January 2009


Today was a spectacular warm sunny day, so bunny and I dragged our bums down to the beach. It’s all part of our plan to get out of the great indoors, and get back out into nature where we belong. We had fun. Much better than staying in the house feeling sick and sorry for ourselves.

Bunny hasn’t seen beach sand before. He was kinda tripping out.

Unfortunately I missed the bit where he stuffed a great wad of sand into his mouth, and I frantically tried to wash it out with water. It was priceless.

I woke up this morning and thought, it’s been WAY too long since I heard from that dating agency of mine. It’s been a month of Sundays, at least. I don’t pay those guys the big bucks for nothing.

But no point getting my knickers in a twist about it. So I called them up to give them a bit of my mind. I told them I don’t want to be left here on the shelf past my sell by date, thank you. Please give me another date. Pronto. A parenting partner if you please.

Hassling people that work for you, always works for me. They called me back straight away with potential date #2. Let’s call him B. Here’s the scoop on B…

He’s a writer from LA, but he lives in Berkeley, and grew up in New York. He also travels a lot to Santa Fe (a big plus – one of my favourite places in the world) and Europe. He writes for films and movies (could be sexy). He studied philosophy and writing at University. He’s a liberal. He loves cooking, fine food and wine (hopefully not an alcoholic).  He’s a licensed masseuse (hmmm…..could be a good thing, or could be a weird thing) and is into sports (ugh). The agency said he was a “regular jock”. (Ye gads! Where I come from that means someone who’s a right twat. A total dickhead. I think it must mean something else in this country).

Apparently he’s creative, intuitive, generous, interested and interesting, deep and soulful, and is looking for someone spiritual and a relationship based on reciprocity. Eh? I don’t get that last bit. Either I’m losing my brain cells, or I’m not smart enough, or deep enough for this guy. Does that mean he’ll scratch my back if I scratch his? Or am I missing something here?

I like the spiritual emphasis, especially if he’s into nature. But if he’s into all that pseudo fluffy new age waffle, then we’re not going to get very far, cuz that shit really turns me off.

Here’s the bad news. He’s 13 years older than me. Yes, I know the F.O.B. is 20 years older than me, but just because I slept with an old geezer once (or twice) does not mean I want to do it again. I want a man with a bit of spring in his step, and good swimmers in his whizzer. A lively man with a perky pecker. Not a wrinkly, old cocktail sausage that’s past it’s prime.

Oh, and he doesn’t have any children. He wants children, but that ain’t the same thing. I can’t help feeling I need to go out with a single dad. A man who has a bit of a clue about what I’m grappling with in the land of single parenting. It would make things SO much easier to have that common ground underneath us. That and a strong schlong.

Ah well, nothing to lose. It’s all good dating practice for me, this only being my 2nd date an’ all. I need an opportunity to brush up on my dating skills, and it’ll give me a chance to wear my outrageously sexy black boots. Otherwise they’re just going to rot in the wardrobe, with the rest of my fancy clothes.  

I’ll give him a whirl (assuming he calls and asks me out) and let you know how it goes.

Oh, by the way, P. texted me yesterday, more than a month after our 1st date and after I’d completely wiped him from my iPhone. He said he was going abroad for a couple of weeks, and that he hoped to see me when he got back.

I know I’m new to this dating game, but WTF??? Is that bad dating etiquette or what? Is he just not that into me? Is he keeping his options open? Is it an American thing? Am I supposed to wait patiently for him to call? I don’t get it. I must have a lot to learn about dating, because I am totally befuzzled by his behavior.

I guess I’ll carry on dating, and try to enjoy the game, even if I don’t understand the rules.

One of the worst things about being a single mother is the isolation. I feel so ALONE with all this baby stuff. I go to playgroups, baby swim class, and to the swings at the park, but somehow I still feel alone. It’s like there’s a  glass plate between me and the world. It’s me and bunny on one side, and everybody else on the other side.

I want someone to share this parenting trip with. I want to be able to talk with someone every day about the nitty gritty baby details. Someone who’s on my wavelength, who doesn’t think I’m crazy when I start babbling on about sleep deprivation, wheat allergies and keeping it green. Someone who’s as interested as me in the bunny’s life, and how it’s being shaped by this crazy fucked up world.

I want to be able to pass bunny over at 5am and let someone else play with him for a change while I sleep for 3 whole uninterrupted hours. I want someone else to do baby bath time, so I can put my feet up and read a book with a cup of tea. I want someone else to wrestle with bunny at bed time, as he performs his bedtime aerobics and amazing feats of baby acrobatics (I only wish I could get this on film, because you would not fucking believe what I have to go through every night to get the bunny to go to sleep).

Most of all, I want a partner to take me and bunny hiking. There are incredible trails here. Paths that meander through ancient redwood forests full of giant tree ferns, waterfalls, mountain lions and deer. Wild places where you can walk for miles and not see another living soul. Plus it’s almost always sunny and warm outside. It’s crazy to be cooped up sick in the house when there is so much healing nature all around. But I need a man to carry bunny. I can’t do it on my own. He’s too big and heavy to go in the sling, and the baby backpack that the F.O.B. bought is bigger than me. I can hardly pick it up.

I’m  solo mama struggling on my tod to keep it all together.  The days blur by so fast I can hardly catch my breath. And the hours tick by so slowly I hardly know what to do with the time. I need time out so I can get inspired. I need someone to take over, so that I have time for myself to come bouncing back into bunny’s world with creativity and joy. Instead of this dull fatigue I have from peddling as hard as I can to keep our heads above the water.

Being sick ALL the time isn’t helping matters. I feel like a leper. Someone give me a bell so I can warn people of my approach.

I want someone to take care of me, to bring me soup and mop my brow.

More than anything, I want someone to hold me (and bunny) while I fall apart. Because when we let things fall apart, they come together again anew.

I need a pick-me-up parenting partner please. Pronto.

Bunny and me have been sick again, so we’re back to being trapped indoors forced to make our own entertainment. Fortunately I have the FLIP as a diversion.

honey-kitten

I’ve decided to bring a new kitty into our lives. But before he arrives, I want to write a tribute to our beloved late cat, Honey. It wouldn’t be right bringing a new kitten into the house, without paying my respects to our old kitty.

This post has been a long time coming. I’ve been wanting to write about it for months but my feelings were too raw. It was too painful, and in all honesty it’s still just as painful. Time heals all wounds, so they say, but I say that’s bullshit. We just get better at stuffing pain down deep inside. We learn to forget, but dig below the surface and the wound is right there, same as it ever was.

honey-and-grandmaHoney was a good cat. She was my mum’s cat, but everyone loved her. She was a wee scrap of a kitten when she first arrived. She could sit in the palm of your hand, a bundle of fluffy cream fur with razor sharp teeth and claws. She was a British Burmese, the colour of creamed honey. So we called her Honey.

A highly intelligent, playful, affectionate and inquisitive creature, she did not suffer fools gladly. I loved that about her.

Honey grew up into the most beautiful cat I have ever seen. Her fur was like silk. She was a miniature mountain lion. A wild and wanton feline, who flirted her way into everyone’s heart. Ferociously vicious when out on the hunt, but sweet as sugar at home with her family.

When I first got pregnant with bunny back in England, I was so stressed out and sick that I had to move in with my mum. Honey looked after me. She would sleep snuggled up against my belly, under the covers. I like to think that bunny could hear her motor purring through my skin. On sunny days, she’d scamper outside and entice me to play hide-and-seek with her in the grass. I’ve never met a cat who would play games like Honey.

honey-hide-and-seek1

When she wasn’t trying to play with her humans, she loved to torment butterflies and dragonflies, and the occasional velvety shrew. She killed a bird once, but once she saw that we were horrified, she never did it again.

I decided to move to California in my 2nd Trimester and I brought Honey with me, all the way from England. She had to travel in the hold, and when I picked her up from cargo her paws were all bloody from where she pulled a couple of claws out in her desperate attempt to escape her crate. She was delirious to see me, and I was over the moon to see her.

We lived alone together in a hotel and then a rented apartment for a few months. She was my only friend and companion. We lived through our first earthquake. We watched DVDs every night and gorged ourselves on tuna steaks and smoked salmon. We played together every day and slept together every night. We were inseparable.

Eventually we moved into a bigger house and my mum came over and moved in with us. We decided not to let Honey outside, because there wasn’t a garden, only decks butting out onto a steep ravine, and monstrous big redwood trees all around. We thought she might climb up one and never be able to get back down.

She continued to sleep with me through my 3rd trimester, and when I went into labour she came and jumped up on my bed all wild-eyed and bushy tailed. She stayed next to me throughout my “home birth”, right up until I had to be rushed to the hospital. She was there on the bed in the action, amidst the puke and blood and poop, waiting to greet bunny when he arrived.

When we brought bunny home from the hospital, she sniffed him carefully all around and seemed very weary of this new stranger in the home. She was cautious of bunny, and kept her distance. She didn’t want to get too close. In my paranoia I kept my door closed at night so she couldn’t come in and sleep with us. All my attention was on the bunny. I didn’t have time for Honey. I neglected her. I will always feel bad about that, and I hope she understands and forgives me. Being a new mother was so overwhelming, I didn’t have any love left over to give Honey.

We had to move house again, and this time we had a big garden, but we still didn’t want to let Honey outside. We were afraid she’d run away or get attacked by wild animals, or run over by a car. But she pestered us so much to go outside. She wanted to be free to roam in the open air, and eventually we gave in.

A week after we let her outside, she disappeared. I came home one afternoon and noticed that Honey was not around. She usually hung close by the house, and I called and called her but she didn’t come. Then my landlady phoned and asked “Have you seen your cat lately?” My heart started hammering, and I said “No, why?” And she said “Are you sitting down?”  

Those 4 words that you never want to hear.

She said that the lawnmower guy had seen a cat hit by a car in the road outside our house, and she thought it was probably ours. I could not believe it. Please God. Not our cat. Someone else’s cat.

I can’t remember exactly what happened next. I told my mum and she screamed and wailed and ran outside the house, crying and frantically throwing herself around. I think her heart broke clean in two. Honey was her lifelong companion. Her beloved pet. Her best friend.

She was mine too, but I had to hold it together, to find out what happened. Like a detective. There was no cat lying outside in the road. I went to all the neighbours but no one had seen anything. I called the lawnmower guy, and he said he saw a car hit a cat that looked like ours. He said the car didn’t stop. He said he didn’t want to go out there himself, so he left it in the road. I went outside and looked at the road. It was covered in blood. I could see exactly where Honey had been hit, and where she laid to die. Her lifeblood spilled in a huge red puddle.

I hate the lawnmower guy for leaving her out there alone to die. He was here today, and everytime I see him I want to scream You killed our cat! I know it was him that scared her into the road with his big lawnmower machinery. I’m sure of it. She’d never seen a lawnmower before, and it would have scared the life out of her.

And I hate whoever hit her even more than I hate him. May they suffer as she suffered.

I called the local Humane Society and found out that there was a cat picked up that an anonymous person had called in, and they had it in their facilities. They said we could go and identify the body the next morning. I knew it was her. I just knew it. We all did. The whole evening I had this stupid voice in my head saying “she was just a cat” but you know what? I told that voice to fuck off. She was not just a cat. She was part of our family, and we all loved her dearly.

That night we scrubbed her blood from the road as best we could, and we held vigil on the place where she died. We lit a candle and prayed for her little cat soul. We hoped she died quickly without pain.

The next day we went to see her body. All stretched out like she was asleep. Her fur was so soft. We cried and held her, and we brought home her ashes in a box. She rests on the mantlepiece in my mum’s bedroom, forevermore.

There will never be another Honey. We miss her so much. She will never be forgotten. May her pusskins soul rest in peace.

honey

Before I gave birth to bunny, I didn’t know whether I was going to have a boy or a girl. I had about a dozen girl names lined up, but only one boy name. I didn’t know anything about boys and I wasn’t very inspired by boy’s names. I was rather hoping I’d have a girl.

But once I had a boy, I was over the moon. He was perfect. I couldn’t imagine why I’d ever wanted a girl.

I wanted to meet him properly before I could name him. I wanted the name to come from him. I thought when I saw him that I’d have one of those aha! moments, so that’s what his name is. But it didn’t happen like that. He stayed nameless for about 3 days, during which time the birth certificate guy kept coming into my hospital room and hassling me about the forms I needed to fill in, so that I could get the paperwork filed, his social security number issued, and blah, blah, blah. I felt enormous pressure to give my baby boy a name, any name.

So I chose the one name that I had chosen before I gave birth. I liked it. It was a good name.

Only one problem. The F.O.B. didn’t like it at all. He came into my hospital room, and practically went blue in the face when I told him our son’s new name. He sputtered and coughed, and finally choked out: “But that’s a Jewish name!”

And I’m like, “So? What’s the problem? It’s a good name, and I like it. There are lots of people here called (bunny’s  name) that aren’t Jewish. It’s a good American name.”

The F.O.B. sputtered some more, and spat out “but darling, we’re not Jewish. You wouldn’t call your son Mohammed, would you?”

Trying not to scream, for the sake of my family who were all in the room with us, and gritting my teeth together so I didn’t bite his head off, I hissed “Listen, you’re lucky I didn’t call him Stalking Wolf or Sparrow Hawk!”

“But darling” he pleaded, “with a name like that, he’ll never be able to work in the oil industry!”

Firstly, by the time bunny grows up there won’t be any oil left. Secondly, I don’t want him to work in the oil industry. Obviously it’s up to my son what he grows up to be, but I’d sooner he became a hip-hop, peace loving eco-activist, than a slippery, fat-cat oil man like his father.

I told him it was not open for discussion and ordered him to leave the room while I seethed.

He never did sign the birth certificate, and this might explain some of the reason why.

—-

Today the F.O.B. wrote me an email. I haven’t heard from him in over a week. Either he’s calling me obsessively every day (usually when business is bad) or he disappears into radio silence (when business is booming). Turns out business has picked up. He’s not destitute after all, but making wads of cash from his latest deal. He’s promised to send me a wad next week, which is just as well, since I only have about a week’s worth of expenses left in my bank account.

He’s in Dubai. He wants me to change bunny’s name again. He says he daren’t use his son’s name in public, or it would be “difficult” for him. He would be branded a Jew.

Bunny is going to be a year old soon. He knows his name. He responds to it. I can’t just suddenly change his name to something more British, like Charles, or Henry or James. That wouldn’t be right. Or would it?

Unless… what if I used it as a bargaining chip? What if I changed his name in exchange for a house? That seems like a fair deal to me. But even then, would it be right? Would it be wrong? Should I even be contemplating this stuff? What do you think?

I took back the new digital video camcorder I got for Christmas this afternoon. It was WAY too complicated. Much too many buttons and menu items. It was giving me a big headache. I struggled to use it a couple of times, and then stuffed it in a cupboard and promptly forgot about it.

Then I remembered it was worth a bob or two ($500 to be exact, a sizeable amount not to be sneezed at) so I dug it out and took it back to Best Buy. The first time I tried, they said no way, Jose. The item was well past it’s return date of 14 days, and I could go take a hike.

I went back home, feeling ripped off and depressed for the day, and then I thought to myself, sod this for a game of soldiers. I want my money back. Technically the F.O.B.’s money, but now it was my camcorder and I was a dissatisfied customer, dammit, and I deserved to get my way. 

I dressed down a notch, and went back to the store with a new angle. I played poor, sick, single mother. Bunny played his part in the scene. We’ve been sick in the hospital for a month, I said. Not exactly a downright lie, but a slight twist on the truth. I bought the camcorder for my mum for Christmas, and it’s too complicated for her to use. That was a lie, but you know, I don’t feel too bad about it because these big bastard corporations lie to us all the time. Their businesses are built on lies. They call it marketing. I call it bullshit.

Anyway, they fell for it. They swallowed my cock and bull story, made an exception on their refund policy, and handed over the cash. I had to grovel, snivel and look pathetic for it, but who cares so long as I got my way.

Being a shopaholic, I couldn’t actually leave the store until I had spent at least some of my newfound money. I prowled the aisles, and came home with a speaker set for my laptop (since I killed my television, I’ve had to resort to watching DVDs on my computer, and let me tell you the sound is shite) PLUS a new digital video camcorder.

Not just any old video recorder, but possibly the best video recorder in the world, at a snip of the price and a fraction of the size. It’s called the FLIP and maybe you know about it already, but it was news to me. I’m way behind the technology times these days, stranded out here in the desert of single mama land.

The FLIP is the dogs bollocks. It’s perfectly designed for new mamas, with no brains, no time to read instruction manuals, and very little space in their nappy bags. I learned how to use it in about 5 minutes flat. Here’s what it says in the instructions: Get Started. Press power button. Press record button. Have fun!

That’s the sort of instructions even I can understand. There’s only 3 buttons on the back: Play, Record (with zoom), Delete.  You flip a switch and out comes the USB plug, which you slip into your computer and hey presto! It starts up a nifty, user-friendly software program in which you can edit and upload your videos to your hard drive, send them by email, or upload them to the internet. Really, it is so simple I can hardly believe it myself.

Also, a very important point: it’s sleek and sexy. It has character. I love it almost as much as I love my iPhone. Needless to say, I’ll be very careful I don’t drop it down the toilet.

In less than an hour I took this clip of the bunny, wrote this blog, and uploaded the clip here.

Not a very interesting clip, I know, but not bad for a first stab. Bunny’s not looking his best here. It’s past his bedtime, mummy’s fucking around with her new toy, and he’s not a happy bunny. But I am so excited by this little hip Flip that I had to get something up on this blog straight away!

This is going to change the face of my blog! I can feel the power of video pulsing through my veins! It’s a whole new world opening out before me, and I’ve already decided I’m going to bore you to death with clips of bunny and eat up all my disk space on wordpress. I might even make an appearance myself. You have been warned. Maybe I should change my name to badmuthavlogger. Watch this space!

Before I had a baby, I’d never heard of co-sleeping. It just wasn’t on my radar screen. Then after I got pregnant, I came across a few stories about parents who slept in the same bed as their kids, but I didn’t think that would be me. It didn’t seem normal. After all, I never slept in the same bed as my mother. I had a crib in a separate room, like most people, or so I thought at the time.

When I finally got bunny out of the intensive care nursery at the hospital and brought him home with me, I wanted to be next to him all the time. That first night I put him in his bassinet pulled up tight against my bed, but the separation felt weird. I wanted to feel his skin against mine, his breath next to mine, his fingers in mine. We were like one living organism. I instinctively pulled him into the bed with me, tucked under one arm where I could blissfully look into his perfect little face and nurse him whenever he mewled.

That was nearly 11 months ago, and I’ve been co-sleeping with him ever since. I never intended for it to happen that way (otherwise I wouldn’t have splashed out on that bloody expensive french vanilla crib) but it was the most natural thing in the world to do, and so I did it. I followed my intuition, my animal instincts. Whatever anyone else might say, for me it simply felt right to have him next to me at night.

I haven’t told too many people about me and bunny co-sleeping, because some have a fairly strong opinion on the subject. That baby needs to sleep in his own bed! You’ll roll over and suffocate him! He’ll strangle himself in the sheets! He’ll roll out of bed and hurt himself! He’ll overheat! You’ll never get that baby out of your bed!

These sort of remarks have forced me to do a bit of research on the subject, so that I have a handy retort at the ready to stuff back in the faces of my unsupportive foes (some of which are my very own dearly loved relatives).

It turns out that co-sleeping is practised in almost every culture except for ours. And up until 150 years ago, it was standard practise in our culture aswell. Solitary sleeping for babies, is an evolutionary anomaly. Sticking your baby alone in a crib, in a separate room, is not normal by any stretch of the imagination.

Neither is it good for their health. There is a ton of scientific research out there that demonstrates the physical and psychological benefits of co-sleeping. For both baby and mama. Don’t take my word for it, check it out for yourself. Better yet, subscribe to Mothering magazine and get your hands on their latest issue which has a couple of great co-sleeping features. (Since I linked to them three times, d’ya think they’ll give me a free subscription?)

I don’t need any scientific research to back up what I already know to be true in my heart. Having bunny in bed with me is bliss. It won’t last forever, he’ll grow up all too soon and want his own big boy room. But for now, we’re happy to be snuggled up together, even if we are waking up every 90 minutes to nurse. His immune system is getting stronger as a result, and I’m getting a hit of oxytocin to keep me mellow.

The way I see it, our culture is so fucked up in oh, so many ways, and one can’t help wondering about our childrearing practices which are focused on individualism and independence in the extreme. We’re disconnected from each other. We’re disconnected from nature. We’re disconnected from the very soul of life. And God knows, I want my bunny to be connected - to life, to nature and to his own soul. I believe that co-sleeping goes a little way towards healing this broken connection, and that makes it worth all the trouble of having the little bunny in my bed for a while, even when he’s a biting monster

Of course, it’s so much easier making this choice as a single mother. I can’t imagine having to negotiate any of this territory with a grown up man. Especially one who isn’t the father. If I ever find a partner, he’s going to have to accept the third party. That’s the bottom line.

I recently came across this video at www.dooce.com and while I don’t normally piggyback off of other people’s blog posts, I’m going to make an exception in this case, because it is such a moving story.

I want everyone to watch it and to stop hurting animals in the name of science, because guess what??? Animals are intelligent, sentient beings that deserve our love and respect.

For decades, scientists have been pondering the question do animals have feelings? What I want to know is, do humans have feelings? This video gives me hope.

Flopsy couldn’t sleep. He was sad and lonely.

flopsy_sad

He couldn’t understand why bunny didn’t love him. He wanted to be cuddled at night, curled up all cozy and warm in  bed with bunny, but instead he was down here in the dark, cold and alone. Snoopy woke up to hear snuffles coming from downstairs. He crept out of the cupboard and down into the living room where he was surprised to see Flopsy on the armchair, in a puddle of tears.

snoopy_comesdown

What’s up Flopsy? Snoopy asked. Is everything OK?

No. It’s not, sniffed Flopsy. Bunny doesn’t love me. I’ve come all the way from Germany to be his lovey, and he couldn’t care less whether I’m here or not. Most of the time he doesn’t even notice me. Sometimes he chews my ears and bites my feet, but he doesn’t even look me in the eye when he’s doing it. I wish I was dead.

There, there, Flopsy, please don’t say that, comforted Snoopy. It was like that with me in the beginnning. Badmuthablogger didn’t notice me at first, but grandma kept putting me in the crib and eventually she grew to love me as her favourite toy. And now look at me, I’m so well-loved the stuffing is falling out of my nose, and I’ve had to have a new skin sewn on me to keep me in one piece.

But it was different back then, sobbed Flopsy. You didn’t have to compete with all these other stuffed toys. I’m not special. I’m just another stuffed animal vying for bunny’s love.

Snoopy sat up on his hind paws, and shook a fist at Flopsy.  Now you listen to me, young rabbit. You ARE special. You’re made from organic cotton, stuffed with real wool, and you’ve been handmade and shipped at great expense across the seas to be here with bunny as his childhood companion. It’s time you realised you’re a cut above those other stuffed toys.

flopsy_listens

Really? Flopsy perked up an ear in hope.  You really think I’m special? 

Of course I do. You’re a fine young buck, if ever I saw one, quipped Snoopy. If I was 20 years younger, I’d give you a run for your money. You’re just the sort of rabbit that gives a dog a bone.

flopsy_snoopy_talkmore

Gulp. Well, that was a surprise, thought Flopsy, both ears pricked in shock. He didn’t know the old dog batted for the other side. Before he could think of a response, Snoopy moved in and pinned Flopsy to the sofa, planting a big, wet smacker on his lips.

flopsy_snoopy_getdown

WOW!! said Flopsy. That was amazing!!

flopsy_electrified

Harharharharhar, chortled Snoopy to himself, under his breath. There’s still a bit of life in the old bugger yet. 

Then he turned to Flopsy and said, Right. Now get back upstairs and show those other stuffed toys who’s boss.

Thanks, Snoopy. I won’t forget this. You’ve made me feel like a million bucks. Flopsy sighed in gratitude. He felt much better after Snoopy’s little pep talk.

Don’t mention it, said Snoopy. Now maybe we can both go back upstairs and get some sleep.

Flopsy floated back upstairs in a daze, and crawled back into bed beside bunny. Tomorrow is another day, he thought to himself as he drifted off into sleep, one paw wrapped around the bunny in love.

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