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Guest post: "I called my son a dick on my blog – so what?"

92 replies

MumsnetGuestPosts · 28/09/2015 14:26

In the years I've been blogging, I've called my son a dick, compared my toddler daughter to Margaret Thatcher and sworn A LOT when writing about my 43-year-old partner's complete inability to correctly identify where the cheese is kept in our home. I have also written about my children being wonderful and my partner being a rock. But I've blogged far more about them all being annoying as hell.

I write about stuff in life that makes me laugh - usually after it's made me cry - in the hope that it will make others laugh too. Of course the stories I tell are embellished, redrafted and made funnier with a little artistic licence. The tagline on my blog is 'the funny side of family life' not 'an accurate description of the life of a 40-something mum of two living in a small Yorkshire town famous for a song about a decomposing corpse'.

Who the hell would want to read that?

Before I became a mum I thought there were things mothers should and should not do. I assumed that the act of pushing a baby out of my front bottom would bestow upon me an air of motherly grace and decorum. It did not. I was disappointed to find that having a baby simply left me with a sore fanny and an inability to watch adverts with cats in without crying. I did not stop finding dumb stuff funny, it just hurt more when I laughed.

The thing is, a lot of dumb stuff happens when you have very small children. But I've discovered that some people really do not like mums making jokes about their children. If you're lucky, like me, you may even become the subject of a whole blog post devoted to calling you a bitch and a terrible parent – because the blogger took your joke about lobbing wine in your toddler's face at mealtimes a little too seriously.

"Why bother having kids if you're going to moan about them?" people often ask. The idea that parents should never complain about their children is ridiculous – we need to acknowledge both the good and bad parts of parenting, if only for our collective sanity. Children are amazing, but sometimes it's hard to remember that when your toddler is headbutting the supermarket floor because Mummy won't let him eat the big bag of kitten crisps (it was cat litter). I am living this - so why can't I talk about it?

In the same way I won't stop doing something I love because some people only want to read the sugar-coated version of parenting, I won't stop just because my children may find my rants embarrassing at a later date. It's a parent's job to embarrass their children – and it's one of the main reasons I signed up for the role. It's the pot of gold at the end of a rainbow built of tantrums, tears and shit.

Embarrassing parents are something of a tradition in my family; I grew up watching my own mum and dad prance around shopping centres up and down the land covered in bells and waggling hankies in the air because they thought morris dancing was an acceptable hobby. As a teenager this taught me an important lesson: that embarrassment can actually be liberating, and shouldn't be a reason to stop doing something. My shame was a by-product of my parents' passion, which actually raised thousands of pounds for charity.

People take issue with parent bloggers sharing details of their family life in a way they never would with, for example, stand-up comedians. But then the majority of them are not mums, and we mums have a responsibility for our children. What many people don't realise is that this sense of responsibility is half the reason we're blogging in the first place.

Personally I don't write reviews or sponsored posts because I have other work that pays my bills; I don't need to make money out of my blog that way. But if I did, damn right you'd be reading reviews. We should be proud that there are bloggers out there finding a way to contribute financially to the family coffers by working with brands and not making working mums feel bad about building successful blogs. Blogging gives parents not only the opportunity to express themselves creatively, but also to build business empires and earn money whilst raising a family - can't we just leave it at that?

As for me, I will continue to write about my partner and children until they are all fully trained and perfectly behaved. I reckon I've got at least another month to go.

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OP posts:
Mintyy · 28/09/2015 20:50

I find myself thinking that all bloggers must surely be incredibly tedious people.

regenerationfez · 28/09/2015 20:55

Yes there do seem to be an automatic inordinate amount of 'mummy bloggers'. Well done, you had sex, got pregnant and shoved a baby out. I have too. As have loads of other people. Do I need to know about every tedious experience? If you want a job, get one. Telling everyone about your child isn't a career move. And its horrible calling a child a dick.

toomuchtooold · 28/09/2015 20:56

Pretty much every one of your blog posts has made me cry with laughter. I wonder how many PPs actually read the Why is My Son a Dick blog post? I thought it was really funny, and it's not about calling him a dick, it's about comparing what you expect of adults vs small children, i.e. if anyone else acted towards you like your toddler you'd say they were a dick. For me your blog captures the reality of parenting small children really well and it comes off as very affectionate towards your kids and nothing more. But there you go. You're a mother with an opinion, that's virtually a hanging offence.

Mintyy · 28/09/2015 21:03

There's so much writing out there. I prefer to read something that has been commissioned and/or been through at least a basic professional editorial process. How many billion mothers are there on planet earth at the present time?

I would find a blog by a mother in a Syrian refugee camp (for example) so much more interesting to read, if only it were available to me.

Mintyy · 28/09/2015 21:06

"All a bit try hard" - how I agree.

Floggingmolly · 28/09/2015 21:11

So what, indeed... Didn't it draw enough attention on your blog (assuming anyone read it?), that you had to highlight it again with a so what?
You're not even being defensive, just trying to bring the self styled "hilarity" of your blog to a wider audience. Blog off.

Mintyy · 28/09/2015 21:21

I agree floggingmolly. And why Mumsnet promotes these "guest posts" is completely beyond me.

What is a Mumsnet "guest" exactly?

Aren't we all guests here?

Thisismyfirsttime · 28/09/2015 21:31

I find all 'mummy blogs' boring. They're either full of fantastic parenting, fantastic children, it's a bit less fantastic sometimes but it's fantastic! Or full of it's shit, they're shit, I'm shit, I hate it but aren't I funny?!
My life as a mum is a mixture of both, but I wouldn't blog about it because it'd be boring as fuck.
I must say I don't understand the point of your post? If you choose to blog you must accept some criticism may come your way? If you can't handle it and brush it off perhaps don't blog?

Racundra · 28/09/2015 21:40

I clicked on this, because I thought it might be by MN's favourite mummy blogger... because I can actually see her calling children dicks.

However, I don't see the humour in calling your children 'dick's publicly. I have read your blog previously, the incredibly helpful Danish travel posts, and enjoyed it.

lordStrange · 28/09/2015 21:40

I think comparing her toddler daughter to Margaret Thatcher is proper lol funny.

Bazzle · 28/09/2015 22:48

''I would find a blog by a mother in a Syrian refugee camp (for example) so much more interesting to read, if only it were available to me.''

Such a shame they can't find the time or motivation to start up a blog eh!

Re. all the mummy blog hate, If you don't like them don't read them but I fail to see why they make people so angry?! Obviously a lot of people enjoy or find them reassuring or else they wouldn't exist in the first place.

LeaveMyWingsBehindMe · 29/09/2015 00:27

You're not even being defensive, just trying to bring the self styled "hilarity" of your blog to a wider audience. Blog off.

^This.

Bazzle we don't read them. That's the OP's problem. That's why she's on here now trying to drum up more business. Grin

I think when you have your first child you honestly think that you are going through physical and emotional experiences that no-one in the world has ever had before and you feel compelled to over analyse them and talk about them ad nauseum. That's okay - we all did it. But by child two you should really have got over yourself and realised that your feelings and experiences are pretty much identical to every other mother's, and you haven't just invented the wheel or discovered Mars,we'll get along without your wisdom and wit on the minutiae of life as a mother just fine thanks, because we are busy experiencing it for ourselves.

I find any writing that constantly needs to hammer home the 'as a mum I find…' or 'the thing about being a mother is…' to be not only dull, but really quite patronising, given that I and just about every woman I know has already been there and done that for herself. It's hardly a window into the world of some minority/niche lifestyle, is it? Confused

LeaveMyWingsBehindMe · 29/09/2015 00:29

Obviously a lot of people enjoy or find them reassuring or else they wouldn't exist in the first place.

Not strictly true, the internet is a huge free publishing platform where anyone can churn out any old shite, irrespective of whether anyone is listening or enjoying it. A really funny, informative or interesting blog is a thing of beauty and also a thing of rarity.

RockPap3r · 29/09/2015 09:00

hahaha this sounds very familiar.

I wrote this: www.baby.co.uk/mum_stories/15-reasons-my-baby-is-a-massive-jerk/

The Facebook comments on the post were...interesting. They mostly said I should be reported to social services for calling my baby names "because if that's how she talks about him online I dread to think what she DOES to him in real life" Hmm

Guess what people? Sometimes our kids are ass holes. Just like WE can be ass holes. They are human beings NOT the messiah

BitOutOfPractice · 29/09/2015 09:13

I'm another wondering what you have to pay do to be a MN "Guest"

"Dumb stuff"?

Bazzle · 29/09/2015 09:25

LeaveMyWingsBehindMe - yes but some parenting blogs are extremely popular. So obviously a lot of people do read and enjoy them. Totally fine if it's not for you but I don't think you can claim they are boring for everyone!

Shakey15000 · 29/09/2015 09:29

I think I've read about two blogs my life and was bored to tears. Just don't see the point. But horses for courses.

It does seem odd though to write one that's embellished, thought the whole reason was to document everyday like etc.

And I agree that if you're so keen to appear "out there" and tell it like it is, why the need to defend/justify it? It's all arse about face.

MNerAnon · 29/09/2015 09:34

I think, OP, that you cone across as someone who wants to make people laugh, not angry.

But you seem to be overlooking that a person's choice of words can be abrasive, and can jar to read.

When I read your post about calling DS a 'dick' and the attempted humorous image of throwing wine in a toddler's face, did not word. Both of those actions are synonymous with bitchiness and unkindness, so hard to translate then as funny. It's a bit like saying you joked about punching your toddler, everyone knows a punch is not friendly, and neither is throwing wine in a person's face.

So it seems that your idea to make light of the hard bits of parenting is all well and good if you like that sort of thing in a blog but you seem to have missed the mark of humour quite a bit.

Having said that I haven't read your blog and it might be hilarious for all I know, but I'm only going by your post. If I found my Mum had written I was a dick then that would be more hurtful than comparing me to a tyrant, as being called a dick is a deep insult whereas tyranny could be seen to be subjective (even Maggie had her followers!).

Caprinihahahaha · 29/09/2015 09:56

I think the problem is that there is nothing as cliche and entirely predictably awful as a 'mummy blog'

It's not actually that the experience is so thoroughly universal that no one can write anything new, it's that they all clearly think they can - especially the 'my kids are wankery, just pass the gin' angle.

The Bad Mothers Club is a decade old and has shut down now hasn't it?

Shakey15000 · 29/09/2015 10:02

Just noticed the comment "I am living this so why can't I talk about it?"

But you're not are you?? If it's embellished? It's a sham.

DonkeyOaty · 29/09/2015 10:05

Blog off made me guffaw

Grin
AnotherGirlsParadise · 29/09/2015 10:20

I know someone who has blogged for years about her tedious life, her cats, and her many illnesses diagnosed by Dr Google. She really tried to go for the self deprecating humour angle, and it failed miserably because A) she's not funny, and B) it was all so bloody self flagellating.

Then she got pregnant. Within 24 hours of POAS, she'd set up a mummy blog with the tagline 'Trying to parent'. Intensely irritating.

SirChenjin · 29/09/2015 10:28

We get it - the only way you can get your blog noticed is to call your son a dick.

MN - stop with these fucking boring 'guests' and focus on getting people in who have actually done something interesting, challenging, unique or inspiring. There are about eleventy billion people out there who fit that criteria - Kirsty Smith just isn't one of them.

BitOutOfPractice · 29/09/2015 10:53

I very rarely read the Guest posts. If I were a blogger trying to grow my readership I don't think this would be the most effective way of doing it. I think if someone has something interesting and challenging to say they would get far more hits by posting it in Chat and starting a proper debate

Yes and Bad Mothers Club has indeed closed down Sad but it was never actually about being a bad mother, it was about mothers doing their best and feeling like they were failing because their life wasn't like the glossy image of motherhood that much of the mainstream media portrays.

Jackie0 · 29/09/2015 12:01

It's all so depressing.