The last time I wrote about my appearance on the Good Morning Show, I had a great time.
I thought I did this time also, until I watched a clip of the parenting panel and I thought to myself … OH MY GOODNESS, who is that Mother of 11 who keeps looking to the skies for divine intervention!!
Up until today, I didn’t know what to write but having an inspirational conversation with my younger brother, Tuna (yes that is right, younger brother and for this moment it was inspirational), it’s prompted me to complete the post that I didn’t almost 2 weeks ago.
The topic was Parental Labour and the division of duties.
Now I know for some it may be hard to believe but Ieremia does almost everything. There are a couple of reasons, firstly because he is the stay at home component of our relationship and secondly, because he does a great job at it.
What I wanted to point out during the Parenting Panel was that you should always plan parenting from your strengths. That way it is so much more of a pleasure than a chore. What is it that you enjoy as part of the parenting process? What domestic chores do you enjoy doing?
I enjoy shopping and dragging the kids around town fitting shoes and clothes. Ieremia hates it. Ieremia enjoys the whole washing, drying and putting away of dishes. I can’t bear that chore, but I love to do washing. I like to wash the toilets and keep the bathroom clean. Ieremia prefers to clean the outside. I am more tactful at pro-actively disciplining the teenagers. Ieremia is great at empowering our little ones through their mistakes. And the list goes on …

Ieremia has the patience of a saint
And when the both of you have issues with chores or management of children … then it’s a decision you both need to sort, maybe this time Mum, maybe the next time Dad.
Ieremia and I also have the added advantage of our children helping out with chores. But before they were old enough to do these, we still had to separate out the different parenting responsibilities.
I’m not saying that our household is sparkling clean, gleaming from the foyer entrance to the manicured back yard terraces.
But, what I’m saying is that, you need to formulate a realistic and workable plan that works for the both of you. Once you have that plan in place then everything will fall into place as it should. So there may be some teething problems, but address each of these as they occur and be persistent with your plans.
There is often the argument or heated discussion that can take place between couples where, “He doesn’t do it the way I like”, or “She hasn’t made that the way I like”.
My simple answer to this is to decide why it is you like it a certain way and impart this to your partner, or take the time to show them and if worse comes to worst, what is the big deal if it isn’t done perfectly.
Fix it yourself.
Don’t get caught up in the” I wanted it this way” syndrome. This is not grade/primary school and as adults we should manage with what we have.
Be practical about your demands.
So he didn’t polish each fork individually. But hey, the fork is definitely clean and I can use it to eat without catching some type of tummy bug. My shirt didn’t have the collar pressed quite the way I like it, oh well, press it yourself. Better yet, show your partner the way you would like it pressed.
For goodness sakes, compromise and get on with being happy instead of being nitpicky.
I taught Ieremia everything I know on the domestic front. He has adapted it to his own style. I may not find his cleaning up chores completely to my approval, but hey, it’s clean.
I can’t fault his cooking. He’s an absolutely great personal Chef!!

When it comes to cooking its all on Ieremia
So all in all I have nothing more to say then to reiterate this:
1. Parent to your strengths
If you are better dealing with the terrible twos and not the demanding teens, then communicate that to your partner and get on with what you do best.
Break it all down and assign the current parenting responsibilities. As new ones arise, reassess.
That does not excuse you from trying to extend yourself into a slightly foreign area in terms of parenting or domestic duties.
2. Compromise fairly
So maybe after 6 weeks you’re sick of doing the washing every day. Don’t stress! Swap up and maybe make it a weekly swap instead of whining and getting an ulcer over it. It’s not worth it. Instead find a way to achieve the best possible scenario. Really now, it’s not a game. For in this instance, you really want to have both of you win. One should feel grateful at being helped, and the other a sense of accomplishment with the feeling that they’ve helped out.
3. If you don’t like the way something is done …
Find the happy medium. Do it yourself, now, or today, but at the same time, make suggestions or show your partner how you would like this chore performed. Don’t get caught up in something that isn’t going to matter a year from now or even a month from now.
Don’t agree? Voice your opinion in my comments or feel free to contact me. I welcome your feedback and comments.