My husband left me.
For a man.
Well okay, he left for a job and he’s staying with a friend, but it makes for a much more dramatic impact when I say he left me for a man. The truth of the matter is he was home for three weeks and it was time for him to get back to work. Before I killed him.
Not that I don’t love the man dearly, but ever since he started working out of town almost four years ago, I’ve become accustomed to being the top dog of the parental duo. With him home, it throws everything out of balance, with the kids being the manipulative smart little banshees they are, as they try and play one parent against the other.
For the most part, Boo and I transition after a day or two and revert back to the dynamic parenting duo we once were before he left the home for bigger paychecks, a second apartment and all the free time with small town strippers (me, not him) a person can handle.
But there are moments; moments when I’m supposed to keep my mouth shut and just support him like the parenting manuals all dictate good united parents should do; when I want to kill. Kill him and set my children loose in the wild.
One might say I parent a little differently than my children’s father does. I insist I do this out of survival. The man leaves me alone with his offspring and expects to come back home to see them happy, healthy and well adjusted. He has entrusted me with this task because he is bat shit crazy. However, while he’s busy earning the dough that pays for our bread and butter, he misses out on all the joyous moments of raising a handicapped boy who likes to dump the dog’s water dish on the floor or unplug his sibling’s gaming unit (generally during a particularly important moment in the game my children like to whine) as well as missing out on all the glorious gory moments of rearing two teens into adult hood.
He can’t understand why I insist he bring home liquor every time he walks in the door.
He has yet to learn it’s because I can’t drown my single parenting sorrows while he’s gone but I damn well can fuzz things up while he’s home.
Not that I’m a liquor hound. Really. The empty boxes of wine in the pantry prove NOTHING.
*Editor’s note for child welfare workers who may be reading this: it’s called artistic license not an admission of guilt.*
My husband has this misguided notion that I’m in charge in his absence. What he doesn’t realize is while yes, I am the one twirling my pom poms at the front of our very own freak parade, I only pretend to be in charge. It’s a charade. I know it. My children suspect it. My husband refuses to know it. Something about me being the grown adult around here.
My life with out Boo for back up consists of arguing siblings, slammed doors, heads filled with eye rolling and mouths that like to sass back. I counter balance this with empty threats, phone calls to their father and locking them outside while I point and laugh from the other side of the window.
It’s called survival of the fittest. Ask Darwin, he’ll explain it.
For the most part, my kids are good kids. (Even if I did go on national television and call them demons.) They are respectful, they keep up with their studies without me prodding them and they bring home straight A’s every report card. They are fairly self sufficient in fact, ever since I taught them that one can survive on bologna, boxed macaroni and a jug of milk. It’s like they don’t even need parents half the time since they are such responsible little cretins children.
But every now and then the hormones rear their ugly little heads and my children disappear only to be reincarnated as, well, demons. My husband doesn’t get this. And it makes for a bumpy road when he’s along for the ride.
Which gives me a head ache. (And not just from the cheap wine I guzzled when he wasn’t looking.)*
*That’d be artistic license again, dear social workers.
My husband’s solution for the banshee screaming siblings is to punish them with slave labour for every misdeed they do. My solution for the screaming festival my children occasionally like to partake in is to separate, sort, and then hug it out. Which is not always successful now that my kids are getting older and more stubborn as they age. They want to be right damn it, they don’t want to see the other side of the coin.
Slave labour tends to be the quickest and quietest resolution while he’s home but then he LEAVES. And I’m once again saddled with the single parenting yoke and two teens and a little boy who all prey on my sanity like the hunter hunts a moose.
There is one other looming factor that makes my life miserable once my husband takes off for greener childless pastures. (Well, two looming factors but that’s why God invented sex toys.)
I don’t know if it’s because my children don’t see my husband every day or listen to him harp on them continuously like I seem to, but he is much more effective at intimidating them into good behaviour. I can say the exact same words, in the exact same tone, and dole out the exact same punishment and the impact is almost neglible as to when my husband does it.
Is it his size? The deep husky voice of his? It can’t be his whiskers, cuz damn yo, I’m growing a few of my own. All I know, is that for two days after his father leaves it is like a free for all and I’m running for cover while the inmates run the aslyum. Every damn time.
So my husband is the hard ass while he’s home and I hand over the role of Bad Cop to him while donning the goofy good cop badge, knowing that once he leaves I’ll have to slap the Bad Cop hat on and pray my children take me seriously. While hoping I can keep a straight face and not get distracted by clever wise cracks. Which I may or may not have a habit of doing. I admit nothing.
Last night after kisses were kissed, hugs were hugged and we all stood on the deck waving good bye to Boo as his tail lights disappeared down our driveway, my children started up with one another, AGAIN.
I, being the weary down trodden mother I am, threatened, cajolled and bartered. I enlisted every parenting technique I knew to whip my kids back into performing monkeys shape but it was hopeless. I ended up losing it and yelling at the older two kids while Jumby took cover under the pillows on the floor.
I hate yelling. It’s ineffective and stupid. It’s sinking to their level and what am I demonstrating to them when I yell at them to be quiet when they are yelling? But it’s like Fric and Frac just kept jumping on my one last frazzled nerve until I snapped and morphed into a rabid screaming badger.
Which ultimately, while bring a nano second of stunned silence, solved nothing. And the kids resumed bickering as though I wasn’t even in the room.
Hi, my name is Tanis and I ran out of parenting tools last night. Heck I even considered beating them but since they are just shy of seeing me nose to nose and both children are fitter than I am, I figured if I did that I was just asking for my own ass to be kicked.
In the end, after a Mommy Time Out to revert back to the adult I’m supposed to be, I dished out punishment like a grandma dishes out icecream. Essays were assigned, television privileges revoked and threats of making them pay me a monetary fine for every eye roll and sassy remark made was promised.
But as I was parenting, I was overcome with an out of body sensation. I realized, mid-sentence as I was shaking my finger and pasting the “I’m so disappointed in you” look on my face, my children just looked at me like I had horns sprouting out of my head and they offered to call their father for me.
So I could ‘calm down.’
It was right then I seriously considered jumping in my vehicle, chasing my husband down and sending him home so I could take his place in the work field. Because I’ve obviously lost my damn mind thinking I can survive parenting and actually produce well adjusted productive members of the next generation.
Seems to me the only thing I’m producing is the hot air I keep blowing at them lately.
My palms are blistered and raw from trying to keep the reigns of parental control firmly in hand.
If only my kids could be as good as I was growing up. My mom doesn’t know how lucky she had it with us.
Heh.
So. Got any suggestions? Parental tips? Humorous anecdotes which impart a glimmer of wisdom? Horror stories you’d care to share? Effective discipline tools for teens that won’t land my ass in the clink? I’m outnumbered here. It’s two against one, with the littlest dude cheering on his siblings. Little traitor.
Help a mother out would ya?









Lindsey Rose
Well, I’m not a parent and hopefully I won’t be for atleast 10 to 15 more years! Since I’m only 15, I can’t say that I’ve used any parenting techniques, but I can tell you what works on me
I’m known for my “smart mouth” in my family. I slam doors and yell because my brother is a demon child who does everything in his power to annoy me while laughing demonically as I’m punished. Anyways, few punishments work on me, as my parents have yet to figure out what kills me.
One of them is taking away my cell phone or laptop. My parent’s know that I am extremely dependent on my cell phone, since I’m one of those addicts who uses about 15,000 to 20,000 texts a month. I know, all of these parent’s are about to freak, but it’s true. That punishment does get to me, since I can’t live without mobile Twitter
Since your kids aren’t into using the phone that much (yet) you’ll have to find their other weaknesses.
Another punishment that works is threats! They work very well if my mother is serious and I actually believe that she’ll follow through with them. Like the threat that she’ll take my door off the hinges if I don’t stop slamming it. Teenagers have to have privacy, so that is about my biggest weakness.
I did see a rather interesting parenting technique the other day though. A girl was standing at a busy intersection, where her friends are guaranteed to see her, holding a sign that said “I’m sneaky and disrespect my parents. Honk if you think this is good parenting.” I swear, worst form of public humiliation EVER! Well, unless you have the guts to walk into your teens school in a bathrobe, curlers, and slippers, which my mother never did!
Haha, but I did learn something from reading this post…if anyone is going to be traveling in my family when I get older, it’s going to be me and my husband can deal with my little demons!
Good luck with your kids! Just be glad that they’re still young enough to not worry about boyfriends or girlfriends. When that day comes, you’re gonna need a lot more alcohol!
jennielynn
The eldest (15) went through her bad phase from 9-12 and I thank God every day we both survived. Then I am grateful she evened out before she got taller than I am and obtained a drivers license. The threat of not getting one worked until she thought I might want her to drive her siblings around. Smart kids are God’s punishment for being a smart ass.
No tips, because the hubris will surely bite me on the ass when The youngest two (5 & 3) hit the teen years. In fact, I may come live with you and Jumby when that happens. A new country is going to looks dang good by that time.
Steve
Oh yeah, parenting tips…The single most effective punishment I`ve found, has been removal of the offending childs bedroom door for a given length of time. Usually, once or twice gets thier attention!
Badass Geek
I couldn’t do it. You are much stronger than I.
kensi
Isn’t alcohol the only was to survive teenagers!?
Have I been doing something wrong all the years?
hmmm…If so, I may need to rethink my parenting strategy…
dammit…
deb
Don’t worry, it’ll pass, in about six or seven years:)
LovingDanger
Hmm it seems the problem is that you aren’t taking away the things that pack the most punch.
Try taking away their glasses. That would drive me effing crazy. They are teens now so their appearance is the thing that matters most soooo maybe start grounding them from things like deodorant or the shower…take away their favourite clothes?
Yep, my kids are screwed when they grow up!
NORCAL DAVE
So far threats don’t seem to be working, and subjecting them to public humiliation has already been suggested. So you might try treating them like the small adults they are, even if they don’t act like it yet.
Sit them down, explain that you are being pushed to the bounds of your sanity (it may at the least scare them). Then negotiate terms of punishment and reward. I have seen few things motivate teens better than what they choose.
If all else fails you could always turn it into a FEAR FACTOR type punishment. Find that which they hate to consume most, the consumption of which being their punishment (then you can enjoy laughing at the faces they make).
But, I’m not a Dad yet, just an uncle and teacher, hopefully soon enough I join the ranks of unfit parents…
badassdadblog
Set up a camera in a secure location in a room you can lock. Connect it to your television in another room. Lock the two older ones in there with a bucket and few days supply of bologna. Cuddle on the couch with Jumby and watch them reenact Lord of the Flies for a few days. When the bucket starts to overflow and they have to drink their own urine to survive, let them out, and they’ll either leave home immediately or never misbehave again. Either way, you win.
Ideally, this exercise should be performed when the social workers are least likely to pay a visit.
You’re welcome.
Random
The Dad being the more effective punisher is not uncommon. Dad’s seem to have an intimidation factor that mom’s never achieve. In my not-so humble opinion, I think it comes down to two things: Mom’s are normally the nurtures (as it should be), hence it is hard to take someone’s “death” threat (some of that artistic license there) seriously when they usually lavish you with hugs. And if the Dad (they almost always get the role of hard ass when the need arises which preserves the mom’s role of nurturer) has shown a history of not taking the kids’ “crap” then they are more likely to take him serious, if he yells or is super stern, because they know they cannot get away with as much when he is present. That prolly doesn’t help, but it’s the why.
My advice would be to not try and adopt Dad’s methods, but be yourself. And remember to say what you mean and mean what you say. Every time you give an idol threat, they will ignore you even more the next time. The best thing for you is to give a calm warning (calm anger was always the worst with my mom, not saying you have to be angry though) and then if they escalate it, then you proceed with a punishment that is absolutely mind-numbingly boring. Copying the dictionary, time out in the bathroom. Those were always the ones I hate most. that may be the end all be all answer, but it may help.
Random
idle threat, damn typos. =p
Jane
Tanis, I feel your pain. I have 7 of them (yes, I was sober)and outnumbered doesn’t describe it anymore. The 4th one is has cerebral palsy, 3 have AD/HD, and 3 have Autism Spectrum Disorders. (Yeah, we mixed the genes great.) I have noticed over the years that it is far more effective to take away something that is actually IN their hands than to threaten a future reward. In other words, if Fric and Frac generally get $7 a week in allowance, and money is a big thing to them, then they start getting $1 a day. In dimes. Everytime they smart off, or misbehave, they lose one. When they see their money going away, they take back nasty talk pretty quick, let me tell you. For another kid, we figured out that he had about 3 hours a night of TV time. So we gave him 15 min TV coupons. When he noticed that he had only 15 minutes to watch TV/play videogames, he decided he’d better get it together. Now, he’s relatively civilized. If it’s the mountains of clothing and crap on their floor, ya bag it up. Lock it in the basement, and if they keep their rooms tidy for one week, they get one bag back. You pick the bag. Worked for my darling daughter. Also, it helps to look at baby pictures and mutter under your breath, “Grandchildren are the reward for not strangling your teenagers” with a fair degree of repetition.
Marlene
I wish I had tips for you but as your life and my life are twins, I look to you for advise. What is a mom to do. My hubby just left yesterday for those “greener childless pastures up north” too and what a shock, the little buggers put on thier devil horns two seconds later! I feel your pain.
toywithme
Wish I could be more helpful but all I can offer is a cure all to take the edge off. So, cheers girl! I’m all for fuzzing things up a little. Nothing like being comfortably numb to get through the day
Neen
Boy, do I remember that crap! My older boys are 16 and 17 now and when they were the ages yours are I wanted to strangle them on an almost daily basis. I finally had a flash of inspiration and told them that since what I was doing wasn’t helping them get along, from now on they could pick each others punishment when they got on my last nerve. The looks on their faces when they realized just how BAD that could get was priceless. From then on when one of them started with the other he would just say “you don’t even wanna GUESS what I’m gonna get Mom to make you do!” and it would just stop before it got started.
AZ Colleen
@Neen, That’s awesome!!!
PS, I *think* I might be de-lurking here… Reading for a while, think I might have a girl crush.
Sadly, no advice but I vote for Neen’s idea!
gaylin
All 5 of us kids were scared of the Wrath of Mom. One glare and we were all frightened into submission.
Also if she was mad at one of us she would punish ALL of us. Earning the offender the wrath of all the siblings as well.
She is now 74 and has told us she doesn’t understand why any of us love her when she was such a bitch of a mother. At least we all knew where we stood with her and when she came out of the raving badger stage we all knew she loved us.
My dad was so not the disciplinarian. He was a very gentle man and used quiet disappointment in us as punishment. Worked every time.
My sister also took my nephew’s door off the hinges a few times, worked like a charm.
If alcohol fails you – there is always chocolate.
Um, I was the quiet, unassuming teenager, not prone to hissy fits of any kind. My older sisters were the queens of drama, I was just being the black sheep . . . I didn’t have kids, but would have been a crappy mother, no really, I would have been. But I was a great aunt and friend to small humans.
BoltBreaker
Geez, did you just write my biography? Not as a parent but as a teenage boy? I recall those years vividly. Those memories prompted me to vow to never have children, a vow that I have carried out for over fifty years. I said to myself I will never let a prepubescent “demon” put my wife through the hell I caused. Just to back it up I didn’t even get married till, what, mid forties. If I could look deep inside of myself and impart any constructive help, other than a tazer gun, well, I would. But I don’t have the answers. At least you have good students. They have a chance of coming through this un-demented.
But will you?
Elly Lou
I think you just added a hash mark in the “maybe I shouldn’t have kids” column on my spreadsheet.
Jennifer S.
Well…not too much in the advice dept. I have been raising kids for what feels like FOREVER and the only thing working for me is Duct Tape and Dimetapp. Just kidding (sorta)
Sherri
a couple weeks ago, my seven year old came home with an incident report from daycare. since he was also having some issues at school, i hoped to nip it in the bud. I told him that the next incident report he gets, he will have ALL his toys taken away, like a friend of mine did with her son. the very next day, he gets another incident report for fighting on the school bus. so guess what? ALL his toys have now found a home at the goodwill. I kept his crafts, books, and boardgames, but everything else is gone. he’s been relatively okay for the last few weeks. becoming very creative with pipe cleaners (unfortunately, i’ve also realized he will probably become an engineer when he grows up). when he does get out of control, i just threaten to throw one of his things in the garbage. seems to be the only thing that works some days.
As for your comment on cbc re: wondering if no tv will have an affect on their behaviour … absolutley … i find as soon as my son watches one show of those awful, mind-dumbing family channel shows, his attitude stinks. it’s like he is trying to be a 15year old 8 years too soon. drives me crazy. i find he is much more respectful, and much less annoying when he doesn’t watch as much tv.
hope that helps. good luck with it all. :0)