Isn’t hindsight a wonderful thing?
I really try not to live with regrets, but when it comes to raising my kids, there are many lessons I would love to have learned earlier.
I tend to be one of those people who must suffer through difficulty to learn the lesson, but oh how I wish I hadn’t tried so hard to be ‘perfect’ and to manage everything myself for my first few years of motherhood. I also wish I had listened to the guidance of parents who had gone before, not on everything of course, but I could have saved myself a lot of time, energy, and heartache if I had just heeded some of this sage advice.
So, below is my definitive list of the top five things that it took me having two children to learn. Some of it won’t apply to you, some you may not agree with, but I hope there are at least a couple of helpful tips here that reduce the obstacles on this big old parenting journey!
1. Kids get sick *regularly*. Have your toolkit ready.
Wow, kids’ illness is wild, and seems to strike when you haven't scheduled it in, funnily. We’ve had many car-ride vomits, and days, weeks, months, years’ worth of runny noses, hay fever, congestion, sore throats and never-ending coughs.
Friends of mine further along this parenting journey had recommended that I create a little illness and injury toolkit to have at the ready.
Different to a family first aid kit, it’s focused on the things that are specific to my children, and the hurdles that seem to come up over and over again for them (looking at you, blocked noses). After many late night trips trying to find a 24-hour chemist, I finally instigated our own toolkit and now have a lovely organised box with vomit bags, a good quality thermometer, different types of kids' pain relief for fevers and headaches, essentials for when gastro hits, band aids, bandages, creams for all the bumps and scrapes that happen on the trampoline, and things most critical of all for my family of hay fever sufferers and runny nose havers.