From SAHM to Working Mom, It’s A Family Affair That, Sadly, Does Not Include A Laundry Fairy

In support of other women writers, today I’m trying a little something different on Blonde Mom Blog courtesy of Women on Writing (WOW)...a guest post as part of author Claudine Wolk’s blog book tour. Claudine is author of “It Gets Easier! and Other Lies We Tell New Mothers.”

It Gets Easier Book Cover

I’ve always been a “working mom,” whether it be full-time outside the home, working from home while Miss A was a baby, and now 30 hours a week split between the office four days a week and telecommuting on Fridays. I think we can all relate to the challenge of transitioning to another stage of motherhood.

I hope ya’ll enjoy Claudine’s post below. Tell me in the comments what your modus operandi is. Are you a SAHM, do you work outside the home full-time, do you telecommute, or do you do work from home and in the office, like me? Today it’s not quite so easy to slap a label on our foreheads as a response to “What do you do?,” is it?

I’ve done it all as a mom – working full-time, working from home, working part-time, staying at home fulltime – there isn’t a working state of motherhood that I haven’t visited.  Although they all have their challenges, going back to work after being home was the choice fraught with the most land-mines for me.

My foray back into the working world came by accident.  My part-time job heated up and they needed me four days a week instead of three.  On top of that, I decided that my life wasn’t complicated enough that I had to create my own publishing company and publish my first book, It Gets Easier! and other lies we tell new mothers.  I knew that the hilarious title of my book was true, I just didn’t realize how true until I was back working full-time.

 The biggest area of change and stress by far was on the home front.  I was in charge of all matters related to the home, you see, and with two jobs taking up all of my time and energy, I quite simply did not have the time to address housekeeping – for lack of a better word.  You might ask, “What happened?”  Exactly what you think happened.  Things were simply not getting done – dishes were dirty, cupboards were empty, clothes were not washed or carefully put away. 

For my family, this state of affairs was a shock.  For years, I supposed they imagined the fairies had magically provided all these wonderful services and that the laundry was magically cleaned, dried, and placed with care in their drawers.  Now, all of a sudden I was getting questions like, “Where’s my underwear?”  “Where’s your underwear,” I would say, “How should I know where your underwear is? I don’t wear your underwear?”  As hilarious as I thought that response was, my family missed the humor.  Similarly, I would get a question every morning like, “Are the dishes in the dishwasher clean, because they don’t look clean?”  “Well, let’s see,” I would say, “I know I didn’t turn on the dishwasher last night, so if I didn’t turn on the dishwasher and you didn’t turn on the dishwasher  then the dishes in the dishwasher would be?  Anyone, anyone?  Bueller? Yes, that’s right , the dishes would then be dirty!  Ding, ding, ding! “

My family responded to my outburst as if I had two heads.  How could I not turn on the dishwasher they wondered, or do their laundry, or buy food – all the things that I had done before so seamlessly?  It was time for a long talk with my family.  For my husband, I explained that I finally understood how he has felt for all these years when he was embroiled with a project that he could really sink his teeth into.  I felt enthused, motivated, and exhilarated.  In all those years while he was working hard, did I bother him with dishes, or ask him to clean my underwear, or wonder why he didn’t come home with groceries?  Of course not.  Well, now it was my turn.  I was going to need to get the help and “the pitch in.”  I got it.

For my kids, I was forced to do something I had been meaning to do for years – help them to find their independence.  “Mommy needs help,” I told them, “it will be up to you to take complete care of yourselves in the morning.  I have to be getting ready for work, too, so I will no longer be able to help you with your hair or your breakfast or your studying – you are on your own.”  It was two months of sheer hell, but after that, an amazing thing happened, they actually got independent.  They now can prepare themselves for school on their own and are quite pleased with themselves.  They now know if they want a lunch for school they are going to have to make it.  Clean clothes, same thing.  Today if I have the time to make them a breakfast it is a welcome surprise and it is appreciated. 

While making the transition from stay at home mom to working mom can be scarier than the original Psycho movie, with the help of your family, you can make it work.  You may even discover some side benefits as well.  The irony is that being a working mom forces you to engage the family for the family’s sake.  If you are strong enough, and keep the guilt in a closet where it belongs, the long-term benefits to your family will be long-lasting.  Think about it, who wants their kid to go to college without knowing how to use the washer?  Not me, sister!

Read more about Claudine and her book on the WOW! Women on Writing blog.

Southern Humor, Frou Frou Drinks? I’m There!

The winner of You Can’t Drink All Day If You Don’t Start In The Morning is Cheryl F. (The Lucky Ladybug) who commented October 6, “She mostly just sits around watching old Gilmore Girls episodes and eating too much Taco Bell.” I’d love to read this—thanks for the giveaway!

I’m excited to be participating in my first ever WOW (Women on Writing) book tour. I’ve reviewed very few books on my blog, but You Can’t Drink All Day If You Don’t Start In The Morning, a collection of humorous essays with a Southern twist, not to mention the author’s guaranteed delicious slacker mom recipes sprinkled throughout, sounded like my kind of book.

Scroll down after my interview with Celia Rivenbark, bestselling author of Bless Your Heart, Tramp and We’re Just Like You Only Prettier, to see how you can win a copy of her latest book, which is equally good with either a tall cold glass of sweet tea or a margarita on the rocks. Seriously, you can’t go wrong with a book that includes a chapter on ‘My Manservant Can Kick Your Ass.”

Celia Rivenbark New Pic


Author Celia Rivenbark

Celia, may I call you Celia, it’s occurred to me that women who grew up in the country (ahem) are just plain funny. Do you think it’s because as children we had to entertain ourselves between feeding chickens and chasing after toads or be bored sh*tless?

Yes, I absolutely think that growing up in the country can help fine-tune a sense of humor. It helps to grow up in the rural South because we love to tell long, looping, colorful stories to keep ourselves amused. My daughter’s 12 and still requests a new story every single night before she goes to sleep. Sometimes she gets a tall tale, sometimes it’s just a recollection from my own growing-up. I’m always careful to include a lot of Southern expressions in these nightly stories because the language is dying off fast and I want her to at least be familiar with “a half bubble off plumb” (crazy behavior) or “in the short rows” (almost done with at task) and “chewing high” (no longer hungry).

I literally listened to old men tell tales around the cracker barrel at the country store when I was growing up. Their language was colorful – not profane, I mean, really vivid. This was the best kind of entertainment going back in the ‘60s and ‘70s in the rural South. Those old men had no idea that I was soaking up their stories like a piece of pone in pot likker. Sometimes I’d go home and scribble down what they’d said. I think that’s where I got the idea to be a newspaper reporter.

You’re an accomplished humor writer with several books under your belt. Which is your favorite and why?

Can’t choose that any more than I could pick a favorite young’un. I will tell you that the one that has sold the best so far was “We’re Just Like You Only Prettier.” That title came to me during a dream and it just always felt kinda lucky.

Your latest book, You Can’t Drink All Day If You Don’t Start in the Morning, includes several fine Southern recipes. Do you consider yourself a good cook and just how many iron skillets do you own?

I’m a pretty good cook but I don’t think I’m especially creative. In other words, my food tastes good but I don’t experiment with ingredients or cook intuitively like the great cooks. I enjoy cooking and baking but I despise the kitchen cleanup. I really need to recruit the princess to help me with that part more often. I only have one perfectly seasoned cast iron skillet. One is really all you need. It’s suitable for buckles, bumps and cobblers as well as frying up a mess of country ham or cornbread or okra or buttermilk-battered chicken. Yum!

What do you think sets apart Southern humor from other genres besides an extra helping of ya’ll and a mess of mullets?

I think Southerners have an extraordinary sense of place and it helps us write true to ourselves no matter what the genre. I prefer writing humor. It’s comfortable to me and, for whatever wonderful reason, Southern humor finds an easy audience outside the South. We’re a bit quirky and people seem to like that, embrace it and want to try it on for size. I love the quote that “Southerners are like people, only more so.” Ain’t that the truth.

What’s your next book project? Can you talk about it?
I have a contract for two more humor collections with St. Martin’s Press. That will be books 6 and 7. The sixth one is well under way and should be out next September. In “You Can’t Drink All Day…” I discovered that a lot of readers related to the two more serious essays and so I intend to expand on that a little in these two collections. It will still be humor but it will be more autobiographical and less pop-culture driven.

You Can't Drink All Day Book

Would you like to win a copy of Celia’s latest book, “You Can’t Drink All Day…” Let me know which of her past books is a favorite or if you’re new to her, visit her website and then come back and comment with a fact about the author. I’ll choose a random winner from all comments left by midnight Thursday, October 8. You can also purchase her book on Amazon.

p.s. I received a review copy of the book, but no other form of compensation to participate in this book tour. It just sounded like a fun read to me!

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