17 January 2011
11 Step Program for those thinking of having kids
Lesson 1
1. Go to the grocery store.
2. Arrange to have your salary paid directly to their head office.
3. Go home.
4. Pick up the paper.
5. Read it for the last time.
Lesson 2
Before you finally go ahead and have children, find a couple who already are parents and berate them about their...
1. Methods of discipline.
2. Lack of patience.
3. Appallingly low tolerance levels.
4. Allowing their children to run wild.
5. Suggest ways in which they might improve their child's breastfeeding, sleep habits, toilet training, table manners, and overall behavior.
Enjoy it because it will be the last time in your life you will have all the answers.
Lesson 3
A really good way to discover how the nights might feel...
1. Get home from work and immediately begin walking around the living room from 5PM to 10PM carrying a wet bag weighing approximately 8-12 pounds, with a radio turned to static (or some other obnoxious sound) playing loudly. (Eat cold food with one hand for dinner)
2. At 10PM, put the bag gently down, set the alarm for midnight, and go to sleep.
3. Get up at 12 and walk around the living room again, with the bag, until 1AM.
4. Set the alarm for 3AM.
5. As you can't get back to sleep, get up at 2AM and make a drink and watch an infomercial.
6. Go to bed at 2:45AM.
7. Get up at 3AM when the alarm goes off.
8. Sing songs quietly in the dark until 4AM.
9. Get up. Make breakfast. Get ready for work and go to work (work hard and be productive)
Repeat steps 1-9 each night. Keep this up for 3-5 years. Look cheerful and together.
Lesson 4
Can you stand the mess children make? To find out...
1. Smear peanut butter onto the sofa and jam onto the curtains.
2. Hide a piece of raw chicken behind the stereo and leave it there all summer.
3. Stick your fingers in the flower bed.
4. Then rub them on the clean walls.
5. Take your favorite book, photo album, etc. Wreck it.
6. Spill milk on your new pillows. Cover the stains with crayons. How does that look?
Lesson 5
Dressing small children is not as easy as it seems.
1. Buy an octopus and a small bag made out of loose mesh.
2. Attempt to put the octopus into the bag so that none of the arms hang out.
Time allowed for this - all morning.
Lesson 6
Forget the BMW and buy a mini-van. And don't think that you can leave it out in the driveway spotless and shining. Family cars don't look like that.
1. Buy a chocolate ice cream cone and put it in the glove compartment.
Leave it there.
2. Get a dime. Stick it in the CD player.
3. Take a family size package of chocolate cookies. Mash them into the back seat. Sprinkle cheerios all over the floor, then smash them with your foot.
4. Run a garden rake along both sides of the car.
Lesson 7
Go to the local grocery store. Take with you the closest thing you can find to a pre-school child. (A full-grown goat is an excellent choice). If you intend to have more than one child, then definitely take more than one goat. Buy your week's groceries without letting the goats out of your sight. Pay for everything the goat eats or destroys. Until you can easily accomplish this, do not even contemplate having children.
Lesson 8
1. Hollow out a melon.
2. Make a small hole in the side.
3. Suspend it from the ceiling and swing it from side to side.
4. Now get a bowl of soggy Cheerios and attempt to spoon them into the swaying melon by pretending to be an airplane.
5. Continue until half the Cheerios are gone.
6. Tip half into your lap. The other half, just throw up in the air.
You are now ready to feed a nine- month-old baby.
Lesson 9
Learn the names of every character from Sesame Street , Barney, Disney, the Teletubbies, and Pokemon. Watch nothing else on TV but PBS, the Disney channel or Noggin for at least five years. (I know, you're thinking What's 'Noggin'?) Exactly the point.
Lesson 10
Make a recording of Fran Drescher saying 'mommy' repeatedly. (Important: no more than a four second delay between each 'mommy'; occasional crescendo to the level of a supersonic jet is required). Play this tape in your car everywhere you go for the next four years. You are now ready to take a long trip with a toddler.
Lesson 11
Start talking to an adult of your choice. Have someone else continually tug on your skirt hem, shirt- sleeve, or elbow while playing the 'mommy' tape made from Lesson 10 above. You are now ready to have a conversation with an adult while there is a child in the room.
Now you are ready to start a family.
Gosh! If only it were that easy! Us IF couples might actually follow this advice in hopes that on top of pill popping, self administered injections, transvag ultrasounds, painful procedures, endless appointments, acupuncture needles hanging out of every body part, and repeated “I’m sorry to tell you of another BFN” phone calls, that these simple 11 steps might finally do the trick!


Can we add, as a primer lesson: To deal with the possible issue of infertility:1. Have sex more than regularly for over a year and a half with no avail (you may want to use protection since this is only a lesson).2. Change your complete persona - cry, get angry, and become jealous over every person who has a baby or a realistic baby-looking doll.3. Book various doctors appointments (multiple ones for the same week and with different doctors) in preparation for all of the fertility appointments you will be making in attempt to get yourself pregnant. Become a hypochondriac.4. Become an internet search wizard and hone your ability to master the art of choosing search words that will actually filter out all of the garbage you find (this will assist you when you become obsessive and try to self diagnose "what's wrong with me?").5. Show your "girl parts" to anyone and everyone who will look at them (again, to prepare you for the audience you will have when trying to diagnose above question)6. Perfect the art of waiting by sitting and thinking of the same thing, day and night, for months on end (choose any topic you wish - preferably one that you have no control over so that it frustrates you to no end).7. Wait another 6 months, and within this time, gradually change your persona to one of a more rational adult who is capable of controlling her emotions (but still capable of a breakdown or two when confronted with baby things, your period, or that realistic looking doll).8. Become a gambler. Go to the roulette wheel and put $10,000 on black. This will give you a 50-50 chance (much the same as invitro). Continue to play until you hit it or run out of money.Repeat the above for an indeterminable mount of time until one of 2 things happen: you get pregnant OR you decide to adopt a child (and to prepare for that: plan a trip, wait 2 years to let the excitement build, purchase and plan anything and everything you can in order to prepare, and then go on it).If you can deal with this, you can deal with the possibility of having to wait a while for kids!
ReplyDeleterokgerl, 17 January 2011 - 10:02 PM
Thanks for posting that, SD. A good reminder about how parenting is not as glamorous as it appears in the movies. I'm starting to think that even though I didn't think so at first, I may have actually won when I pulled that $10,000 roulette wheel and 'lost' three times. :)
impatient, 17 January 2011 - 10:19 PM
I enjoyed your post and had a few good chuckles. Thanks for sharing some "lessons" and letting me find humor in all this craziness of wanting kids and this ivf rollercoaster :)
LMC, 17 January 2011 - 10:45 PM
I've seen this before and it never fails to make me laugh. And DH (who has kids) says it's pretty accurate.You're missing the one about preparing to leave the house and going out and coming back in about 10 times!
Good Fortune, 18 January 2011 - 01:50 AM
LMFAO!!!!!Love it!
DiXie, 18 January 2011 - 04:48 AM
I've been seeing this all over facebook. I'd gladly take goats to the grocery store to avoid the needle-jabbing, junk-probbing, and very expensive BFNs.
Erin_G, 18 January 2011 - 05:58 AM
Love it!
Erin_G, 18 January 2011 - 05:59 AM
Ok, this really made me laugh this morning - much needed! I think I need to share this with my husband. :)
galfromaway, 18 January 2011 - 06:35 AM
A former infertile friend of mine posted that exact thing on Facebook. I was so offended.
papoose76, 18 January 2011 - 10:16 AM
I agree - I didn't find the purpose of it funny at all. In fact I found it another attempt at fertile parents trying to complain about how hard they have it. Ha, parenthood is easy compared to infertility and as such I recommend it for everyone. Perhaps we'd have less people complaining about parenthood if everyone tried it (infertility that is).**being a parent ment**Seriously - its not that hard and fertile parents should stop whining about it so much. Ok, off my soapbox :) :)
4leggedbaby, 18 January 2011 - 03:01 PM