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Archives for November 2004

Gainful employment

10 November, 2004
Posted in: Work

I appear to have secured gainful employment. I will be starting at the end of the month. I may even like the job.  I have already begun to spend my first month’s salary.  You may congratulate me.

So this will be a big change for me and my girl.  Princess will be spending her days in the creche and I will be rejoining the world of adults.  To be honest, we’re both a bit apprehensive. Well, she would be, I’m sure, if she had the remotest idea what was coming.

The past year has been hard.  I have found it more difficult than I ever imagined it could be to be home alone with a small child.  Even the most perfect small child in the world.  And of course the stream of rejection letters landing on the doormat hasn’t helped my mood either.

I must pay tribute to my loving husband who never once reproached me for my inability to find a job.  Who never objected to paying all the shoe bills. Who never ever in all the time I was off work asked “what do you do with yourself all day?”.  Who never said “it’s so easy for you at home, not having to work”. ( I don’t think that he ever thought that either and let’s give some credit to my mother-in-law here, the woman who said “it’s much easier for him going out to work than for you staying at home, he’s very lucky, work is sociable, you know” – he must have absorbed right-on vibes at home).  And he always thought I was brilliant and potential employers were stupid.  Except obviously, the people who’ve taken me on. And he’s going to take me out to dinner on Friday night to celebrate.

Though I am delighted to be going back to work, it’s not the unmitigated delight it would have been, if I were not a mother.  I am worried about my baby.  Worried that she will be unhappy. Worried that she will miss me.  Worried that she won’t understand what’s going on.  Worried that I will miss an important part of her life that I should perhaps be there for.  But I am also hopeful that she will understand or at least feel how much happier I am (though of course this does depend on the job being as entertaining as I hope it will be, my friend D has pointed out to me that it’s not all coffee breaks, which is a disappointment).
I realise that, objectively,on the scale of things which people have to deal with, my life was more or less perfect, but for me it was difficult at times.  Looking after my little girl is getting easier now and she has a personality and she is fun and I love her dearly, but, just between you and me, she’s still not the great conversationalist I think that she will be some day.  I miss adult conversation.   There were days when the only adult conversation I had was with my husband before and after his day at work.   Sometimes the days would stretch out in front of me and I would think “what the hell am I going to do?”  We have visited every museum and playground in the greater Brussels area several times. We have shopped.  We have set up camp in the Glam Potter’s house and F’s house on alternate days (my only friends who do not work full time). But you can’t see someone 4 times a week. Really, you can’t.  Often I was tempted, but you can’t.  Maybe it would have been easier in Ireland with our families around, I don’t know. Maybe it’s easier for other people, but, you know, I doubt it. Before I was at home full-time, I used to think that non-working mothers had copped out of the world of work.  That they couldn’t hack it and had gone for the easy option. Obviously, I would never have said that in a million years, but I thought it.  Now, I know, I was wrong. I am going back to work, I’ve gone for the easier option.   Full-time mothers, I salute you.

Comments
Bobble

on 10 November 2004 at 11:43

My friend Helen has said much the same thing Waffle. It’s the lack of adult conversation that gets you. You feel you are slowly losing brain cells one by one – no matter how much you adore/love being with your child.
As I am childless I can’t imagine that feeling yet…
Have a salutation sweetie on me. 1 Sweetie(s) given
poggle
on 10 November 2004 at 11:55
(
Comment Modified) Well done waffle. And just think of all the news you and the Princess will have to share with each other in the evenings.
She’ll love using her imperious tones and high IQ on her subjects in the creche ….
NorahSplog

on 10 November 2004 at 12:00

Go Waffle! Thrilled for you. How wonderful and terrifying. Well done you.

UndercoverCookie

on 10 November 2004 at 12:18

Congratulations on getting a job
and Congratulations on all that time at home with only a littl’un for conversation and NOT having gone completely bonkers as a result.

lauren35

on 10 November 2004 at 13:27

Fantastic news! Will you be able to blog from work though?

Friar Tuck

on 10 November 2004 at 16:47

But what about MY needs? How am I going to waste time at work if you don’t have time to blog?
No, seriously, congrats.
Shall we start an office pool on when you start wishing you were a full time mum again?

Beth

(Homepage)

on 11 November 2004 at 02:08

Woo-hoo! Congratulations. It isn’t all coffee breaks, but there are lunch breaks too.

belgianwaffle

on 11 November 2004 at 12:58
(
Comment Modified) Thank you, thank you, one and all. I am pleased but apprehensive as well (special thanks to HJB and Bobble -sweeties!). Thank you also for note of concern re blog, we will see whether I will be able to blog at work. FT, if you want to waste time at work, I suggest that you start your own blog. Beth I am delighted to note your point re lunch breaks which I had entirely forgotten.

Locotes

on 14 November 2004 at 19:33

Bloody hell, I don’t believe it. I’ve been here since (almost) the start, been feeling your pain on the rejection front, been enjoying your optimism on the next possible job front – and then I miss the ‘actually got a job’ post. Curses. My deepest apologies.But hey, my warmest congratulations! Well feckin’ done – am highly happy for you. Though of course it now sounds as if you won’t be looking for work in the homeland and giving me another option to have lunchtime grub and pints with. Ah well, I’ll survive. Can I ask what general area the job is in / what you’ll be doing? (without you having to go into details…) 1 Sweetie(s) given

belgianwaffle

on 16 November 2004 at 14:31

No, no Locotes, you have been here since the start. Thank you for your congratulations, much appreciated. Job is dull but worthy. Well, I hope that I will find it interesting, obviously…

Locotes

on 16 November 2004 at 16:58

Dull but worthy….sounds good. Or bad. Or a bit of both. I can’t tell actually. From that description it could be a doctor or a McDonald’s server. Hopefully somewhere in the middle.
😉

Arts and crafts

11 November, 2004
Posted in: Princess

Princess picks up a leaf and puts it in her trailer. I take it out saying it’s a bit shabby and she picks up another one.  Finally we have a trailer full of leaves that meet my stict criteria.

We go home and get out a sheet of paper and a glue stick. The Princess chews meditatively on the glue stick. I arrange the leaves in pretty patterns on the page. The Princess refuses to surrender the glue stick. I remove it from her by main force and use it to stick my pretty leaves on the sheet of paper. She wails throughout the procedure. I return the glue stick to her. She chews on it while removing my prettily patterned leaves from the page and wiping them one by one on her tights. There is a brief tussle wherein I use my superior force to remove from her little fists leaves, paper and glue stick.

When she goes for her nap, I stick back all the leaves on the paper, write her name and the date on the end of the sheet and hang it on the wall.

Is there something wrong with this picture?

Comments
NorahSplog

on 11 November 2004 at 13:51

Nope – not that I can see.
(That leaf she chose first was pretty manky.)

poggle

on 11 November 2004 at 13:59

She’ll sue. She will you know.

lauren35

on 11 November 2004 at 15:55

nah, she’s learning the valuable lesson that if you want something doing properly you’ve got to do it yourself…

Friar Tuck

on 11 November 2004 at 16:41

Art critics can be difficult that way.

belgianwaffle

on 12 November 2004 at 12:56

I fear that Pog has the right of it, but I like the way the rest of you are thinking.

LRB personals

11 November, 2004
Posted in: Reading etc.

It’s been a while since we’ve had one of these. How about this:

“Don’t reply to this ad if you are now or have ever been a T.A. reservist. Orienteering is neither big nor clever, and no-one in your department at work ever calls you captain. You know who you are. F., 36. Box no. 20/13″I see that the mean old editorial staff are not giving out the bottle of champagne for best ad this week as “this issue is the first of the LRB’s 25th Anniversary editions. As a result advertisers are asked to get over themselves for uno momento whilst we keep this issue’s champagne for an office jolly.”

Comments
poggle

on 11 November 2004 at 14:50

Yes. What she said.

Bobble

on 11 November 2004 at 15:37

Thirded.

Beth

(Homepage)

on 11 November 2004 at 16:49

How topical – want the list of things in this post that I didn’t understand? 🙂

belgianwaffle

on 12 November 2004 at 12:57

Actually to be fair to the personals in the LRB, they are all wonderful. Hilarious. They should sell them separately. Beth, I suspect you are baffled by the TA which is the territorial army, I think. Further guesswork here but could it correspond to US reservists?

Romance, Glamour and Excitement

13 November, 2004
Posted in: Mr. Waffle, Princess

Romance

Mr. Waffle and I went out to dinner last night in our favourite restaurant in Brussels.  It is small and full of velvet and mirrors and the food is fabulous.  It was cold and wet outside.  It was warm and candlelit inside. We held hands.  We stopped talking about the Princess for minutes at a time.

Glamour

For the night that was in it, I wore a rather daring (but subtle) outfit that I haven’t donned in a while. The babysitter (a middle aged Polish lady) raised her eyebrows, Mr. Waffle admired and the rather older gentlemen sitting on either side of us in the restaurant peered.

Excitement

When we came home, herself was up and playing with the babysitter. I took her into my arms and Mr. Waffle drove the babysitter home. I hadn’t even had time to take off my coat when the Princess vomited all over me – getting coat, outfit and, for good measure, boots.  Pausing only briefly to consider how many florets of broccoli she had swallowed whole, I began to mop up. When Mr. Waffle returned, it was to find his wife clad in a distinctly unglamourous dressing gown and playing with a wide-awake baby in the marital bed. Although she had been a bit upset at vomiting, within minutes she was her usual chirpy self. As a vomit veteran, she bounces back quickly.

Attempts to persuade madam that she might be better off in her own bed were unavailing, so the next hour was spent picking up doggy from the floor and passing the Princess from parent to parent before, finally, we all collapsed from exhaustion.

Comments
jackdalton

on 13 November 2004 at 17:00

A simple case of seeing off any possible opposition, by the sound of it…. 😉 1
Sweetie(s) given

Friar Tuck

on 13 November 2004 at 19:14

bw, see what you’ll be missing when you go back to work!
jd, as plausible as your theory sounds, it never worked with any of my dates.

belgianwaffle

on 13 November 2004 at 22:02

Sweeties and sympathy. Just what I needed. Thank you.

Culture Vultures

13 November, 2004
Posted in: Reading etc.

In the morning we went to an exhibition on tattoos. It also threw in some alarming body piercings for good measure. In the afternoon we took in an exhibition on 25 typical Bruxellois. It included a profile of a Madam Pipi. I feel this is not a profession which is well known in the anglophone world. We were led to this by the admirable Thierry who is my source of information on all that is going on in the Belgian capital.  Finally, we went to an exhibition of pre-colombian art which was sponsored by my bank and we got in free. I think that this was the first time I got something for nothing from my bank, so let’s celebrate that. The exhibition featured quite a number of large stone phalluses and I couldn’t help feeling the mother and teenage son team making their way round weren’t having a great time with these.

Comments
belgianwaffle

on 13 November 2004 at 22:03

Stop being all American. We know what you Bush lovers are like.

Friar Tuck

on 14 November 2004 at 19:40

Touch?!

A slight backlog

13 November, 2004
Posted in: Mr. Waffle, Reading etc.

Mr. W : Have you read “American Pastoral” yet?

Me: No, it’s on the bedside table.

Mr. W: But, it’s been there for years.  Philip Roth has written two more books in the time that book’s been sitting on your bedside table.

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