Recovery Replay: The Mom Flu - podcast episode cover

Recovery Replay: The Mom Flu

May 02, 202311 min
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Episode description

Terri is recuperating from surgery and we have forced her to take a few days off. So this week, we're looking back at some of our past discussions on encounters with sickness, health, and health care. Today’s chat is originally from 2019.

Nicole has a cold, and she's griping about how hard it is for moms to take a sick day. How come there's no such thing as the mom flu, equivalent to the man flu?

Transcript

Welcome to the Parenting Roundabout Podcasts for the week of May one, twenty twenty three. I'm Nicol Artics and I'm here with Katherine Heleco. Hello. Every week we chat about what parents are talking, complaining, and obsessing about right now. But this week we're short one podcaster as Terry recuperates from surgery and we forced her to take a few days off, So we thought we'd take a look back at some of our past discussions on encounters with sickness, health

and healthcare. Today's chat is originally from twenty nineteen. And you know what, I am sick of being sick. That is my complaint for today because legitimately I am sick again. Oh dear that kind of year. But I mean I have no problem working my way through a cold. I mean, nobody wants to be sick. But I have a problem with is that my family does not seem to respect the fact that I have a cold. Of course, that's that's my complaint. It's like there's man like, there's the

man flu, but what about the mom flew? Like can we not have our own version where we just get to curl up in bed for a day and everything around us will get like mysteriously taken care of, and our kids will get picked up, and dinner will get made and we don't have to direct anybody or and you won't finally emerge from your sick bed to find like piles of dirty laundry and dirty dishes and dare and very dirty just as you

left it because you're loving spouse picked up the pieces while you get falling apart. Is it just me? Or does anybody have like you know, do they get to like do that? Do they get to retreat to their room and and you know, spend some time on self care or do we just pop some pills and keep going. When my kids were littler, I couldn't, But now I think I could. My husband makes dinner and cleans up, and he does most of the stuff around the house, and I just

work. So the only person who would miss me would be whoever I had work due to Um, I think I could just kind of hide the room so you could rent him out forever. The only thing is if if I needed to drive my son to work, that would be a problem. Um. Yeah, you can take a mom sick day, but the stroblem is you can't take a freelance sick day. I can't take a freelance sick day. Yeah. That's where my inability to take a sick day lies because um, if I if I take a day off, I get no money and

that's a problem. And also I have deadlines, and you know, those don't go away. I just get later on a whole bunch of things. So that makes it less fun to just lay in bed to be sick. Wow, you get to have the mom flu. I knock on wood. You know, don't get sick very often. Oh you don't say that. I know, Oh no, no, I know it's hard. Um, but yeah, it would be very difficult because just dropping off and picking up

and yeah, you know, keeping on top of things. You know, I go away frequently, like fairly frequently, and things generally can hang together while but you know, I do tend to come home and find like piles of clutter and unwashed clothing and things, um when I get back. So

I think that would be the equivalent. But I have a thing where I would love to a lot of nights, I would love to read in bed before I go to sleep, and my husband is always in there with the light off, and that's when I'm like, you know, when you just started like dragging through the day and you're like, I just want to you know, that sounds light down, And I find that I am always you know, the last one to bed and the first one mm because of just

stuff that needs to be done. So that's part of what I like about going away, because I feel like I can be so productive on whatever it is I'm there to do because I don't have all the day to day home stuff to deal with. That makes sense, Yeah, I don't know. I stay home and I get sick and things fall apart. I leave things fall apart. You cannot. I can't wait. You know, when are they not gonna need me? Though? Yeah? I think your kids are

at an age where they should be able to fend for themselves. They are, and they're getting there. It's you know, I'm a big softy too though, because, like I get, I let them get away with a lot too. You know, they've got oh I'm studying for the m cat got you know, all this ap homework to do, and I know it legitimately takes up a lot of time another day. So yeah, I tend to give them a free pass far too often. You're nice, Okay, I'll do it. Well, now we need this. This is starting to

explain why you never get to be sick. You have to just say. You just have to tell yourself, I am ill, I cannot do things. I'm just going to stand bed. And then you have to listen to yourself and not feel guilty and not feel like a martyr. Unfortunately, you think about like if you were you know, your leg was broken or something and you couldn't drive and you couldn't move around, somehow it would get done.

It might, I mean it might involve. For me, what it would involve is a lot of calling in favors for other of other parents to take my kids places. Yeah, wouldn't that be a good excuse though? Yeah, well they would have to say, but they're not going to come and wash my dishes either, so no, yeah, and it would have

to be something more dramatic than a simple gold or the flu. Well, right, although I think I think, you know, my mom, friends, my fellow like hockey parents or whatever, I think we're all pretty happy to help each other out if we can, and if we are if we need to. You know, well, if someone asks me to go to run their kids somewhere. They don't have to be like on their deathbed, I will do it right. So yeah, and I guess I know now

that my kids are a bit older, it's a lot different. Of course, when they were younger, right, Yeah, having to do that minute to minute care, yeah, it seemed to be needed. But um, but when they're younger too, you can like spark them in front of the TV sleep, do you know what I mean? Like, there's certain things that are easier, I think, and feed them cereal, right, isn't that the truth? Actually last night, my son, Um, they were hungry, and I said, you know what, I'm so busy trying to

get ready for the conference. You're going to have to deal with it. They actually put together quite a nice meal. So well, hey, maybe I just need to feign business more often. Yeah, suckers, Now you know they can do it, or just do what you did earlier today and take some cold medicine and just pass out so that they're you know, you were just unable to help them. Everybody. I mean, I'm I'm unable to be available for anybody, but everything, you know, casts to keep

going. I mean, my kids were a lot better. I have to admit, my kids were a lot better when I was working out away from the home. They were a lot more, especially my son, who was a lot more independent and could do things. And so when I got sick,

you know, it wasn't too big. But it's like they regressed now that I've been at home for the last Anyways, independent skills, yeah, it's very much about, like, you know, what what the expectations are and what they get used to and like, yes, the other day my son surprised me in a good way because he was at home. My husband was at home, but he was working in he was going to be on

a conference call, so he really couldn't do anything. And I had to go out and a repairman was coming, so I said, you know, you are going to need to be the one that opens the door and shows them in. And you know he knows what to do, but you I need you to, you know, be aware of the doorbell, like open the door, put away the dogs, all that stuff. And when I came home, not only had he done that, he actually shoveled snow in the wall in the front walk because he knew that this person was coming and

he wanted to. So I was very prize. That is very good.

I guess I'm surprised you Well, I've been doing something lately that is giving me the feel of having a sick day, whether I'm actually having one or not, which is that when I wake up in the morning, instead of thinking about all the things I have to do, get up, take a shower, breakfast, do this, do the treadmill, whatever, and then like rolling over and going back to sleep and then starting my work really late, I just sit up in bed, grab my laptop and start working right

there in bed with the pillows propped up behind me. I call out for my daughter to bring me a cup of coffee and a breakfast bar, and then I just spend the morning working and dad, and it's worked out really good in terms of getting work done, and I kind of feel like, well, you know, here I am sequestered in my room, having people bringing me things and playing with my computer. So maybe if you ever need a sick day, try that. That's it for today's Sickness and Health Chat.

Tune in tomorrow for another take on this theme. We're always interested in what you have to say, so drop us a comment on our website, our Facebook page, or Twitter, where you will find us at roundabout chat

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