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What can i do

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He does sleep, for about an hour. That's when I have to cook him his meals and get my work done. I'd love to sit with him and work through it, but he doesn't sit. Ever. He races around and every moment he's awake is spent trying to keep him from doing stupid shit. There is no such thing as sitting peacefully with him nearby. I'm on here now because he's napping but I'm also working right now, and taking advantage of the fact that my boss seems to be hungover and not really paying attention to me. I'll order a DBT book gladly, but do I have any guarantees that I'll have time to actually use it in a focused manner? None at all. This is life with a toddler when you don't have help. You do not get free time. I haven't even showered or eaten properly in days.
 
He races around and every moment he's awake is spent trying to keep him from doing stupid shit. There is no such thing as sitting peacefully with him nearby.

Playpen?

ETA: Also teach independant play. There is a mom of two (1 and not quite 3) on youtube I follow cause she had a service dog. (It's US). She has PTSD and teaches independant play so she can have the downtime needed. She can put them in their rooms alone. It is safe. And she can have a freak out if needed.

I am not a mom but indepenant play seems essential for a PTSD mom.
 
Not the ones he can tip over. One like this: WG9ayT_ZEBEiQApZBFuP_VDYtb2yn6ye5pcp3RmvCYvV2vhZ1_7Z8JyrW-UAcaAtO08P8HAQ

Also, baby proof. Put out baby gates that cannot be tipped over. There are ways to isolate him to an area where he cannot get ibto things. Put things up high. Put baby locks on doors and cabnets/drawers.

Come on @Casey_03, you are thinking black and white here. There are ways to get 30 or 15 mins a day to go through a DBT book. Independant play would be the best thing as you can get hours alone. There are ways. Parents all over the globe need downtime. There are ways.
 
I really appreciate you trying to help me problem solve, I genuinely do. But I don't think you realize how insane my kid is at this age, and that even buying him a new play pen is not going to prevent him from throwing hissyfits, banging his head on the walls and ultimately preventing me from getting down time. Independent play would be great, but right now I don't see how it would give me hours alone. Maybe at a younger or older age, but not at 11 months, no way in hell. This is the age of hissyfits, meltdowns and extreme neediness. I have and do try to leave him alone with himself to play (I do have baby gates and baby locks, etc). But you know what he does? He bangs his head against the wall, screams bloody murder and doesn't stop until I let him come into the room with me. He'll start hyperventilating and I genuinely fear he will have a heart attack. He wants CONSTANT attention, 24/7.

Earlier he was fine, but he's morphed into a monster. Literally in the past week or two - that's why I was able to cope before and now I'm not.

You are right -- parents all over the globe DO need downtime. But I don't see any way to get real downtime in the foreseeable future. I can and will try to go through a DBT book after work, at night, and sacrifice the few hours of sleep I get. That's really the only time I can do anything.

While my kid is awake, I definitely could not work through a DBT book, even if I left him in another room. Because I just can't focus on anything while my kid is screaming his brains out and banging his head on things. I just can't. Maybe some parents can, but his screaming sends me into complete meltdown mode and hysterics. It's genuinely, excruciatingly painful. And ridiculously stressful.

As it is now, I do leave him alone to try and get alone time. But it always ends the same way - he'll freak out, I'll try to ignore him but then he gets too loud, so I go in to calm him. He calms down, I leave again and try to resume what I was doing .... and it starts all over again. This can go on for entire days. It's not the kind of environment that would allow me to focus on DBT, or really anything that requires some degree of calm.

And yes, there are ways -- babysitters, nannies, family members. That is what every single doctor has told me -- "You cannot physically or mentally do this entirely on your own. It's not possible without some sort of support network." And they've all said I have to get AWAY from the baby, as in out of the house, somewhere where I won't hear him screaming and crying.

I didn't believe them at first, but now I see they were right. And I guess that is my frustration, because even when I try to explain how hard this all is, it's like people don't believe me or they think I'm just self sabotaging and not bothering to look for solutions. I am, I swear. My whole plan was to use the money from my grandma's house to pay for a babysitter/daycare. I was counting on it, and that was my lifeline. But for whatever reason, the aunt that evicted me has now not even taken any steps to sell the house. So it looks like she may have thrown me out so that someone else could live there. Who knows.

Anyways, sorry for the length of this. It turned into a vent rather than a response, and I probably babbled. I hope I didn't come off as defensive in any way; I'm just frustrated with the situation.
 
Independent play would be great, but right now I don't see how it would give me hours alone. Maybe at a younger or older age, but not at 11 months, no way in hell. This is the age of hissyfits, meltdowns and extreme neediness.

Remember, she has just over a 1 yr old and a 2 yr old currently. This was post Aug last yr.

MOTHERHOOD WITH ANXIETY & PTSD! | Refreshing Motherhood

She has a husband but he works and they manage 3 large youtube channels. One can easily take 8 hrs to manage. They have to have time to video, at least, an hour of fotage to get an 8 or 10 min video. She explains in other videos when people were calling her lazy when they just had their vlog channel.

Deep Play (independant play):

COMBATING CHILD BOREDOM WITH DEEP PLAY | Collab

She has toddlers. I don't but she does. And she has PTSD. This is where I am getting deep play from. She has shown her toddlers during deep play and they do indeed play alone by themselves quietly. It is possible but you have to teach it.
 
Really @lostforgottensoul, babies aren't meant to be left alone. @Casey_03's little one isn't even a year old, they aren't meant for independent anything at that age regardless of what you see on YouTube. Parenting a baby is hard, relentless, dependent work - babies need carers to be present, play needs carers to be involved at times and her baby is in distress if she doesn't attend to him. I'd go so far as to say leaving a one year old alone for an hour is deeply neglectful, they need human interaction at that age.

Babies that small really can't be left unattended unless they're sleeping and then I'd be using a baby monitor in case the baby got mobile, climbed out of his cot etc.

I can understand your employers point @Casey_03 working from home isn't a substitute for childcare because both demand your full attention, but you know this. Are there local supports for parents? Church groups etc or even local teenagers who would mind him/play with him while you worked in the same/next room?
 
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Honestly, I'm sorry but at this point this feels like you are just trying to prove you are right and I am wrong. Because some lady on YouTube is able to cope and I'm not. Who has a husband and a second source of income. I know what independent play and deep play is. I take my son to the doctor regularly and consult them; I research childraising tactics and the developmental timeline. I leave him alone to try to get him to play, as I mentioned above, but I am not able to do much during that time, as he has not yet gotten the hang of it (which the doctors have said is normal and works differently for every child), and so, as I said above, he freaks out.

Please do not post more videos pointing out that because some woman on YouTube can do it, i should be able to. I am saying as explicitly as I can, "I can't do this" and instead of getting empathy, I'm being accused of not trying hard enough, or self-sabotaging, or not teaching my son the right tactics.

The woman on YouTube is not a doctor. I've stated above - I've spoken to doctors about this, and both of them said there is no way in hell I will be able to cope going forward entirely alone. They stated that as a fact, said I'd burn out, physically and mentally, and that it's not healthy for my son. They were right. That is a fact. I am confirming that and screaming as loudly as I can that I CAN'T DO THIS. So please don't tell me I can because some other woman in completely different circumstances on YouTube can. It's incredibly patronizing and insulting.
 
@Suzetig Thank you. There are some Mommy support groups but they're 45 min to an hour away. Once I can afford the gas, I will attend, but for now I have to hold off. A church might be my best option, now that you mention it. I don't like organized religion but it might be worth going to a church just to ask if they know of any support groups for me. I only moved to this town a few weeks ago and don't know anybody here, which is another factor that makes the situation more difficult. Honestly, it might just be a matter of me making some friends, preferably with kids.

I don't mean to sound so negative in this thread, but I think I'm too exhausted and upset to see things clearly, and I've been working on no sleep and very little food for the past three days.
 
I've stated above - I've spoken to doctors about this, and both of them said there is no way in hell I will be able to cope going forward entirely alone. They stated that as a fact, said I'd burn out, physically and mentally,
What are they suggesting then as an alternative given your lack of support structure? Some places will provide access to a funded nursery place for children where mum is struggling or isolated, I've known mums who have needed to raise their babies alone and it's hard going, but they coped by being really creative. One went to a local church that has a crèche facility so her baby got looked after during the service and she got an hour of headspace (she too hated organised religion so completely tuned out during the service and enjoyed just not needing to be "on". Another joined a mums and toddlers group where she found other mums who would look after little one while she had a shower etc.

How can you meet people and build supports where you are? Can the doctor point you in the direction of other mums with similar aged children? As you said, you can't keep going as you are, so what's within your control to change?
 
Honestly, I'm sorry but at this point this feels like you are just trying to prove you are right and I am wrong.

No, I am not. I am trying to help as you felt in the orginal post that giving your baby up for adoption is an option. I would think anything could be tried before giving your child up.

Point taken though. Out.
 
The other thing it might get be worth looking at is an online support group for mums. Mumsnet is a uk one which tends towards folk being quite pragmatic and direct, if a bit middle class, but it has an international membership so you might find good, practical support there? At least they'll understand the sheer bone aching relentlessness of single parenthood.
 
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