice looking young man who took one look at me and my exorcist baby and practically did a front flip into the seat my sister offered him as a switch so that she and I could sit together.

As we took off, my mind went to the dark place.  I all of a sudden became an expert airplane mechanic. “Hmmm.  That change in sound can’t be good” and “that noise was probably the landing gear getting stuck” and “pretty sure the right wing just broke off.” Then we hit some turbulence.

I grabbed my sister’s hand and clutched a still keening RJ close to my chest.  My sister is like “Jesus, it’s just a little turbulence!”  I’m like:

PEln72X - Imgur

And then the Flight Attendants came over the intercom and were all “we are going to discontinue our in-flight service due to the  turbulence that will likely cause the fucking plane to come apart  mid-air, and we’d like to be sitting down comfortably as we plunge to our watery graves” and RJ was still yowling at the top of her lungs, and I thought back to my time in the security line when I wished for death and decided that I was now getting my wish.

Clearly, because I am now writing this, everything turned out fine, we landed at our destination safely, and RJ eventually passed out.  I guess demon babies need rest too.

Of course, I’d be lying if I said that later that evening I didn’t polish off an entire bottle of Pinot Grigio by myself, because I did.  And even that bottle, pounded in a ninety minute time span, was not enough to drown out the cacophony of sighs and and dirty looks that went on to haunt my dreams for the rest of the weekend.

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In Which I Fail Terribly at Making a Mom Friend

A mom I met in one of RJ’s baby classes asked me to go to coffee the other day, and I was all:

4N7b1JF - Imgur

It’s the same look I gave back in ’06 to this guy (with his own Wikipedia page!) after he asked me if he could snort a couple of lines of my ass:  one of abject horror coupled with curious wonderment.

It’s not that I didn’t want to sit around and talk about the time Mercury came out of her mother’s vagina reciting King Lear–after a couple of glasses of Pinot Grigio, I’d make up amazing shit about my baby too.  But…

The only two things I can do over coffee is 1) complain about my hangover and 2) yell at my boyfriend for not having done the dishes the night before.

So I suggested that we go have a drink instead.  And she looked at me like this:

Screen Shot 2016-01-14 at 9.23.13 AM

It was the same look that the guy from ’06 (with his own Wikipedia page!) gave me when when I told him I hadn’t waxed in five months and it was like “Welcome to the Jungle” down there, so he could proceed at his own risk.

“I can’t have a drink.  I’m breastfeeding,” she bit it out.

So I’m like:

Screen Shot 2016-01-14 at 9.50.40 AM

It’s a sensitive subject, I get it.  When RJ was born, a nurse in the hospital told me that drinking and breastfeeding was fine and that it could actually help with the letdown of milk.  I’m not saying it’s right or wrong, but she was a medical professional.  Who was I to argue with her? In fact, it would have been downright insulting if I hadn’t taken her advice!

Anyway, I understand that not everyone had my insanely qualified nurse to guide them at the onset of their breastfeeding journey, so I eye-darted for like, thirty seconds, and then instead of saying something like “Oh, of course, I totally understand, let’s get coffee,” I panicked and blurted “I’m allergic to coffee beans and tea leaves.”  Which is a completely ridiculous lie, but she was visibly relieved.  So relieved, in fact, that it was kind of embarrassing.

Then we just stood there blinking at each other until she politely excused herself.

And thus concluded another awkward attempt at me trying to fit in with the other new moms.  It was successfully unsuccessful.

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In Which I Attempt to Make a Mom-Friend

In keeping with one of my New Year’s Resolutions, I’m about to meet up with RJ’s friend from music class for a play date, and I get the impression that her mom thinks I’m normal, so I’m like, going light on the eyeliner and trying to think of normal topics to discuss, but I know my social anxiety will immediately take over and I’ll like, drop the fuck word like 10 times and then over-compensate by trying to be relatable by getting her to agree to something like “the best part about having a kid is when you fart or accidentally shit yourself in public, you can totally blame it on your baby, amiright?!”