I'm a 35 36 37 38 year old mother of 3 who needs a break - physical, mental, spiritual or financial - I'll take what I can get. My husband says I work too much and I should chill more. Whether he's right or wrong, my life is what it is. I'd love some more "me time" to read, write and shop, but I never have the time to take it. So this blog is my "me time" and it's ALL ABOUT ME.

100 things about me



Janine Dunlop's Facebook profile



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In a previous life, I freelanced for Pregnancy and Parenting magazines.

I'd love to do more of this. If/when someone offers me a regular gig (hint!), I'll start up again.

Here's a list of my published work.

Dunlop, J. 2004, "Got time on your side?", Living and Loving, vol. September, pp. 146.

Dunlop, J. 2004, "Happy endings", Your Pregnancy, vol. April/May, no. 32, pp. 60-62.

Dunlop, J. 2003, "Coping with depression", Your Pregnancy, vol. October/November, no. 29, pp. 54-56.

Dunlop, J. 2003, "Working moms: guilt or grace?", Today, vol. October, no. 126, pp. 22-23.

Dunlop, J. 2002, "AIDS in the classroom", Your Family, vol. January, pp. 88-89.

Dunlop, J. 2001, "The baby gap", Your Family, vol. April, pp. 14-16.

Dunlop, J. 2000, "Hope is born", Today, vol. May, no. 99, pp. 26-27.

Dunlop, J. 2000, "The nappy debate", Your Baby, vol. August, no. 53, pp. 95-96.

Dunlop, J. 1999, "Waiting for a heartbeat", Today, vol. May, no. 91, pp. 24-27.

Dunlop, J. "'Just relax' and other infertility myths", TLC: Tender Loving Care for Life, vol. 5, no. 2, pp. 95-96.



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Friday, June 27, 2008
I've Moved!

I've moved to http://metime.typepad.com

I'll be leaving this blog up so you can still access my old posts.

Come over for a visit!

Posted at 07:01 am by neenblog
You said (1)  

Thursday, June 26, 2008
Whining Mommy

I think what Ashley and I disagree on is whether moms have a right to complain.

She says,

Put yourself in one of your children's shoes. If your mom complained about the mundane things such as combing your hair or fixing your lunch, what kind of message would that send to you? Self-sacrificing our time (and that dazzling social life) for all these necessary things shows our children that we love them.”

What I get from her comment is that moms don’t have a right to whine. We’re not allowed to say we don’t enjoy something relating to child-rearing. We should uncomplainingly sacrifice all our time to serve our families.

I don’t agree. I watched my mother immerse herself in the mundane for 20 years. She never complained. Ever. To anyone. It earned her a breakdown, serious enough to land her in a psychiatric hospital.

What I learned from her experience was to always be in touch with my feelings. I don’t think my mom even complained to herself. Which meant she wasn’t sure about how she felt about continuously serving at all times.

So I complain. I whine. I sulk sometimes.

However, I think you misunderstand, Ashley: I don’t sit around complaining like an 8 year old to my kids about how irritating it is that I have to make them supper. I wait until they’re in bed and then I complain to the internet. Totally different audience, totally different purpose. I complain because I’m a real person, with real feelings, and sometimes I don’t like doing the necessary.

Not that I’d ever neglect the necessary. I just like grumbling sometimes. 


Posted at 07:05 am by neenblog
You said (3)  

Wednesday, June 25, 2008
Criticised Mommy

Aaaaand just when you’re feeling all smug and happy about your blog, along comes this comment in answer to my “Missing: 1x social life” post: 

“I thought "your" life was your family when you had one. Being a mother is one of life's biggest blessings but we miss it so often because our culture makes us think that we need all these other things to make us "who we REALLY are", or were meant to be; a job, a social life, etc, etc. These things aren't bad but they make us discontent with our situation that so many would give up all these other things to have. I wish more moms would find satisfaction in the mundane work that's necessary to raise up children. It's the little things in life that seem so insignificant that really count.”

Ashley, I get what you’re saying. Believe me: I appreciate my status as a mom. I tried for more than 3 years to conceive James. I’ve been pregnant 6 times and I have 3 live children. I love, appreciate and cherish them.

However, I don’t cherish the mundane. Not that I dream of being one of those creepy Mrs Americas (because I live in South Africa, but also, just a little because entering pageants when you’re a mom – or at all - is, you know, creepy and twisted). Not because I want to be famous and known as one of those socialite-types. No, not for any of those reasons, but because…. wait for it, because this is profound: I don’t cherish the mundane.

Just in case we’re not clear, here it is again: I don’t enjoy cooking. I don’t enjoy tidying. I hate routine. My favourite reading matter isn’t school notices. My idea of the ideal Friday night outing isn’t a school Bingo evening. The “life” I was whining about in my “Missing” post isn’t a fantastic career, or a dazzling social life. No, what I feel I’m missing out on now that I’m busy with the mundane all the time is a rich intellectual life. The chance now and then to read a good book, to be creative, to write and think about something other than how to palm off raffle tickets and what kind of spread to slap on today’s sandwich.

In case I still haven’t been clear enough: I don’t hate my children. I hate the mundane. I know it’s the little things that count. Like the 10 minutes I spend in bed with them in the morning. Or the time Hannah and I spent last night at a belly-dancing lesson. Or laughing at one of James’s not-very-funny jokes. It’s the little things like that that I cherish. Not the mundane.


Posted at 06:59 am by neenblog
You said (6)  

Tuesday, June 24, 2008
I'm leavin' on a jet plane

I’m thinking of moving this blog over to Typepad. Whereas Blogdrive has served me so well over the past few years, I think I’ve outgrown it. I want to be able to do a little more than the free package can offer me and I’m not willing to progress to a paid subscription.

I’ve started moving a few things over to Typepad. Go have a look and let me know your opinion. I’ve signed up for a free trial, which expires in about 10 days.

The most important question of course is: would you follow me if I moved? There doesn’t seem to be an easy way of migrating my posts from here to there, so I’m just going to leave an “I’ve moved” message here and a link to old posts there. Do you think that would be adequate? I’d hate to lose my (two) regular readers. Smile


Posted at 01:35 pm by neenblog
You said (4)  

Monday, June 23, 2008
Apparently, I have a church voice

Whenever I'm feeling a little too smug and self-confident, I can always rely on my children to knock me down a peg or two:

James: Mom, when will you get a proper job?
Me: What do you mean by "proper"?
James: Because being at the University sounds like you're still learning to be someone.

Hannah: Mom, sing in your church voice.
Me: I have a church voice?
Hannah: Yes.
Me: What does it sound like?
Hannah: You know: like you're screaming.

Sigh.


Posted at 05:59 pm by neenblog
You said (2)  

Saturday, June 21, 2008
Missing: 1 x social life

Do you have a life? Because I'm not sure where I left mine and if you're not using yours at the moment, I'd like to borrow it.

K? K.

No seriously. Who stole my life? Currently, I'm spending my days:

1) Preparing. For work and school: packing bags, making lunches, signing forms… blah, blah. I've nodded off just thinking about it.

2) Working. 8.30-4pm, I'm at a desk, or bringing things to other people's desks, barely resisting the urge to add, "Do you want fries with that?"

3) Cooking. 5-6pm, I'm in the kitchen, cooking and maybe, if the mood takes me and the planets are correctly aligned, cleaning up.

4) Grooming. Children, that is. Bathing them, combing their hair afterwards, trimming their nails. You know, general pet maintenance.

5) Laundering. Pointlessly shoving clothes into the washing machine and then having no way of drying them, because it's winter here and it's been raining for about a decade.

6) Organising. Persistently tidying the children's cupboards, even though experience tells me that they'll look like the day after Hiroshima in about 2.5 minutes.

7) Watching. Dvds - which, currently, are my sole form of entertainment.

8) Internetting. Because this, apart from a Friday dvd, or a glimpse at a few pages of a good book in the bath, is my only "me" time.

So I ask again: do you have a life? And if you have small children, how do you fit it in?


Posted at 11:05 am by neenblog
You said (4)  

Friday, June 20, 2008
My clever boy

"Dear Parent

We are pleased to inform you that an example of your child's creative writing has been entered into the Literature section of the Cape Town Eisteddfod."

Not sure what that means exactly, but, um, yay James.




Posted at 11:03 am by neenblog
You said (2)  

Thursday, June 19, 2008
South African Mommy Bloggers

Are you a South African mommy blogger? If so, or if you know of a SA mom blogger, then please send me your / their url. I have an idea that can only work if I have enough data.

Thanks!


Posted at 04:13 pm by neenblog
You said (2)  

Tuesday, June 17, 2008
And now for something completely different

Been a lot of negativity about my mothering skills around here in the last few posts. For your enjoyment, here’s some self-praise:

I’ve been meaning to move Jonah out of our bedroom since forever. James moved out when he was about 18 months old and Hannah took a little longer. Neither of them stayed until they were 2. Yet there Jonah is, sleeping in the cot next to our bed, and most nights, waking us up or crawling onto my head in the middle of the night.

We have a tiny house: 3 bedrooms, but the 2nd and 3rd could actually be one small bedroom if you knocked down the wall. Hannah and James each have their own room and there really isn’t space for Jonah.

The solution I came up with was to buy double bunks and put the boys in together, until James got too old to share with a younger sibling, or we moved out to a bigger house – whichever came first.

But how to afford double bunks? The prices ranged from the really basic (ie -ugly) at R900 to the designer (ie –unnecessary) at R4500. Whatever: we could afford neither R900 or R4500 or anything in between.

So I wrote an article. And then I got it sold to a magazine. And then I got paid. And then yesterday, I went shopping, bought the bunks, had them delivered and assembled and set up the room.

Resourceful mommy? I think so.  Smile

(Link to magazine to follow when the article is published in August. Whoo-hoo!)


Posted at 06:45 pm by neenblog
You said (4)  

Saturday, June 14, 2008
Oh dear

19

As a 1930s wife, I am
Very Poor (Failure)

Take the test!


Posted at 07:37 pm by neenblog
You said (3)  

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