When you have fought tooth and nail for the ability to bring home a bundle of love to call your own, you make darn sure your tie is straight, your hair is combed and there is no spinach in your teeth when you go to first meet your new child and the social worker responsible for gifting said child to you.
You mind your manners and smile prettily and pray to everything that is holy that you don’t accidentally slip up and drop a F-bomb or reveal any family skeletons that have been deeply buried for a reason.
You do everything in your power to appear polished and polite, charming and likeable.
And if you are really lucky, (or you have a husband who is capable of keeping a tight reign on the leash he’s wrapped around your neck,) you succeed.
Which results in your very own delivery from the stork.
You have one last hurdle to jump over, but you have come so far, been through so much that this tiny little bureaucratic loose thread seems insignificant now that there are plastic kids toys once again scattered through your house and the sounds of a small child making himself at home just down the hall from you.
You let your guard down, relaxed and at ease, so when the social worker with stork-like wings and the child’s foster care parents drop in to check on your child and examine your parenting skills first hand in your own natural habitat, you don’t blink or give it a second thought.
You’ve succeeded. You’ve swung at the adoption pinata and the most beautiful, charming child you could ever imagine dropped from the sky and into your lap. Your prize is a lifetime of love and you feel so blessed that one last visit from the guardians who cared for your child until you were able to claim his as your own is most welcome.
You want to show them this child was meant to be yours. You want to show them the boundless depths of your love for him and the world of possibilities and joy that wait for him under your roof.
But that’s when the moment arrives. The moment your veil of shiny parental prowess is pulled back and every dint and chink in your progenitorial armour is revealed for all to gaze upon in horror.
It didn’t even take one full hour for my perfect parenting facade to crack and disintegrate.
Not sixty damn minutes.
Oh crap!
All it took was me swooping my lovely brand-spanking new son into my arms and sweetly putting him down for an overdue nap. I kissed him and cuddled him and tucked him in tightly and with nary a thought I closed his bedroom door behind me while I beamed at the company watching my every mommy move.
I visited and laughed and served fresh made brownies and home made pastries while my darling Boo served coffee and charmed our guests, our child’s protectors, with the very vision of perfect parenting.
Until the THUD came.
A loud THUD.
The moment my perfect mommy illusion vanished with a puff of smoke.
I forgot to make sure the guard rails on the side of my precious bundle of love’s bed were firmly latched.
And off the boy rolled like a ball down a steep hill. Onto the floor.
Even worse, I didn’t even hear the poor boy hit the floor, his former foster daddy did.
Worse yet, former foster daddy raced in to the room to rescue this poor boy who is now eternally stuck with incompetent parents and lovingly tucked him back into his bed after ensuring the rail was safely latched, while I sat and hung my head in shame and Boo tarred and feathered me with a simple look.
Luckily for me, my boy, my sweet precious boy, is made of strong stock and actually laughed at his new adventure in a strange bed. The child, like his new mommy, likes to be bounced around.
(Different bouncing of course, but bouncing nonetheless.)
Also luckily, my husband is a quick-witted man with some experience cleaning up his wife’s blunders, and snake charmed the social worker so she didn’t feel the need to snatch our boy out of our hands and back into government custody.
The truth had escaped it’s locks and chains and my hopes to pull the wool over everyone’s eyes with my swell parenting were forever dashed.
Welcome to our family little man. It may be a bumpy road but I promise, you’ll always enjoy the ride.
I also vow to never forget to latch that damn rail ever again.
I make no promises about remembering to bring diapers and wipes every where we go though.
Your momma does like to walk on the wild side.







nic
you never cease to amaze me. i don’t think i’ve ever read something so candidly vulnerable and hilarious all at once. let’s go have a drink.
katie ~ motherbumper
DUDE that would have totally happened to me too… seriously, you know it would have. And yes, momma does like to walk on the wild side.
Cheryl
With all 4 of my kiddo’s I never felt properly initiated into motherhood until one of them rolled off something. Welcome to the club! (All in good humor I promise).
Best of luck with your new little guy.
natasha the exile on Mom Street
I am STILL so in awe that someone gifted us with our son that I know exactly how you feel imagining that he’ll be taken away.
Thank GAWD those people don’t show up when he’s in full meltdown mode…I might well be the one they’re taking away!
Kyddryn
Aww, sugar, these things happen, and our kids survive just fine – that’s why they’re all bendy and squishy when they start out, don’t get solid until puberty, so when we drop ‘em, knock ‘em over, send ‘em flying, or forget the Velcro and let ‘em fly off of, into, under, or through things, they’ll just dent a little and keep going. <—runon sentence, sorry.
I bet they were a little relieved, actually – the shoe dropped right away, so they didn’t have to wonder what was hiding behind the perfect facade.
Shade and Sweetwater,
K
Amber
When my daughter was 18 months old we moved her into a ‘big girl bed’ from IKEA. Those guard rails don’t really work on IKEA beds with the slats and all, so we just went without. It’s pretty low to the ground, so we reasoned there wasn’t much risk of serious damage. My precious bundle’s fallen out of that thing at least 8 or 10 times, and none of that actually propelled me to solve the guard rail issue, she just eventually learned to sleep next to the wall.
So compared to me? You’re a rock star.
witchypoo
I told my youngest that I had dropped him on his head when he was a baby. I was totally messing with him. Which is worse? Me. *hangs head in mock shame*
psumomy
Ha, all of my kids have rolled off of things (or maybe, *ahem* crawled off…right in front of me…) The 4th has yet to do it, but she isn’t exactly mobile yet. I figure she isn’t officially part of the family until she does. We’re all a little knocked in the head here.
(I had to laugh at Cheryl’s comment because I feel the same way!)
psumommy
(and I managed to misspell my own “name”…that would be psumoMmy. Oops.) (Not that it matters. I just feel the need to correct it.)
mandy
My kids have rolled off all sorts of stuff. Sometimes of their volition… sometime my “oops”.
So far everyone seems okay, as I’m sure your son is too. And have you picked a bloggy pseudonym?
Matt
Seems to me like the social worker should have applauded your efforts to try to toughen the kid up at an early age. You know, show him that the world’s a tough place and whatnot, instead of just rushing right in at every little incident and setting him up for disappointment later in life. “Life has no guardrails”, thats what my mom always said. That was clearly an exhibition of tough love, and therefore skillfull parenting. Well done!
Lolita
Here’s what I did when my youngest was only a few months old and I was completely sleep-deprived and forgetful: I was nursing him on the couch. My older son, then 4ish, stepped onto a short stool (probably 4 – 5 inches high) to get a toy. He started to wobble, so I jumped up to catch him before he fell the few inches to the ground.
I completely forgot about the baby that was ATTACHED TO MY BREAST. Until he flew out of my lap, fell about 2 1/2 feet and the hit the hard, wood floor. And screamed bloody murder.
maggie
I would’ve really FREAKED OUT! Good thing you didn’t or they would’ve been wondering about your coping skills…which btw, no offense, I’ve noticed may need some work.
Michelle
That sounds like something that would happen to me. Of course, I’d also bump into a table or a doorway or something and they’d probably think I was drunk, but honestly… just a klutz.
momranoutscreaming
I watched my daughter fall off of a chair and break her arm several weeks ago.Last week my husband was playing with our youngest at the top of the stairs and guess what happened. Life is what happened. Super Mom doesn’t really exist unless you count the love
Kellie
Amo
I once walked into a door frame while nursing my little one.
The best part? He actually glared at me before screaming. Yeah, welcome to the fold kid.
We’ve all had Super Mom moments, company or not!
James
Just to think, things can only get better from there. lol. Congrats!
Jill
I think falling out of bed is a childhood rite of passage. You’re just trying to give him as many experiences as possible!!
Amanda
Hey you are OK, he is OK. All is good.
astarte
Oh, shit! Hahahahaha! Well, what’re you gonna do? We all is what we is, I guess.
Now you’ll never have to worry again if they visit, since what the hell else can happen?!