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Ok, I am going to admit something that is not nice…..

Pre-baby I used to look at a colleague who had recently returned to work from maternity leave and wonder why she couldn’t make a little bit more of an effort. I mean, how hard could it be to put moisturiser on those flakey hands more often? Or at least make a bit of effort with a touch of makeup? And while she was at it, maybe get rid of those weird white patches on her clothes? I felt compelled almost on a daily basis to give her a makeover. Yes, I can be a bitch sometimes but a helpful one at heart.

Now all those questions are coming back to haunt me.

I have the answers because I live the answers.

That flakey skin is the result of good hygiene when handling a baby. If you wipe away poo or vomit or pick their tiny nose with your fingernail, you need to wash your hands. If they are formula fed, you need to clean the bottles and sterilise them. If you handle raw food and then need to tend to your baby, you need to wash your hands beforehand. And the list goes on.

At the end of the day, I find myself washing my hands possibly more times than the average person suffering from obsessive compulsive disorder. Even if I went to the effort of putting moisturiser on between each hand wash, it would be on for only an hour or so before the next hand wash. And while I’m not a dermatologist by trade, I can only imagine that the moisturiser offers little barrier to the depletion of natural oils in my skin from all that antibacterial soap.

Apart from the technicality, my mind doesn’t think of details like hand moisturiser anymore. Even if it did, I don’t have the time to give myself a twenty minute mini-manicure every time I wash my hands. The closest I get these days is wiping the excess baby oil on the back of my hands after Little Old Man has his bath.

Sadly, having a baby is precisely the time when I most needed to pamper my skin more.

Nothing makes my hands look more haggard and damaged than when I hold onto his flawless baby skin.

As for the makeup, this comes with its own challenges. At the beginning I kept the makeup regime going and found concealer to be a godsend for those sleep bags under the eyes. But now my son is a full-blown toddler, the makeup has mostly been given away. Well, except for the concealer. No mum gives that one up easily!

Part of my lack of commitment to makeup is being time poor but the more major part is the physical realities of babies. Looking after my son involves a lot physical contact, drool and food scraps. And then there are the kisses, which I really can’t complain about but they do put the brakes on the concept of makeup. His favourite technique is to kiss me on one cheek and then swipe his mouth across the rest of my face.

Finally, there are the white marks on the clothing. From experience, I now know this can either baby vomit, overflow from feeds or snot trails. Try as I might, I can’t really avoid the appearance of these marks on me. Little Old Man is crafty in his use of me as a human-sized tissue.

He is like a snot ninja, quietly leaving his snail trails all over my clothes and furniture.

So now I am back at work and I am the one with the dried out skin, bare face and white marks. I imagine that some childless woman is sitting there judging me for my appearance. And perhaps I deserve it given I was once in her shoes. But what I know now is that I don’t even care about being judged. If I am at my desk, awake and able to function in the adult world, then I’ve already won.

My only hope is that my old colleague took the same attitude. At any rate, to my old colleague: I am sorry for secretly judging you without a clue. If nothing else, motherhood has taught me not to be so judgemental – especially of situations I have never experienced first-hand. We’re all just, to a greater or lesser extent, getting by anyway we know how.

  • A really honest post. I totally ‘get’ and agree with it all. We just don’t know until we walk in someone else’s shoes, do we?

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  • I never thought that someone may possible see me in this way – I had 3 kids under 2 for a while and was hideously sleep deprived, unfocused and sometimes in-comprehendible. I can only imagine what people thought when they saw me down the street… Can Zombies be sleep deprived??
    Wear our vomit patches proud Mumma’s!

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  • Yes it is only AFTER you have your own do you really understand.

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  • Oh don’t worry, there will always be someone judging us by their own set of standards, it’s not just when our babies are little. It is hard not to judge others too, as most of these comments have pointed out, we haven’t walked in someone else’s shoes so we wouldn’t know why they are a certain way.

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  • The bits of white on clothing, always a tell tale sign of a mum.

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  • An interesting read thanks for sharing

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  • I don’t think I ever looked at a mother & thought those things but I can say I know people have done it to me. I know one day they’ll understand.

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  • Loved this, it should be a must read for all those well meaning workers out there.

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  • well said you just don’t know till you are in that situation

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  • Ah yes, how we learn not to judge others, until we’ve walked a mile in their shoes. Same goes for giving advice when we’ve never been in a particular situation. Years ago, when I’d finished my nursing training, I was giving advice (read here “what I had learned from reading text books”) to a woman who had just started going into labour. She very calmly said to me “I hope you remember what you’ve just said, when you’re about to give birth”. I did remember it, and in retrospect I’m surprised that she didn’t tell me to go to Hell.

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  • ha ha this gave me a laugh and put a wide smile on my dial.
    I am sure that many mums can relate to this article. But I was just thinking of one person i know, she would not even open the door without her face on (as she called it) she would put her face on every day after waking and would not be seen dead without it. i seen her only the other day and yes, immaculately dressed and full makeup, accessories and all and she was only grocery shopping. Guess there are some who just stand out in a crowd and have to be the perfect picture. lol.

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  • haha this gave me a good laugh, I had twins first up and I am sure I got judged alot

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  • So true. I think we have all judged at so.e point only to walk that road ourselves and find out whats really going on a feel bad for judging without knowing

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  • Its very much a walk in someone elses shoes isnt it.
    As they say “Dont judge others for you have no idea what they are going through”…sometimes its hard to stick to that but i try and remind myself of that.

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  • love it, I think its a must read for every female

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  • I remember I was an \’expert\’ on child care before I had kids. I\’m a teacher so of course was an \’expert\’ cos I\’d studied at university and was working with kids all day and I remember (now with horror) some of the advise I\’d give to parents about how to bring up their kids. It wasn\’t until I had kids that I realised that I knew nothing and I apologise to all those parents for the ill adivsed advise I dished out on you all.

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  • HAHA this article is definitely appropriate to many people. It just goes to show that you can’t judge what you don’t know. We have all been there though.

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