There are good nights, and there are bad nights. Just as there are good days and bad days. But the nights, the bad nights, are the worst. Tonight, for example, is a bad night. These days, Lila won’t sleep if she does not see me next to her crib. To achieve this, she forces herself to open her eyes every five damn seconds. She finally drifts off to sleep, and I stay by the crib for 20 minutes, 30, before allowing myself to slip out of the door. The slightest sound of bare feet on parquet is comparable to a landmine, and I stop in my tracks, wincing and praying to all the different gods – God, Buddha, Allah, any higher power that people believe in in this world – to please let her go back to sleep. She shifts, rubs her eye, and continues to sleep. I tiptoe to the kitchen, not allowing myself to breathe until the door closes quietly behind me. I breathe a sigh of relief.
She starts crying.
“I shouldn’t have sighed!” I reproach myself, although I know it wasn’t my sigh that woke her up, but her innate ability to piss people off.
I go back, try to tap her to sleep, and after 20 minutes I give in and rock her in my arms for 4 Beck songs, then put her down. She shifts again. I hold my breath.
She opens her eyes, smiles, sticks three fingers into her mouth, removes them, and says “Buh”.
I decide to leave the room. Let her cry, I think in anger. I don’t care. I have a life too. I have other things to do.
30 minutes have passed and she’s still at it, crying, half-standing half-kneeling while holding on to the crib railing, drowsy from sleep but hardheaded enough to keep on wailing. I surrender first. As always (”Pussy”, I can hear you saying contemptuously). I mentally flip a coin in my head. Heads, I remain calm. Tails, I may have to throw her off the balcony. The coin falls. Heads. I sit next to the crib, whisper against her ear, sing eensy-weensy spider, recite Dr Seuss books, until she drifts off to sleep.
There is a finality to her finally falling into a deep sleep. Her little body sags against you with all the weight in the world, you’d think she spent the day solving Calculus problems or running a marathon. I put her down and she obligingly turns over, accepts the pacifier and sleeps.
She sleeps.
She sleeps.
She’s ASLEEP!
Imaginary confetti fall from the ceiling as I pump my fist in victory and hop around in silent cheer. I can finally finish that film I’ve been trying to watch for 3 days! Finally finish that email sitting in my drafts folder! Finally go online and search for a return ticket from Issirac! Finally sit on the balcony, light those candles, nurse that bottle of Clairette de Die, and just soak in the warm summer night! Finally, finally, finally, I can put that box of Picard yakitori in the oven, make some rice, and savour a hot meal. Or I can do a combination to save time: sit on the balcony drinking alcohol and eating yakitori while watching dvd on a warm summer night!
Freedom!
I glance at the clock. It says 23h38. Involuntarily I yawn. Then, like a chain reaction, my body starts to complain, my back starts to ache, and my stomach tells me, in a tiny voice, “You know what, I didn’t really feel like having yakitori that much anyways…”
So I drink some orange juice while surveying the mess of the living room, swearing to myself, “I’ll fix all this tomorrow” (because I’m good at lying to myself), brush my teeth and turn off all the lights, drop into bed, roll the comforter around my body and admit defeat.
She starts to cry.
Lila = 8,573,292 ; Kala = 0
Like I said, there are good nights, and there are bad nights.
Currently listening to:
Lila
Crying, Wailing, Teething and being a general Pain in the Ass

{ 9 } Comments
she looks like she could do damage. haha. pretty baby.
Lila has you really wrapped around her fingers! A few more years & she’ll be focused on other things, errr, like boys & you’ll totally miss her wailing for you
i can relate. benji started to wake up several times at night too. he still breastfeeds and this (breastfeeding) is the only way i could keep him quiet and go back to sleep. yes, we’ve been co-sleping for about 2 mos. now since he started teething and waking up several times a night. he has been “grazing” all night. it is tiring for me. my nipples are now droopy. i am seriously wanting to wean him. no one told me that sleepless night will come back.
sparks, yea, serious damage, mostly to me. I’m running mad.
Makis, I don’t think I’ll miss the wailing, honestly.
Loraine, wow, I hope that it gets better for you. Did you try giving him a pacifier? I didn’t know this waking-thru-the-night would pop up again and again. I want a refund!
kala, LOL regarding refund! i did try a pacifier but it did not work… and he doesn’t like formula anymore…
Please let me know where you came across the expression ” a perfect day for banana fish’ i could scarcely believe it as years ago my father was a proof reader for Cassell’s and that was one of the titles i remember. I took the book from the shelf by his bed and marvelled at the title. It became one of our family favourite expressions, and all the early photos of tiny children at the beach usually had that written in white ink on black paper.
Thank you
hi caroline, it’s the title of a short story by jd salinger. it’s in the book ‘nine stories’. nice to know that it played such a big part in your family. A significant part of the story takes place on a beach so probably that’s why all your beach photographs have the title scribbled on it. Wow. I’m so jealous!
I remember I have to go outside the house and watched the Christmas lights dancing six Christmas songs with my daughter when she finally realized that she needs to sleep, that is after the long horrible wailing.
I remember also singing all the songs I know from pop to Christmas songs to activist’s songs I learned from college every time I finished all the lullabies and kiddie songs I know.
Oh well, I already accept that that was MY life when i had her.
Sometimes you breathe a sigh of relief when your kid started to grow, but sometimes too, you feel like something is missing and you will realize that you want to experience their sense of being “self-centered” again.
Oh mommy dear
I can totally relate, Antonio is the same. Mothers with older children tell me that it is a phase. Hope that things clear up soon!
Post a Comment