Mommy is doing the best she can, honey.
I can’t tell you how many times I repeated that phrase to my four-year old while visiting my Mom this past weekend. Swimming nonstop for 6 hours straight combined with the fact that I overcooked her mac and cheese and forgot to pack her favorite Hello Kitty underwear really sent her over the edge!
And I didn’t miss the small smile forming on my mother’s lips as she watched Miss R demand the crust be taken off her bread or when she told me that my singing “hurt her ears”. (In her defense, I am a TERRIBLE singer. But still.)
Come on people. It didn’t take a mind reader to know what my mom was thinking while she had that smirk on her face.
Finally! It’s payback time, beyotch!
Yes, it’s true. Growing up, I had a tendency to be somewhat of a little bitchface at times to my mother, who in all fairness, was a wonderful parent. Hell, even now, I sometimes speak to her like a spoiled teenage brat, rolling my eyes and saying, “Whatevuh, Mom!” whenever she harps on me for not taking a daily multi-vitamin or reminds me that osteoporosis runs in our family.
And normally, occasional meltdowns from my kids when they are overly exhausted don’t really phase me. But I just finished Tori Spelling’s MOMMYWOOD last week and now every perceived injustice from my daughter has me paranoid. You see, My girl Tori has got some serious mama drama and she’s obsessed with righting the perceived wrongs from her childhood. Specifically, things that her mother Candy did. And that obsession seems to control most of the parenting decisions that she makes.
Candy made Tori wear her hair in a bob for most of her childhood? Well, her daughter Stella is going to grow her hair down to her ass like some crazy hippie!
Candy had incredible costumes made every Halloween? Well, Tori is ordering hers from *gasp* Pottery Barn Kids! Take that, Candy!
By the end of the book, I felt bad for Tori. And not because she had some terrible childhood, (I’m sorry, but while giving your child Madame Alexander dolls may be lame, it’s not child abuse!) but because she has let her mother’s flaws as a parent have such power over her, even as an adult.
And if Tori and I were BFFs, (Does it count that I know someone who knows someone who is in her Mommy and me class?) I’d give her this small pearl of wisdom:
No matter what you do or how hard you try, you’re going to F*CK up your kids somehow. That while you may be successful in not screwing them up the same way your parents did, I assure you that they will find all new ways to be screwed up. It’s just the way it is. All you can do is love them and do the best you can!
So there you go, Tori. The answer to all your problems. No need to thank me, girl.
And in tribute to my own mother, I’ve complied a list of all the ways I’m probably scarring my own children for life. I’m thinking it will come in handy when my daughter pens her first tell-all!
MOMMY IS VERY SORRY THAT…
1. Mommy is very sorry about Goofy the guinea pig’s death. And despite what you told everyone at preschool, I did not feed her poison spinach.
2. Mommy is sorry that she dared to speak while you were watching Spongebob. I know that it was a very pivotal moment where you were about to discover the secret “Krabby Patty” ingredient.
3. Mommy is very sorry that her tater tots don’t taste the same as the ones they serve at preschool. You would think that all over-processed frozen potato products would taste the same. But as you mentioned, theirs are “yummy” and mine are “disgusting”. Actually, you told me that they were IS-UG-STING. But I knew what you meant.
4. Mommy is very sorry that she doesn’t want to get her hair wet at the pool. But, seriously, have you seen what Mommy’s hair looks like when it air dries? And on a side note, I’m sorry to break the news you may have the same problem on your hands in the future. And don’t go blaming that one on me, girlfriend. Even Mommy can’t control genetics!
5. Mommy is very sorry she didn’t eat the thousand-calorie banana bread your class worked very hard on at the Mother’s day breakfast. All I can say is that I hope you inherit your Grandmother’s metabolism!
xoxo Liz









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Love #4–This past weekend, Matt’s sister-in-law & I banded together & decided simply not to wear our suits to the pool. Turns out, they don’t ask you to swim if you’re fully-clothed! (In my defense, I’d gotten a blow out the day before and wasn’t prepared to wash the hair for my standard 3.5 days!)
I appreciate the blog, mainly b/c it allows me to know that my effort in screwing up my kids isn’t a solo-flight! (it probably shouldn’t be comforting that my plane will crash with others in it, but it is?!!)
In kind….Daddy is sorry for:
1. Making you sing the Illini Fight Song on demand, esp in public
2. Making you throw away everything that was blue & gold (Michigan) or black & gold (Iowa)—and that limits a little kid’s wardrobe big time
Surely there is plenty more, but those just seem obvious, ridiculous, and I have no intention of stopping!
Yes, Lisa, you are very wise. And is that why my Mom didn’t put on her suit all weekend? Well, except for one time when the kids were just about to get out….she is one smart lady! xoxo
Oh Matt!
No matter what we do, our kids will probably end up in therapy, right? Love your list, that could definitely be considered child abuse in some states! ha. xoxo
And let the Church say AMEN!
The OGG got all pissy with me because we moved this weekend and our cable isn’t hooked up yet and she couldn’t see the new episode of Jonas. So, my bad for not forcing the cable company to hook us up on a holiday weekend. I do plan to throw it in her face that I’m taking her to the JoBros concert a week from today.
Hey, I’m over my kids and their whining. They can just go get therapy. Isn’t that what health insurance is for?
Great post – funny because it is sooo true!
Well said!!! What a wonderful way to start my morning! #4 had me in serious stitches. I won’t list my crimes. There are too many I’d rather ignore…very much like my own mother’s style, but I can’t dwell. I’ll wait for the tell-all that C&C co-author and be shocked like everyone else
Thanks Michelle, glad you got all moved in. My fave is when my kids are watching live TV and get totally pissed when I can’t fast forward through the commercials! Are you kidding me?
Thanks Thea! Wait till they start talking, then you’re in BIG trouble! PS, I saw their pics on FB, soo cute! xoxo Liz
I have to say I don’t have kids (other than my very spoiled bulldog) and I just cried very real tears from laughing so hard. You and Lisa are AWESOME!! Which is why I tell all the girls at work about your blog (and they too love it). Well that and you are as close as I get to *stardom* and can say “they are my sorority sisters”! WOOT WOOT!!! ;0)
Juana! Thanks, so great to see you here! And don’t worry, I’m sure your bulldog will start talking back you as soon as he hits the tweens…AOT! xoxo
Soooo funny! I can’t even list my crimes against my children; I’m sure there are too many to count. Let’s hope they don’t become writers.
And I just saw the video — is that new or have I just been really dumb and missed it all these times I’ve gone on your blog? Hysterical. You two play off each other so well. Are you sure you’re not actually sisters?
Hi Sarah, I think I’m going to avoid helping my kids with their English homework for the next 16 years so that’s there is no possible chance they can put together 80,000+ words! ha.
As far as the video, you didn’t miss it! We just put it up last week. And we are off to Vegas this weekend and will be filming our second installment! I’ll be ready for my close-up after a couple of Don Julio shots.
And people say the sister thing all the time… I guess that’s what happens when you’ve been friends with someone since shoulder pads were in style! xoxo
A very wise woman once said, “Everyone ends up in therapy at some point, I’m just giving my kids something to talk about.”
The more I live, the more I see the truth in this statement! From that moment on, the pressure was off!
Laura,
Yes, I totally agree! xoxo Liz
Liz, I thought I would wait to add my comments as you are slowly learning, mom’s words of wisdom are rarely viewed as such. As I recall, you were sweet and attentive at that age. you never spoke back, ate everything with a complaint,loved your brothers and went to bed without a fuss. See how convenient you can twist your memories as you age?? Actually you did not start as young as Riley, but you did manage to turn into a typical teen. As I recall, you did not eat dinner with us as “we chewed too loud.”
I reread and notice I put “ate eveything WITH a complaint” I THINK I meant to put in “without” but then again…..
Mom,
I’m glad you have conveniently forgotten my brattiness! And btw, there was some seriously loud chewing going on at that table. Admit it!!! xoxo
hey, I ate almost everything except for that nasty cod with all the mini-bones in it!
Liz, Actually, you did wait until about junior high. I remember going to parent night and every teacher said, “oh Liz is SOOOOOO wonderful, such a good student, so sweet….” after about the 4th one mentioned your sparkling personality, I said (and this is true) “I’m sorry, I think you have me mixed up with someone else’s mom, “I am LIZ’s CLARK MOM.” fortunately, this teached was a mom and she explained that some girls at that age are rude morning until night and some are able to go “part time” on the sweetness and the family get the short end. So true, but I actually was grateful you did not do the reverse. Then I was able to bask in all the complements and was able to gag your brothers if they were in earshot of their comments. Love mom