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COLUMN: The ties that bind Ƶappmoms

Motherhood brings babies, but also lifelong friendships
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Motherhood is a never-ending balancing act filled with love, says columnist Kirsten Andrews.

With Mother’s Day just around the corner, I found myself reflecting on the friendships that have been etched in my life since I first became a mom – much like these stains on my couch that have persisted for the decade-plus I have called myself a parent. 

I’m kidding. I sold that couch to a couple of new parents a few years back. They were completely unable to detect the lingering odour of sour milk.

We sometimes talk about motherhood as being in the trenches. And it’s true. Parenting is unlike anything we’ve been called upon to do before – mentally, physically, emotionally or spiritually. 

Motherhood is a challenge beyond all others. Even if we’ve got things dialed in one department we most certainly don’t have it in the rest. Perhaps it’s the never-ending balancing act – as soon as we’ve got one aspect under control another falls to utter pieces. 

Think you’ve got meal plans sorted for the week? The allergist will call with results letting you know your daughter is woefully sensitive to dairy and gluten. 

Finally got your eldest on board with chores? 

That’s the day the school calls and lets you know he’s broken his arm at recess. 

Motherhood is like surfing the most spectacular wave imaginable after saving five years to take the holiday you’ve always dreamed of. Except there’s a freak frigid current and you’re without a wetsuit. And the ocean is full of sharks. And you’re in a monsoon. But the scenery is still really pretty.

By no means when I say “in the trenches” do I want to suggest that motherhood parallels actual war, or that the job of raising a child is in anyway equivalent to what military women and men face. 

What I do see, however, is that the relationships that are forged under a common experience – such as becoming a mom for the first time or, perhaps, triumphing over an unjust dictatorship – are often ironclad. 

The things new moms discuss… from changes in sex drive, to wilfully ignoring the advise of a mother-in-law even when we knew she was probably right, to anal fissures. Yep. These are the intimate details shared amongst the women I met in the first year of my eldest child’s life – sometimes in tears of anguish and frustration, sometimes in hysterics. Often both. 

Now our children attend different schools, some have moved provinces away, but despite the fact that I don’t see them nearly as often, the bond remains. And as the kids got older, we discovered that we have different values, inspirations and pursuits. But these are still the women I know I can turn to without the least bit of judgment when I need someone to talk to – and vice versa. 

When your friend has accidentally peed on your couch from laughing too hard, how could they possibly judge you for disclosing your innermost secrets, frustrations, missteps and dreams?

And yes, I’m starting to feel just a tad guilty for not burning that couch.

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