This has been a smashingly good summer.
I know I complained about being sick during the first part of the summer, but since approximately mid-June, I’ve been feeling pretty fantastic!
R and I celebrated our 10th wedding anniversary with a marvelous trip to coastal Maine. Â We took our kayaks and spent some time on the water. Â We wandered through art galleries. Â We ate lobster. Â We had a glass of wine with every meal. Â We got massages. Â It was most excellent.
While on our trip, H went on a camping/fishing excursion with his grandparents. Â H caught a 17-inch bass. Â We are so proud.
H started swim lessons this week. Â He’s doing great!
We’re doing other things, too. Â Like visiting the library and the aquarium/science center. Â Tending our small garden (we finally have sugar snap peas!). Â Going on hikes. Â Enjoying “picnics” on the front lawn. Â And fitting in those house projects, slowly but surely.
H begins preschool on Sept. 1. Â I go back to work (part-time) on August 29th. Â I’ve started prepping my class, but I won’t have too much done ahead of time. Â It’s just been hard to do it with H around.
I’m also feeling conflicted about work stuff. Â For now, teaching 1 class/term is clearly a good choice. Â It helps me keep my CV current, I get to feel like I am doing something productive outside of the house, etc. Â And because I’m teaching an evening class, we don’t have to fuss with daycare. Â These are all good things. Â But I am starting to have second thoughts about pursuing the usability business. Â Although usability research could be interesting, I keep feeling this tug back to my original field. Â I just can’t shake the feeling that I am abandoning learning about the brain. Â I feel like there’s something I am missing.
I recently submitted my very last manuscript from my postdoc. Â Now I have no more data. Â And I am jonesing a little bit. Â I feel like I need to plan an experiment, execute it, and let the data roll in. Â And today, I had a weird experience. Â H was having his annual pediatrician appointment (that kid weighs nearly 37 pounds now!). Â The pediatrician recalled a conversation we’d had 2 years ago, where I shared with her my controversial and as yet, untested, hypothesis about the effect of prenatal SSRIs on later development of autism. Â Today, the pediatrician showed me a new paper just published in the Archives of General Psychiatry, which is suggestive of such a link (although causation still hasn’t been established). Â It got me thinking about the animal model I had designed around this very idea, how I wanted to run some kick-ass studies to explore the model, and how everyone I talked to thought it was too speculative and too risky. Â And now, here is some evidence to support it. Â It made me think that I really know what I am doing, even if no one else seems to think so. Â Several months ago, my postdoc advisor told me I was welcome to come back any time to tinker in the lab if I want to. Â It was a nice offer. Â And it’s tempting. Â But I’d be a volunteer again. Â And for what? Â Would I be taking a step backwards?
I feel like I need to be choosy about my commitments these days. Â I can only take on things that are going to advance my career, since I’ve already wasted 8 years building a career that just can’t happen here. Â I keep thinking about how doing clinical neuropsychology would be right up my alley (and I would have a job here), but as I concluded months ago, it would be a long and expensive road.
Do I just need to teach part-time for a while, and think about it all some more before I delve into anything new? Â It’s clear that I am conflicted. Â It’s clear that I am not 100% committed to any one decision. Â Maybe I should volunteer for the Brain Injury Association of Vermont. Â Make some connections, learn some new things. Â Maybe that would be good.
One question that has thrown me for a loop at the playground is this: Â “Are you a stay-at-home mom?” Â I wince whenever I hear it, and I quickly reply no. Â Yes, you can hate me for saying this, but I’m just being honest. Â I don’t know why the question always makes me feel so insulted. Â I think it’s because the phrase “stay-at-home-mom” is insulting. Â I don’t know any moms that *just* stay at home. Â We’re all running around all the time, doing our parenting at the pool, the park, a restaurant, a friend’s house. Â It’s not like mothering is relegated only to the private sphere, to be kept out of the public eye, like nudity, sex, or drug use.
But also, I feel like it’s a judgmental question. Â Stay-at-home moms probably think I am selfish for working, and working moms probably think I lack ambition. Â I am in the purgatory of the parenting work world, having “stayed at home,” worked part-time, worked full-time, and everything in between since having H. Â I don’t really feel like I belong with any of them.
My best friends in VT do not have kids. Â In some cases, they won’t ever. Â And that’s awesome. Â Nearly all of my friends in VT with kids are those who already had kids at the time I met them. Â And now I am rambling.
I don’t know where I am going with this, other than to say I am nearly 100% sure that all of the moms I know struggle with career/identity/balance issues. Â And also, I am nearly 100% sure that I have had conversations with nearly 0% of them about this fact.
Why is this?