A Big Day
- 01
- 21
- 10

Yesterday was a big day for this literary rookie. It was big because advance copies of LIFE AFTER YES arrived. For the first time, my story was not a collection of loose pages, but an actual book. And I held it. I flipped through it. I ran my finger along the spine. I smiled. A lot.
But. Yes, there is a but. (Isn’t there always?)
But yesterday was not like I imagined it would be. Maybe I should not admit this, but I have been anticipating yesterday for a while now. Fellow authors had told me that the day on which galleys arrive is a Big Day, a day I would not forget, a day that would make everything seem real. This all made sense to me.
I don’t know what I expected. I didn’t expect the literazzi to congregate on my front stoop waiting to get their money shot. I didn’t expect flowers or balloons. I didn’t expect a whole lot of hoopla. I didn’t expect a glamorous unveiling. I don’t know what I expected the day to be like. I really don’t. But I do know that I expected the day to be a bit different than it was.
Enough about expectations versus reality. About my yesterday…
Today is Thursday. Which means that yesterday was Wednesday. And this is pertinent only because Wednesday is the day on which I am solo with the girls and when my flaws as a parent and as a person become exquisitely exposed. Yesterday was no exception. In fact, yesterday was the rule.
The day began like any other Wednesday. Baby and I stood by the front door and said bye bye as Husband and Toddler left for school. Once they were out of sight, Baby turned beet red and cried like her finger was caught in the door. To say that she is a bit of a Daddy’s girl these days is a severe understatement.
Moments later, her tears ran dry and our morning was underway. Together, we worked hard to create a cyclone of chaos and clutter. We scattered the contents of the diaper bag. We splattered apple sauce on the newly-cleaned rug. We ripped pages out of books and then said, “Uh oh.” We were busy. Working hard.
And then the doorbell rang. Baby and I looked at each other, locking blue eyes in a moment of curiosity and confusion. And then I realized what was happening. We ran to the door. I opened it. A nice man whose face I wish I remembered smiled and handed me a box. Medium-sized. I thanked him. I studied the print on the box. Sure enough, it said HarperCollins.
“They’re here!” I said to Baby.
And then I placed the box down on the floor. Right there next to the door. Baby and I crouched down next to it. I tore into it. Ripped it open. Baby pulled the bubble wrap from the top and played with it. I pulled something else out.
My book.
In my shaking hands, I held it. I showed it to my little girl.
“Booooook,” she said and went back to her bubble wrap. And I just sat there, on the hardwood floor, in a divine daze, looking at it. Baby pulled a book out of the box and studied it and flipped the pages like I had done moments before. And this warmed my heart. So I decided to take a picture.

And then Baby chucked that book and a few others on the floor. And then popped up and disappeared into the living room. In an effort to preserve order, I collected the books and the bubble wrap from the floor and put them back in the box. Baby reappeared by my side. Clutching a bag of Veggie Booty. She looked me in the eye and then put the bag in the box too.

And then we retired to the living room to play some more. She brought the Booty. I brought my book. Every few moments, I picked up the book and tried to read a bit. But Baby didn’t like this. Soon, my book was banished to the coffee table chaos where it would hang out with snacks and remotes and magazines. It ended up under a pair of Dora dominoes. Right where it belonged.

I tried to call Husband. To tell him that this monumental day had finally arrived! I could not reach him. I left messages. I left texts.
Baby and I picked up Toddler from school. And then we came back home. Toddler skipped into the living room. I followed, clutching a copy of my book. Toddler made herself comfy on the couch.
“Guess what?” I asked.
“What?” Toddler asked.
“This is Mommy’s book.”
Toddler ignored me. “I want to watch a TV show.”
“Okay, but in a minute. Look. This is Mommy’s book.”
Toddler glanced over and said, “Okay.”
“Mommy wrote the words in this book. All by herself.”
And then Toddler looked at me. Actually looked at me. And rolled her eyes like she was a teenager and said one word, “Good.”
Good.
The rest of the afternoon proceeded like most other Wednesdays. My girls giggled. And fought. And cried. And dumped small items all over the carpet. And refused to eat anything with a morsel of nutritional value. Toddler napped, but Baby refused. I put her in her crib, but she screamed Daddy over and over. Even though this was Mommy’s day.
And when I couldn’t stand it anymore, I declared defeat and retrieved her from her crib. Her cheeks were flushed. Her eyes were wet. Her neck was sweaty. I brought her back to the living room, the room I had grand plans to tidy. We sat down on the couch next to my computer. I had planned to get some work done, to leave some comments on my favorite blogs, to cross some things off that endless list.
But Baby had other plans. She snuggled up to me and said “Mommy” and then nodded off to sleep. On me. Something she hadn’t done since she was weeks old. I shut my laptop. I sat there. Holding her. Staring at my book. Wondering if I could reach it without waking her. But then I decided not to try. I closed my eyes too.
And the peace was short-lived. Soon, Baby was up. And so was Toddler. Soon, they were back to their old tricks. Making messes. Making me crazy. The poetic crescendo came at the end of the day when Toddler told me she had to go potty. The three of us went to the bathroom. Toddler, my big girl, climbed up onto the toilet all by herself.
And I heard my phone ring in the other room. I knew it was Husband. Excited, I ran to get it.
Before I could answer it, I heard Toddler crying. And hard. “Mommy!”
I ran back to the bathroom. Toddler had fallen in the toilet. She looked up at me, panicked, arms and legs flailing like a bug. And I rescued her. Kissed away her tears. Dried her off. Flushed.
I got the girls situated in front of a television show. I surveyed the damage in my living room. And then I hopped up. I walked to the box. One by one, I pulled the books from it. I carried them into the kitchen. I shoved dirty plates and mail piles to make space on the counter. And then, slowly, methodically, I stacked my books up. One on top of another.
A tiny, tidy, triumphant tower.
And then I took a picture. So I would remember my day. A big day. Not the glamorous and grand day I’d secretly pictured. But a big day. A day filled with babies and books and booty.
A day filled with bounty.
When Husband came home, the girls were running wild. Naked. Wearing my necklaces. My shirt was soaked with toilet water and chicken soup. My pants were caked with diaper cream. With zero fanfare, I handed my man a copy of my book and said two words, “It’s here.”
And Husband smiled. And kissed me on the cheek. And then we went back to chasing our sweet girls.
Just another Wednesday. A rough day. A raw day. A real day.
A big day.
____________________________________
What’s your hardest day of the week? Why? Have there been big days in your life that you foolishly assumed would be fabulous and flawless that turned out to be stuffed with mishaps and real life?
**Leave a comment here before 11pm EST on Friday, January 22 for a chance to win an advance copy of LIFE AFTER YES!***





Okay, I’m leaving a comment for two reasons: (1) because I like to leave comments here; and (2) because even though I have pre-ordered a copy of your book, I would still buy it even if I won an advance copy and then I would gift a copy to a friend. Am I being selfish in hoping I can win something twice on your website — YES!!! And I am not ashamed.
To your questions . . .
My hardest day of the week changes. Sometimes it’s Sunday, because I am dreading the start of the workweek all over again. Sometimes it’s Friday because I can’t wait to get out of work but am stuck for some unjustified “emergency.” Sometimes it’s Saturday because I know I need to get up early to cross things off my to do list, but I just can’t and that ruins all of my well-laid plans. And sometimes, it’s the day where everything seems to go wrong and I end up on the couch in tears (which can be any day ending in “y”).
Until somewhat recently, I was a staunch pessimist, so I never really assumed any day in my life would be fabulous and flawless. I just assumed they would all go poorly and if, for some reason, one didn’t, I would be pleasantly surprised. This has changed. I now am more neutral than either pessimist or optimist, which I think is certainly better, but still not great. Now that I think about it, it’s a little sad that I can’t think of any day which I assumed (or even hoped) would be fabulous and flawless. Does that make me the bump on a log that is just floating down the river of life taking the slow meanding turns and rapids in stride but not really ever looking ahead to the excitement of the changes? (yikes, that was a mouthful)
Hmmm . . . interesting and thought provoking indeed.
Congrats on the advance copies! How exciting for you!!
My blah days seem to sneak up on me. They’re usually the ones where I jump out of bed thinking “Today’s going to be FAB” only to trip over the dogs, find the cats threw up on my new jacket, and the toddler has a snotty nose… again. lol
I am sooooooo very excited to read your book. And I’m so very happy for you!!!
Aidan, what a beautiful, bountiful day you had. And how many days are like that, really, when we stop to appreciate the toilet water and the Dora dominoes, the book galleys of the Everyday?
Congratulations to you. I cannot begin to imagine the magic of holding your book in your hands. I look forward to the chance to hold a copy in mine!
Definitely one of my favorite blog posts of yours. Big day, indeed. Congrats!
My hardest day of the week depends on what is going on that week. I think Saturday may be the hardest day this week as I am going to attempt (and I WILL finish) run 10 miles. Next week the hardest day will be Thursday as it is opening performance of #6’s high school musical – “The Pajama Game.”
Some weeks I make the day hard. Others the kids do.
I had best go do some dishes so I can have plates to dirty for dinner. Congratulations on holding your book!!!!
my hardest day(s) of the week? the three days after my husband has had his two days off. then what feels like normalcy returns for two very short days until i repeat it all over again.
congrats on your big day!!!
Congratulations – it really was an important day, tho’ maybe not in the way you originally imagined. Kids are good that way.
I really don’t have ‘hard’ days. I have long days, like today, but rarely hard ones.
Congratulations on getting the early copies! They look beautiful!
YES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
unfortunately that’s all i can comment right now because today is a “worst day” and the magoo is climbing up my back as i type this… and putting raisins in my ears.
Aidan, that THIS is the way your book made its way into your life is so utterly perfect. Not perfect in the traditional sense. But perfectly you. And I mean that in the nicest possible way. The way in which you marry mayhem and merriment is priceless.
Congratulations on your day – even if it was hijacked by your little whirling dervishes.
As for me, Monday is always my hardest day. My first day back in the office after two days of saturating myself with my son. As I sit here in my clean and tidy office I envy your chicken soup shirt and diaper cream pants. They are the markers of a mother.
Again, congrats on the book!
Oh, Aidan! I’ve got tears in my eyes…what a wonderful, vivid post chronicling the dream! Perhaps the most perfect days are just like this, when real life tangles with expectation and you remember it forever. Thanks for sharing your Wednesday with us.
I have the chills for you. Chills. Congratulations. And the fact that you accomplished this book WITH the craziness of booty, toilet drama and tears, makes it that much more special and amazing. I can’t WAIT to get my copy!!
My hardest day is any day after a night when I haven’t slept well… not a specific day of the week. I hope you enjoyed your day, even if it was also a day like any other.
yay!!! i can’t wait to read it!!
the veggie booty and your book ARC shot is priceless – a little capsule of life right now.
xoxo
“My pants were caked with diaper cream.”
Lightbulb moment! It just so happens that I have a mysterious –and stubborn– white streak on a black suit skirt that I previously blamed the dry cleaner for depositing.
And congratulations on your 3rd baby. I can’t wait to read her!
Congratulations—sounds like a bustling, busy, breathtaking day! I know exactly how it is when you feel like the world should just pause, sink in the moment, but it all just keeps whirling around you. Can’t wait for the release—keep writing!
ooo congrats! Even though it was a hard and tough day for you – you still deserve props and congrats.
Being a mother never stops does it?! hehe.
Anyway – a hard day. My 21st birthday – wasn’t just rough. It was horrible. Too horrible to even remember but I got over it, moving on, and well – reliving my next birthdays a bit better.
Oooh! I want a book!
How is it that small children are able to channel teenagers so well? My friend’s 4-year-old does the same thing!
Generally I find that Sundays are pretty hard–church and visiting with friends (we always get together with another couple and their kids for dinner Sunday afternoon and end up staying over for hours) just take a lot out of me, especially when I know I have to go to work the next morning. I can’t count the number of times I’ve wished that Sabbath was on a Saturday here, the way it is in the Middle East, so that I could have a day of downtime before getting back to the work week. Wednesdays aren’t much easier, since I generally don’t get home from various activities until 7.30 or 8 in the evening. Twelve-hour days are just too long!
My first day of university was kind of a let-down. No idea what to expect, but I’d figured it for something exhilarating–I mean, a whole new world of knowledge was now open to me and all! Instead, I was suddenly struck by how much work I needed to do and the fact that I was 2500 miles from my family. And my roommate was not quite hostile, but there were some definite tensions (probably didn’t help that I started during the winter term and she’d had a semester to get used to having the room to herself).
Woot! Woot!
I am so excited for you.
A big day.
I think that when you anticipate that for so long and plan it out in your dreams that you naturally are disappointed.
I would say that the birth of both kids was prime example.
Kid #1 was breech. Had a planned c-section. Never went into labor. Never had the water break in aisle 3 at the grocery store. Never felt a contraction. Never used that Lamaze class. But there he was all pink and healthy and crying like a banshee.
Kid #2 was late. And so we induced. So I got the fun of contractions but still never had that spontaneous moment of acknowledgement when I knew it was “the time.” But still she arrived, albeit with a cone shaped head where the suction cup was attached. But beautiful nonetheless.
I am so happy that this regular Wednesday can be one that is now filled with the happy, sticky, wet, frazzled and very ordinary moments shot through with one big memory of Life After Yes.
Enjoy the day!
Erin
CONGRATULATIONS, AIDAN!!!!
I’m sorry the day wasn’t what you had thought it would (could, should) be. I hate it, but I find that, too often, those who give the most tend to get the least back.
I wish a bunch of us could descend on you, scoop you up and take you out for an AidansBookIsHere! Day. One of TKW’s little drink recipes, your books, a bundle of balloons and a pretty clump of flowers, just for you. Oh, and did I mention one of TKW’s little drink recipes…?
Congratulations one more time!
It may not have been how you envisioned it (is anything ever?) BUT, that is a huge accomplishment my lady…HUGE!
You should be extremely proud of yourself. And I want to read it!!
That’s so exciting! Personally I think yesterday sounds kinda perfect, in life’s wonderfully imperfect way.
Still can’t wait to read your book!!
(Also, the copy of The Happiness Project arrived yesterday–thanks again! Can’t wait to read that either!)
First of all, congrats on your book! I’d be honored to receive a copy from you.
Secondly, to answer your question, I don’t think there has been a “major” day in my life yet that wasn’t completely different then expected. I have come to expect this. People are never as I imagine them. Days are never as I imagine them. Life is never as I imagine it. But reality is better because stuff I could never think of is filled in. Yes, sometimes those things are disappointing, but I don’t think we’d be happy if everything was always “just so.”
Coolest thing ever. Seeing these pictures is incredible — so proud of you!
I learned at a fairly young age that if you’re too excited about something, it likely wont live up to your expectations (prom, new year’s eve, proposals from people you shouldn’t say yes to), so I try hard not to get super excited for big days until the day has finally arrived.
I’m sorry that your day didn’t turn out as you had envisioned. But I think you’ll look back on it with joy. And one day your daughters will appreciate the path that you’ve constructed for them. Congrats!
Congratulations! I’m excited for you and can’t wait to read your first book!
Weekends are rough days. Paul and I have a million and one things to accomplish that can’t be done during the week. It’s also the only time he has off. The kicker is he’s not really off – not completely. He’s a musician and Friday and Saturday nights are spent playing gigs with his band.
So that leaves a mad rush into the weekend so hopefully we can at least pull off spending some much needed time together Sunday evening. Notice I said hopefully as life proves…nothing ever goes as planned. (Hugs)Indigo
Well, your children might be blase’, but the rest of us are wagging our tails, thinking, “Ohmigosh! Look! It’s her book!”
I don’t think I have a specific day of the week that is hardest, but the hours of 6-9am and 4-7pm are almost enough to send me climbing up the rafters.
Love this post — especially the part about toddler falling in the toilet. I’ve never commented before, but the advance copy of your novel is too much to pass up!
Congratulations!!!!!
Life with toddlers brings you down to earth.. they’re here so your head doesn’t get too big, lady!
So so happy for you!
Congratulations
Slightly relevant to your current feelings: “You can’t plan the events that shape us. You can’t predict the moments. But we can all change the world around us”
More relevant to the idea of you & your book: “You’re gonna eat lightening and crap thunder”
Look forward to reading it!
HUGE Congrats on your book arriving!!!!!!!!!!!!! I liked this post very much.. your baby daughter said ‘good.’
And it will be.
I’m so happy for you – I can’t wait to read “Life After Yes.” I also can’t wait to open a similar box with my name on it and my book inside. What a once in a lifetime thrill it will be.
My babies are older, so they’ll be able to join in the celebration. By the time your babies are able to truly understand what a momentous day this was for you, you will have had many best-sellers gracing book shelves throughout the world. They’ll always know their mommy as a writer. What a great thing for them. And what a huge accomplishment for you.
CONGRATS!!!
WINNER of advance copy of LIFE AFTER YES
Congratulations! How thrilling, real, and hilarious. I laughed out loud at the surprise book throwing and veggie booty moments. I suppose that time waits for no mom. Thank goodness for cameras!
Later, I swear, they will realize what an incredible role model you are, doing something you love! They will put down their food (whatever food they’re eating later), put down their remote controls, their cell phones, and glow. My kids (14 and 10) are so ambitious for me it’s scary. They watch my email. My rejections are their rejections and, honestly, I take them much better than they do!
Congratulations, Aidan. It was indeed a big day.
Congratulations! From what I have read on your site in recent weeks, this sounds like the perfect way for you to receive those advanced copies!
Wednesday is the roughest day of the week for me. Monday, I have the enthusiasm to get going and get through another week. Friday is a happy day b/c it means I made it through. Wednesday, though, is that day in the middle that is called “Hump Day” – getting over that hump some weeks is very, very difficult.
June 10, 2008, has to go down in the books as the most bittersweet day in my life. It was the last day of a very difficult school year for me as a high school English teacher. I’m a single parent (then to a recently turned 10 yr. old and a 13 yr. old). I taught new content that year, was the yearbook adviser for the first time, had a uterine and a breast cancer scare. However, June 10th marked the last day of school that year! And, we were given the reprieve of being able to leave early due to extreme heat in the northeast and just as an administrative gift. I took advantage of it and didn’t do my usual stay behind and get crap done. So, home I went.
This day was also the last day of school for my children. Both had plans to hit the local pool. My daughter arrived there shortly after I made it home. My son had been there for a few hrs. already and walked home a few minutes after his sister left. He wasn’t home 20 min. and something that has shook our “Earth” happened. He went to the kitchen to get some ice cream…I was lightly napping on the couch. He came in to watch t.v. and eat the ice cream to cool off. Next thing I knew, I was awakened to a clanking sound…loud clanking. I look up from the couch to see my son convulsing wildly, making only gurgling sounds with his breath, seemingly completely catatonic (I’m become anxiety-ridden just writing this and reliving it). While I frantically called to him to see if he could respond, I ran for a phone and called 911. I thought my son was dying. Almost 6 min. later with paramedics helping, my son came out of his first grand mal seizure. First of many to come. He was diagnosed two months later with epilepsy.
10 yrs. old on the 10th day of June – a day meant to celebrate the end of a personally difficult year. It is a day I won’t remember and the one in which both my son and daughter mark as an anniversary.
sorry…there is a lot of editing that needs to be done with this post…just emotionally challenging to write…hope you understand!
Just discovered your blog and have subsequently spent far too much time ignoring my children to read back posts. Posted a link from my own blog to yours, in fact.
Congrats on the book! Looking forward to future reads.
Once again, I love this post (and all of them this week)!
It was absolutely genuine, filled with LOL moments and raw truth. I have had a handful of days with unmet expectations but, like you, those expectations were not necessarily clear and therefore were not accompanied by genuine disappointment. Maybe it is not specific moments, actions or fanfare we are expecting, but feelings and emotions? Sometimes it takes time for us to appreciate the magnitude of such events and to embrace the accompanying emotions. For me, deaths and funerals, while vivid, are like background noise. At times, I find difficulty in fully feeling loss. I expect to be overcome with sadness and mourning at a prescribed time and place but, in actuality, those feelings are faint at those times and often do not fully surface until much later.
Apologies for the sullen synonymy, I by no means want to detract from the happiness, pride and satisfaction you should, will and must be feeling! Congratulations Aidan! Your day of unmet expectations was certainly ripe with humorous mommy moments, brilliant blog fodder and wonderful memory material and as a constant thinker, mom, writer, and blogger – what is better than that? A big day indeed!
I think my hardest day of the week is Mondays when I have to leave my little girl and go to work. I only work 3 days a week but Monday is the start of those three days when I have to leave her with the nanny and I just can’t stand it. Thursdays are my favorite day because that’s the start of our four days together.
Congrats on your book — it looks great!
Oh Aidan. This is so poignant, and so real. And I laughed out loud, truly, when you said that Toddler said “good” just like a teenager. Oh yes, absolutely.
I’m sorry the Big Day wasn’t quite as planned. But maybe it was a better Big Day this way, after all. The hallmark of a very rich life, in all the best ways possible.
I came here via Maureen’s site and this is my first glimpse into your life and I see YOU HAVE HAD A BOOK PUBLISHED! WOW! I am so excited for you! Congratulations!
Congratulations, Aidan! I love how days we build up in our minds sometimes pan out differently than expected.
New Years Eve is one that I’m always reluctant to get too excited about, as I’ve had some wonderful ones and some not-so-wonderful ones. Unlike Christmas, Thanksgiving, 4th of July, it seems like New Years Eve has the most capacity to go horribly awry!
But the best kinds of days are the “normal” days that end up being perfect just from some small detail. Maybe because of something in the air, a great meal, a kind word from a loved one, etc… I just love going to bed at the end of a day that feels awesome in a totally unexpected way!
I’m entering this contest, but that doesn’t mean I don’t still plan on buying SEVERAL copies of your book!
I assumed the day I got engaged and the day after would be flawless and fabulous. Well, the engagement and the evening plans that immediately followed were wonderful, but the next day I remember feeling so strange like life just returned to normal- and even more of a testament to this was the fact that my new fiancee (the now official love of my life), and I got into a HUGE argument at the carwash over something stupid involving how to vacuum the floorboards. I remember thinking, we have not even been engaged 24 hours yet- the world is supposed to be perfect right now- there are supposed to be bluebirds singing, sun shining, you get the picture. Instead I am getting a car wash argument!
Funny how life’s big moments are really just big doses of normal sometimes! I would like to blame the movies for my silly expectations!
Congrats on your book! What an AWESOME accomplishment! You had a dream and you did it- and that’s inspiring!!
First, congratulations. Second, do you (or does anyone) really expect days to be flawless? Fabulous maybe but I have given up on flawless. Hardest day of the week is Thursday for me. Weekends I am with the kids and Monday to Wednesday I drop them off and focus on work. Thursdays I am back and forth from office to school and the juggling isn’t pretty. At 335pm yesterday (thursday) when the boys’ piano teacher told me I was late and that the boys had to practice more I started to cry…my flaws front and center.
Congratulations! This is so exciting! But what is even more amazing is your perspective. I love the post that followed your announcement. You are real. You recognize the extraordinary in the ordinary. And that’s what I love about you! Can’t wait to read your first (of many) book!
YEAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH!!!!!!!
I have chills all over my body just looking at the actual picture of your book. I am so happy for you, so proud of you and so in awe of you…
I have pre-ordered my book but I WANT ONE ALREADY!!!! I am dying to read it. I will stay up late just to finish it quickly!!
We have known each other almost 3 years now and it’s hard to believe that this dream, this amazing novel that you worked so hard for is so close to being displayed on the shelves of Barnes and Noble. I know this is going to be the 1st of many successful books for you. I do have dreams about it being picked up as a movie and all us attending your red carpet premiere where Rachel McAdams is the lead and we sip champagne all together!!!
Your day sounds perfect to me. Being a mom is the most amazing job we all have and that your “Big Day” was such a mommy day is just perfect. I don’t have hard days, I love taking care of my little guy, I don’t miss going to work in an office for one second, I have help twice a week and I think I have it pretty good. Some days just seem long though… Especially now that I’m 6 months pregnant and tired all the time.
Did I tell you that I REALLY WANT AN ANVANCE COPY of the book? I’m shameless.
Congrats again. You deserve all the best.
Aidan, I had a horrible day yesterday. It kind of went exactly the way you described it.
I am so excited for your new book!
I wanted to let you know, I admire you. I appreciate your honesty. I also appreciate how you find the good amongst the bad. I need to work on that.
Yay Yay Yay Yay! Aidan I am so proud of you, and so constantly impressed by you. I cannot wait to read it (and make my book club read it too…and start the chicago chapter of your fan club!) What an incredible day.
Oh, yay! Cool looking spine (also like the cover, did I miss a post about that?)! Congrats!
I will happily buy your book but I’m commenting for a chance to win a freebie.
You ask good questions. I don’t have a hardest day of the week but yes, I’ve had big days filled with perfection expectations. It seems to come with mommy/wife/friend/daughter/sister/wanting-to-be-good territory. For the most part, I’ve really changed my perspective on things like that. I definitely get excited and ride a high so to speak when it comes my way, but when things don’t go as expected, I mostly try to just “be” and move on as quickly as possible. Beats wallowing.
Congratulations! What a great feeling it must be to hold your fresh-off-the-press book. Nice work!
How coincidental that your post happened to fall on the day that I have claimed my hardest “Mommy Day” yet since #2 was born 10 months ago. I think I became a human puddle no less than 15 times and said either “No”, “Stop that”, “Be GENTLE to your brother” or the famous “Ok, TIMEOUT!” more than I can recall. It certainly wasn’t the way I expected the day to go. Then again, are our days ever how we expect them? Small or grand events considered?
My husband works at night, 6 nights a week, and I work part time during the day (outside of the home). Only three days, but enough to constitute work. We have Sundays off together, all four of us – myself, husband, toddler and the babe. So, my hardest day of the week? Monday. We’re back to the grind, back to our ’ships-passing-in-the-night’ existence, back to missing our complete unit. It’s ok, though, because though I have my puddle moments, I have plenty of times where my boys giggling, dancing and smiling make up for them.
P.S. Yes, that was me in line for the lovely port-o-potty at M’s wedding. Fancy meeting you there! Congrats, again. On everything.
Hi, I follow you on Twitter (@ForCorysSake). I remember when my box came, with the first copies of my POD book. I remember sitting in stunned awe on my couch for many long minutes. I’d made something. It was an unforgettable feeling. Something did happen, a few hours later, to figuratively rain on my day–but I’m not going to return to that, because I just want to remember sitting on the couch, with the feeling.
I like your writing style; and I’m looking forward to your book.
It will take your girls years to realize what their mommy accomplished in writing that book and seeing it through to publication. And that’s ok. You’ve got the years to go.
Sometimes a moment like this one reminds us that no matter what else we accomplish, being a mother is the biggest accomplishment of all.
I would pick a babies/books/booty day over a grand and glamourous day anytime. But I do like to daydream too:)
Big congratulations on your big day.
We all have big days in our lives. Graduation, wedding, etc. These big days usually begin with a mindset, “whoa, today is one of the biggest day of my life.” Usually, it turns out to be. or not.
I believe the “arrival day”(of the books) is definitely a big day for a writer. It’s the day where all your sweat, blood(from paper-cuts, maybe. XP), and tears are finally justified. The day you delight in the fruits of your labor. A big day. But I believe all big days started out as normal days. It starts of as a routine. Get up. Wash up. Breakfast, etc.
So, Miss Aidan, your big day may have started of with routines and a hint of chaos. But ultimately, it is your big day. It’s the day you’ll remember for the rest of your life. The day your career as a author (I suspect you’ll be the first best-selling author of the decade.(: ) officially begins.
I’m definitely looking forward to book and read your book. I love your writing style. Though I’m currently pursuing Engineering, hoping to study Architecture at Yale in the near future. Writing(and, reading.Haha) has always been a passion (and, will always be) that holds a place close to my heart.
All the best! Best of Wishes from Malaysia.(:
-Chris.Luo-
My hardest day is Thursday. Short school day so the toddler never gets enough of a nap before I wake her to pick the “big” kids up from school, then we’re off to piano, have to fit in dinner before gymnastics, home at 8:30, clean up, homework and every one off to bed. Ugh.
I know I am too late for your draw but is your book available on Amazon yet? Those of us that have loved your writing (for free) will support your livelyhood!
Congratulations, Aidan. A big, fat, happy congratulations. I can’t imagine the feeling, even if you didn’t have a true moment to feel it all just then. I don’t know you but I feel proud. Well done, bloggy friend. Well done.