BY LUCY KIPPIST.
I’m midway through telling a friend about this amazing Harper’s Bazaar profile on Claire Danes. Actually, I’m gushing – swooning even – profiles NEVER go this way. Not profiles about working mums.
It starts off kind of normal. Claire Danes and Ajesh Patalay (the journalist) rendezvous at a swish New York restaurant, but there’s no sophisticated entrance. Danes arrives late, flushed and described by turns as ‘distressed’ and ‘confused’ – madly punching stuff into her iPhone – her face animated with contortion. They sit down. But instead of ordering a martini, Danes ‘dashes apologetically’ to the bathroom, only to return – even LESS composed – before launching into this ‘life update’:
“But yeah, we are off in two days,’ she says, meaning her actor husband Hugh Dancy and their 17-month-old son Cyrus, both of whom are leaving with her for Cape Town, where the new series of Homeland is being shot. ‘So it’s just kind of manically trying to – interesting choice of words – but no, [we’re] desperately trying to get all of our gear together and it seems a lot right now. Hugh is actually taking a job, a mini-series about Gallipoli five days into our [stay], so he will fly with us and then five days later go to Adelaide for a month and then come back for two weeks and then [off] for another month, so… We have a brand new nanny too, who we will basically meet at the airport, so it’s all just, you know…’
Yeah Claire, I basically want to yell. I know EXACTLY what you are talking about. I really do.
Because what you’re really saying – behind all that glamorous/Hollywood/nanny/jet-setting lifestyle stuff – is the truest thing there is for me right now. And here it is: This working motherhood thing – it’s a killer. Really, really tough. More physically demanding, more mentally exhausting and more undeniably challenging than clearly, many of us – even Hollywood types like you – ever, ever expected.
But my friend stops me mid-sentence.
“Hang on a sec, Lucy? What do you mean you didn’t know being a mum would be hard work? Didn’t you expect to be carting a baby around all day, that they’d need you 24/7. That there’d be days you’ll be working on zero hours sleep without a shower. How could you not have known that?”
I feel taken aback and start hunting around for a ‘good’ answer.
The real answer is a big fat ‘no’.
I had no idea whatsoever what being a working mum was like. Everything I thought I knew came from books that I’d read or advice I’d been given. The rest of it, I just imagined.
Books depict working motherhood in deceptively manageable terms. After all, routines, sleep schedules and long paragraphs about the impact of hormones and sleep deprivation – they’re easy to ‘write’ about. Living those things, well that’s a completely different story altogether.
Top Comments
I'm scared to death of becoming a mother. I'm 32 and putting it off still because I'm so scared. :(
You know what is also hard? Not being able to have kids, going through multiple cycles of ovulation induction and IVF and the results being negative, negative, negative. Parenthood is hard, I see my friends go through it... I also see and hear of constant complaining about lack of sleep or being overweight or stretch marks or feeding, the list goes on. But just remember, as hard as it is, most parents chose to be in that position, and there are people out there that WISH they had a lack of sleep or a baby constantly needing their attention. Some would say consider yourself lucky that you have that privilege and you are able to be a mother.
I'm an IVF gal too but I don't think that other people aren't allowed to vent just because they have kids & we don't.
There are always people better off than us & worse off than us. Everyone has a right to vent about their own problems as they are valid for their experience.
Someone could equally say that we are lucky to be in a financial position where IVF is an option for us.
Best wishes on your IVF journey - I hope you are one of the lucky ones :)
Whatever the process to becoming a parent - even if the experience includes IVF and stillbirth as it did for me before having a baby to take home - it's all tough - and just because pregnancy is more effort and so very hard to achieve doesn't mean a woman can't complain about it either - IVF pregnancies are just as likely (if not more) to have extra issues. Hang in there.
Thank you for a balanced perspective, wishing you the very best in your IVF journey.
Isn't IVF reeaaallly expensive? Multiple tries? Couldn't you have adopted 2 kids with that money? Kids that are already here, that need a home? Most women just want the "I'm pregnant cater to me and I won't adopt because if it comes out of me its better" experience and see kids as babies forever. Most women don't look at child rearing as raising an adult, because they are adults much longer than they are children.