ÃÛÌÒÊÓÆµapp

Skip to content

Desperately seeking sleep

What month is it? What day is it? Confusion of a sleep-deprived parent

The shop assistant mulled over the expiration date on my coupon, paused, handed it back to me and apologetically said, “I’m ever so sorry, but I think it’s expired.â€

I looked it over, then whispered with uncertainty, “What month is it?â€

Just earlier that week I’d been corrected by someone over the phone that it was in fact Wednesday and not Monday, so the idea that I might have skipped an entire month wasn’t actually that ridiculous.

It’s the kind of mild confusion, I’ve decided, that might be caused by six months of sleep deprivation which, in this case, involves waking four times a night to feed a little one who still gives the bottle a brush-off. 

I don’t dare do the math on the number of hours missed. But thankfully (and I use this word cautiously) the foggy state of sleep deprivation is just, well, normal. I probably shouldn’t operate heavy machinery or attempt algebra, but I only have to look after two small children. How hard can it be? Right?

Hah! It turns out there is nothing in life that can possibly prepare you for parenting while fighting fatigue. If you’ve ever tried to ‘parent’ a willful three-year-old while sleep-deprived, you’ll know what I mean. Like a wounded animal, you’re an easy target. They can sense you’re feeling weak and tap, tap, tap away at you until you want to scream, cry and give them away to the nearest pack of wolves to raise as their own.

I have, at times, been a terrible parent because of tiredness. In theory, I know the discipline routine, the beauty of distraction in diffusing an outburst and the importance of my own good listening. But when operating on little to no sleep, the rational side of my brain lags behind the irrational and I lapse into my own toddler-like behaviour – something my eldest thinks is hilarious, fanning the flames of my mummy-style meltdown.

What’s different about the sleep deprivation after a second child is that there is no downtime during the day. At all. 

The eldest has dropped her naps and isn’t one for sitting still any longer than absolutely necessary, so it’s go, go, go from dawn ’til dusk.

Come evening, when I’ve carved out just a tiny slice of time to do something other than fend off tiny people, I Google parenting tips and expert opinions – of which there’s as much variety as there is volume, leaving me more puzzled than ever. 

My solace at nighttime is the handful of mums also on child number two who send the occasional text. There’s camaraderie with a message received at 1 a.m., a friendly reassurance that you’re not the only one going through this.

And then, when the little one inevitably wakes for the third of fourth time that night, and you’re desperately rocking her back to sleep, instead of following your plans and nodding off, she looks up with a heart-melting smile. 

You forget the fatigue, the tantrums, the hopeless desperation of being outnumbered by children during the daytime, and contemplate, just ever so slightly, the possibility of having a third. 

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks