Life

The Most Important Job To Who?

The Most Important Job To Who? - Adventures of a Subversive Reader

Last week a comedian published a controversial article about motherhood. (This particular comedian always manages to post mother-bashing articles on the days I feel like crap, so I’m not going to give her the respect of mentioning her name. It’s petty, but makes me feel better). Her rather jumbled click bait article argued that ‘Motherhood is not the most important job in the world’ and that ‘it’s not even a job’.

You know, somewhere in the confusion of words, she had some valid points. It is a rather tired slogan which could be widened to include fathers and step parents and others who parent our children. It’s a throw away statement which can hurt when you’re going through fertility issues. But the feel of her article was more about pushing the ideas that feminist women should be working outside the house and that mothering isn’t really that hard at all.

I’ve read a couple of excellent rebuttals to her article (including the tweets of a friend with a 2 week old . . . someone who has worked as an engineer, run an independent press and started a PhD at the same time) but now I’ve had time to get back into a good head space (plus some sleep) my thoughts have turned more to the notion of ‘Important’ jobs.

A traditional view of ‘important’ jobs turns up the usual suspects – surgeons and airline pilots. (It probably comes as little surprise that these are traditional jobs held by men.) But, to be honest, the surgeon isn’t that important to me until I’m lying on the operating table (and a couple of them have seemed more interested in where they’re going to leave my scar than the work under the skin!) Airline pilots are wonderful when I’m flying, but I’ve seen enough Air Crash Investigation to know they really only become important on take off, landings and when something goes wrong.

The truth is, jobs become important to us when we’re invested in them. The special care nurses looking after my son after his birth had the single most important job in the world to me at that time. When a near by bridge was damaged by the 2011 floods, the engineers designing the new one were terribly important to stop the massive traffic jams. And when I had pregnancy cravings, the workers at MacDonalds were of extreme importance to me!

When a parent is the primary carer of a child, it is probably the most important job in the life of the parent and the child. At the moment, I see myself having four jobs – mother and carer of Squirm, looking after the house, blogger, and teacher on leave (I still keep up my professional reading in that job). Out of those four jobs, being a mother is the most important to me. I’m on call, on my own, from 6.15am to 6.30pm from Monday to Friday. Our days are planned, to a certain extent, around what Squirm needs. It may not always be the most important job in my life, but at the moment it is, and I’m okay with that.

This particular article is part of a bigger problem at the moment. There’s an awful lot of internet power in being offensive to sections of the community and being offensive about mothers is a solid gold pass to getting a lot of clicks. You don’t get as much attention from being inclusive, from acknowledging that different people have different priorities, and that slogans will fit for some people and not fit for others. And you can’t promote your latest show or book without lots of clicks, so people like this will continue to do it. But as thoughtful people we can do something. We can acknowledge that different people want different things from life. We can support people in what they want to do. We can campaign for good childcare and offer support to those who do want to stay at home. We can refuse to let someone like this make us feel bad so that she can make more money.

We can decide who’s important in our own worlds.

Letting Go To Become More Organised

Letting Go To Become More Organised: Adventures of a Subversive Reader

If you’ve been following my blog for a while, you might have seen a few posts about my struggles to ‘get organised’. I’ve tried apps, I’ve tried routines, I’ve tried internet challenges. But I miss a day, and I get cranky at myself and feel guilty that I can’t keep at it. And then I give up. And things seem to just fall over again until the next time I’m feeling so frazzled that I’ll do anything to get organised again.

And then I discovered two things which seem to be working for me

  1. A pen and notepad
  2. The understanding that some days things don’t work

The first one was pretty simple. Each day has a page in the notebook. I write down things I want to get done that day and cross them off when they’re done. If they’re not done, they either get transferred to the next day or they are put aside for now. It helps me remember little things like brushing Squirm’s teeth in the morning (we remember nights because we have a firm routine, but mornings are more flexible because our commitments change day to day) or bigger things (buying presents for birthdays, cleaning out the fridge). I have all sorts of strange things on it, and that act of writing it down and then doing it, really seems to keep me motivated.

But it doesn’t work everyday.

It doesn’t work on the days where we’ve had no sleep and I’m a teary mess who should just drink tea in the backyard while Squirm plays. It doesn’t work on the days when Squirm in feeling ‘off’ and is best outside (it’s harder to do the housework out there). It doesn’t work when we’re moving from one event to another with no time to stop and think about what we’re doing next.

And that’s ok.

That’s been the hardest thing for the perfectionist in me to come to terms with. If I miss writing anything down for a day, that’s ok. It’s not the end of the world. It doesn’t mean that writing it down isn’t a good idea. It doesn’t mean I’ll never be organised and I might as well give up now. It doesn’t even mean that the notebook is ruined and can never be used again! It means I missed a day and can start again on any day I chose.

Overcoming my perfectionism to come to terms with that has been such a big thing for me. It lets me know that I have actually found something that works for me, that it’s ok to miss a day or two and it’s ok to go back to it whenever I want to. I can be more organised and I can feel better about it.

And that’s a really wonderful thing to know.

Playing with Piadinas (Recipe Post)

A couple of months ago, I bought the latest Jamie Oliver cookbook, Save with Jamie. I generally have good luck with Jamie Oliver recipes, but this one has really outdone itself, with lots of really yummy recipes.

Playing with Piadina - Adventures of a Subversive Reader

One of the things I really, really like about the book, is that it’s quite adaptable. A lot of the recipes seem to be made of different elements, which can be served on their own or combined with other elements from different recipes. There’s also lots of room for changing ingredients – in fact, I’ve only ever made the Pork Meatloaf with beef mince.

The Tuna Melt Piadina has had a really good reception at our house. Piadinas are an Italian flatbread which is made from flour, salt and water and then fried. The Jamie Oliver recipe has a really delicious tuna and cheese ‘salad’ which goes deliciously gooey in the middle. But the piadina itself can be used for lots of fillings. Squirm and I had a very cut down tuna version the other day for lunch, while the other night I substituted cut up cooked chicken for the tuna (soooooo nice). Apparently they’re also great for sweet fillings, though we haven’t tried that yet.

Here’s my ‘altered’ recipe for the Lunch Tuna Piadina. I made this for 1 adult and 1 toddler and we both ate it all up!

Lunch Tuna Piadina (Inspired by Jamie Oliver)

Serves 1-2

Ingredients

  • 125g self raising flour
  • About 60ml water
  • Pinch of salt
  • Olive oil
  • Small can tuna
  • Desert spoon cream cheese
  • Mustard (of whatever preference)
  1. Put flour, salt and water together in a bowl. Mix them together, first with a spoon then with your hands. Add more flour or water to get the right consistency. Flatten it out to around 18 cm wide.
  2. Put some oil in a medium frypan over moderate heat. Put the dough on for around 3 minutes each side, rubbing a little oil on the top
  3. While the dough is cooking, mix the tuna, cream cheese and mustard together in a bowl
  4. Carefully cut around the edge of the flat bread so you end up with 2 rounds. Put the tuna mix in the middle and fry again for around 3-4 minutes each side

See, really easy! I highly recommend giving this a go for lunch some time. And if you’re looking for some other really interesting and yummy recipes, go and get yourself Save with Jamie – it really is a great book with lots and lots of great ideas in it.

Squirm enjoying his piadina

Squirm enjoying his piadina

Why Yoga?

Why Yoga 1Photo from Flickr

I’ve been finding it really hard to get in any kind of exercise since Squirm was born. Because I had very bad stomach separation (and I have weak stomach muscles to start with because of previous surgeries) I was too busy learning how to stand up without pain to get to mother/baby classes. And those pretty much end once the baby is crawling. I could join a gym with a creche, but that hasn’t been possible since we’ve still got a move north hanging over our heads.

So when Jos from Sew. Cook. Laugh. Live. started posting photos from her yoga work outs, I was intrigued. Then she wrote a great blog post about it, and I found myself following a You Tube yoga class that very day – and I haven’t looked back since.

I love the way yoga makes me feel – I get off the mat each time I do it feeling more relaxed and stretched and revitalised. It’s starting to have an affect on my body too – my posture is better, my core is feeling stronger. There’s this lovely feeling of accomplishment when you get to the end of a video and realise you’ve worked your body in all sorts of wonderful ways. And I’d discovered all sorts of wonderful videos which really make me think about the way I’m moving my body – with a quiet reminder, I am aware of exactly how my body is moving.

I started out with a very simple workout for absolute beginners which was a lovely introduction, and a good way to start. I sometimes do yoga first thing in the morning (especially if Squirm has an early morning), and then my favourites are this one which has a wonderful flow and is really relaxing, and this one, which is just standing and breathing with bends and arm movements, but was surprisingly refreshing.

But the yoga I’d been doing every day actually comes from a website called Do You Yoga? It’s a 30 Day challenge with instructor, Erin Motz, who is a self described ‘Bad Yogi’. Her style is really comfortable for me, relaxed with an occasional joke, always building up on previous movements. I can feel myself improving throughout the course, and I love the different options she gives – I can often do the harder moves in stretches, but need the easier work for abdominal exercises. You can sign up for the challenge here and get emails, or just follow the playlist on You Tube.

The Crow Pose, which I actually held for nearly a second thanks to the 30 Day Yoga Challenge

The Crow Pose, which I actually held for nearly a second thanks to the 30 Day Yoga Challenge