I am swimming, thrusting my arms through golden water—golden like oil. The water grows thick and syrupy, then it pulls me under. I’m in a bottle, glass sloping above me. Someone tilts and pours, and I slide onto a pan, palms burning from the heat. I slip and roll in the slick spill. Steam rises off my wet hair. Then I am smothered under the sticky weight of raw meat.
“Mommy, can I sleep with you?”
The voice startles me, a breathy whisper in the dark. Then it comes again.
“Please? I had a bad dream.” Jack’s lisped dweem melts my heart, and I can’t say no.
So, into our bed he comes, nestling himself in between me and his snoring father—a hibernating bear on a weeknight in July. Jack curls an arm around my shoulder and buries his chubby face into my neck. I wonder what haunted his sleep—if he too was trapped in a frying pan, being smothered by chicken breasts.
A few minutes later, the door cracks open, and a girl with a halo of curls shuffles in—Maggie. She throws herself onto the bed and wiggles next to me, warm cheek against mine. Soon both of their breathing slows as mine begins to quicken; I’m too hot, suddenly suffocating under their small limbs.
Then a cry in the night cuts through me like electricity; the baby monitor lights up—an arc of color that changes from green to red. The baby is wide awake, though all around me, my family sleeps unaffected. My feet hit the floor before my brain agrees to get moving, and then I’m padding through the hallway and into Ethan’s nursery. It smells sweet, like baby skin and clean laundry and lavender lotion. But the smell has begun to disturb more than soothe me; the dim room, the sweet scent, his throaty whines, it’s an experience I’ve come to associate only with exhaustion.
After a fresh diaper, a belly full of milk, and a few minutes in the rocking chair, he falls back to sleep. I stumble into the kitchen, pour a glass of water, and drink like a woman rescued from the desert. The clock on the microwave glows green: 3:15 am. I stand there staring at the numbers as if waiting for them to apologize that I’m even awake to see them. My shirt feels damp, and limp strands of hair stick to my forehead.
Why is it so hot?
The house is perfectly quiet now; everyone is asleep. Not even the hum of air through the vents disturbs the peace.
The air.
A glance at the thermostat reveals the house is a balmy 83 degrees, and no matter what I push and flick, nothing happens. The house remains silent. And hot. No, no, no. This is not the time for the air conditioner to give out! Not in the dead of summer. Can’t it push on at least until morning?
I give up trying to resuscitate it and collapse onto the sofa. It embraces me with its worn-out cushions and shabby throw pillows stained with grape juice. The ceiling fan spins in lazy circles above me, and I let my eyes follow its orbit. Visions of homes with white couches and walls free from fingerprints dance across my mind. Women in crisp blouses and bouncy hair, off to do something important—to be someone important. I want to hate them and worship them all at once, despise them but also discover their secrets.
My shirt is itchy, the fabric coarse and irritating. It feels too tight around my neck like it’s slowly inching higher and higher, determined to choke me. I strip it off and toss it over the lamp, then throw open a window before falling back onto the couch.
Crickets chirp outside, and it sounds like they all must be perched on the sill, faces pressed to the screen, competing over who can chirp the loudest. At some point, the sounds morph into the singing of birds, distant and light, sweet and melodic. Then one bellows—an awful, belching noise like a chorus of angry bullfrogs. Then they start speaking to me in their gravelly croaks, and it sounds something like Mommy. Mommy. Mommy.
“Mommy, how come your clothes is gone?”
I force an eye open. It’s morning, and my oldest children are hovering over me—Maggie with frizzy curls standing on end and Jack wearing a Spiderman Halloween costume, his face concealed under the twisted polyester mask. One’s holding a jar of strawberry jam, the other a spoon.
I peel myself off the couch, find my shirt, and plant a kiss on each child’s sweaty head—then I confiscate the jam. Somewhere in the house, I hear the shower running and my husband’s off-key singing—always the morning person.
I need coffee.
The kids chatter on and on while I start the coffee, something about how I look “sorta deadish” when I sleep. Dark grounds tumble into the basket, some spilling all over the countertop. I wait, eyes half closed, as the appliance spits and sputters its trickle of hot water over the grounds and into the pot. It’s barely half full when I hear the baby, his impatient cries echoing through the house. In the reflection of the pot’s glass dome, a frazzled woman looks back at me—a woman not ready for another day.
***
I am swimming, pushing my arms through piles of damp towels, flannel blankets, and grass-stained jeans. Zippers snag and tangle in my hair. The air is moist and stuffy and smells like spoiled milk. I am shrinking, growing smaller and smaller until I disappear into the folds of a fitted sheet. The fabric settles around me like a parachute and I can’t discern which way is up, which way is out.
“I have to pee.”
The voice jolts me from tortured sleep. A face just inches from mine, quiet but urgent. In the darkness, I see little eyebrows shooting up toward the ceiling and a wide grin—unnaturally alert for the hour. Maggie cups my cheeks and leans in closer, stale kid breath in my face.
“I have to pee now.”
“Okay, let’s go.”
We race to the bathroom together, tripping over toys I don’t remember buying. The too-bright light hurts my eyes, and I feel hungover—drunk on exhaustion. Her short legs dangle over the rim of the porcelain bowl, then there’s a quiet trickling. She’s pleased with herself, but I’m too tired to dole out praise.
“Alright, back to bed with you.”
“Can you come tuck me in?”
“I’ve already tucked you in.”
“Just one more time? I want cuddles.”
We tip-toe back to the room she shares with Jack, and I crawl into the bottom bunk with her, pushing aside piles of beloved stuffed animals. The room is comfortably cool now, thanks to the repairman and our vacation fund which never even had a chance. I guess now we know we can always shut off the air, throw beach towels on the living room floor, and pretend we’re in the Bahamas.
I pull Maggie’s blanket to her chin and sing a song, stroking her hair until her eyes flutter closed.
“Mama?”
“Yes, baby?”
“I miss you.”
I wrap her in one more hug before slipping from the room.
I miss me, too.
***
I am swimming, dragging my arms through scattered heaps of paperwork: receipts, appointment reminders, wedding and baby shower invitations, bills I thought I already paid, and kids’ artwork that all look the same but are things I can’t bring myself to throw away. Somewhere a phone rings, and I can’t get to it. Then the papers turn into Amazon packages, and my feet become wrapped in tape and trapped within the cardboard flaps. The doorbell rings and the dog barks; it’s my mother at the door, but she’s holding a clipboard and is trying to sell me solar panels.
“Mommy, I don’t feel good.”
Light from the hallway silhouettes Jack’s face as he stands beside my bed, peering down at me. He whimpers and coughs and the need for urgency does not register in my foggy mind. I don’t move fast enough before the contents of last night’s dinner find their way out of my son’s stomach and all over my sheets. Fully awake now, I whisk him into the bathroom and lead him to the toilet bowl. I rub circles on his small back as he heaves, and I wish with everything in me I could make it go away—take the sickness from him. We sit there together until he has nothing left.
When I come back to bed, the sheets have already been stripped and replaced with ones that don’t quite fit but are at least clean. The washing machine hums from the other side of the house, and I smell bleach. I find my husband in the nursery, rocking Ethan back to sleep, an empty milk bottle on the dresser. When I take a step inside the room, he holds a finger to his lips and waves me away. I got this, he says.
And I don’t argue.
***
I am swimming in an endless, black ocean. My hands and feet appear like shadows in the dark, inky water. Something brushes my leg, then grips me with a slick, barbed tentacle; it pulls me down, down where no light touches, where no one hears my screams.
The dog is licking my feet. I jerk them back under the covers and gasp, sitting up. The house is silent, the sky outside the window is purple and blue and tinged with gold—like a bruise just beginning to turn yellow. Pepper watches me stretch, her furry head tilted to the side, and I wonder if she knows what I’m thinking. I grab my running shoes, and she follows me from the room, and together we slip out of the house.
It’s already humid, the air pregnant with moisture. Wet grass clings to my shoes and to Pepper’s paws. Dampness seeps through the mesh of my sneakers and it’s cooling, invigorating. The sky is lavender behind me and golden in front of me where the sun is beginning to peek above the trees. I lift my face toward it like a flower seeking its energy, absorbing whatever strength it will lend.
I am slower than I used to be, more aware of my uneven breathing and of a heaviness that seems to have settled in my limbs, but I push on, down a familiar path I haven’t tread in so long. Pepper trots along beside me, as patient as ever. With every slap of my shoes against the ground, I am reminded of the hope—no, convinced of the reality—that my weariness won’t last forever.
All babies sleep eventually; my children won’t always need my assistance with simple functions. Someday, they’ll grow tall and strong and will learn to do things for themselves. But when that someday comes, they might be too big to hold, might stop begging for cuddles—won’t ask to share my bed. I’ll wish, then, that I could turn back the clock—even turn it back to the middle of a sleepless night.
***
I am swimming, hands gliding through crystal clear water. There’s a village under the sea, where a man sits on his porch, painting at a floating easel: a portrait of a parakeet in a top hat. At a café next door, a woman pours tea from a porcelain kettle, and the amber liquid bleeds into the sea and disappears. The diners smile and sip from tea-less cups. Children push through the water in a slow game of tag. One breaks away from the group and swims up to me, her hair floating all around her like a crown. She hands me a spoon and a jar of strawberry jam.
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156 comments
I can see why this won. Congratulations, by the way. Repetitive-niss (if that's a word) often gets on my nerves but this was perfect. Monotony that's not so monotonous - dream, wake, child wants something. 'I miss you' 'I miss me too'. Sad. This woman is doing her best, her children love her but it's taking so much out of her that she's not really the same anymore. At least that's how I interpret it.
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Hello, Ms. Walker. I am a Course Instructor at WGU Academy based in Salt Lake City, Utah. Would you please email me at sonya.redd@wgu.edu? We are interested in using this story, "Strawberry Jam Under the Sea," in our course. I would like to discuss this with you further. Thank you for your time.
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Thank you for the comment! I’ve sent you an email.
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Hello, Ms. Walker. I am a Course Instructor at WGU Academy based in Salt Lake City, Utah. I would like to discuss using your story in one of our courses. Would you please contact me at sonya.redd@wgu.edu. Thank you for your time and consideration. Sonya R. Redd
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Can u do me also a short story dha
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Dear Aeris, it is a great story that unleashes the labour of being a mother in micro detail. I often wonder what differentiates a WINNER from a contributor and your example comes to mind. So much emotion is invoked and we can actually visualise what a mother goes through in the course of her journey. Really very creative and inspiring. Well deserved winner!
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Hey Shahzad—thanks so much for your comment, I really appreciate that.
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Oh my! This is perfect.
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Congratulations on your win, Aeris! I recently joined Reedsy and I had the pleasure of reading your story this morning. You wrote this story beautifully, with the mother’s exhaustion told between dreams and waking moments. Your writing captured the essence of what it means to be a parent, and I felt myself nodding along in agreement throughout. I’m now retired with three adult children and your story resonated with me in a powerful way. I felt transported back to those years when my own children were young, and I was living the happiest (wh...
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This is really great! I loved the way you kind of made the dreams meld into the reality but you can still tell it’s a dream because of how weird it is, lol. I really liked the line, “The doorbell rings and the dog barks; It’s my mother at the door, but she has a clipboard and she’s trying to sell me solar panels.” Haha. I love it when writers can incorporate things that make you laugh along with the serious story line. I think you totally nailed the innocence of both the children. The way the mom is equally annoyed and wants her children to...
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Hi Aeris, I’ve only just discovered this, but what a story! It’s hypnotically beautiful and frenetically chaotic at the same time - just like the experience of motherhood itself. Like many of the people who’ve commented, my babies are grown now, but your vivid storytelling brought it all back to me: the sleepless nights (Child 3 decided at 11 months to start waking every hour demanding a feed and became hysterical if he dropped his dummy (pacifier) on a car journey), the brain fog, the feeling of being trapped in an endless cycle of cooking ...
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Congrats on the well-deserved win, Aeris! I resonated with this story at such a deep level. I'm in the trenches raising five-year-old Autistic twins. I love our boys to death and I'm so grateful to be their mom. Our road to parenthood included obstacles of infertility, miscarriage, high-risk pregnancy, and the NICU but...there's still no denying that this phase of life is extremely difficult and exhausting with amazing and rewarding moments sprinkled in. I love how you captured the Groundhog Day effect of motherhood. It often feels like a ...
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Jamie, I know you have to be worn out! Not just on a day-to-day scale, but on a chronic level. Anytime our children are going through something, whether it's medical or emotional, we just carry it all the time. And I love how you said it: "We do lose ourselves in that cycle unless we're able to actively engage other aspects of our identity." Exactly. I'm home much of the time with my kiddos, and sometimes just a change of scenery or an hour of alone time helps lift some of that *fog*. Thank you for taking the time out of your busy schedule t...
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I have to thank you for writing this story. One doesn't always understand what a mother goes through with children and always assumes they don't do anything and just sleep. It's not like that and you showed it. The tiredness but also the love of doing it. Thank you, and an absolutely lovely story!
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Thank you so much, Yaoorii!
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Brillient
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Thank you!
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Hi Aeris! Oh, my heartfelt, congratulations on this one! It was such a well-deserved win for this contest. I recently had a dear friend, who was diagnosed with postpartum depression, and I felt like the piece managed to capture a lot of what she could be going through right now. I also really liked the way that you used the italicized parts of the story to push the themes. My dear little sister is named Maggie so bonus points on that one. As always, my dear, you’ve managed to capture a beautiful and tumultuous time in your characters lives...
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Hey Amanda! Thank you for reading! I love that it helped you put yourself in the shoes of your friend. I really appreciate your kind feedback (and I love the name Maggie too--it was one of my top picks when naming our daughter ;) Thanks again!
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Can we talk
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Oh my lord, this is absolutely beautiful writing <333 I had so much fun reading this!!! For days, I've been having a bit of writer's block, but just reading your work has given me so much inspiration to go and write what I was supposed to write. I'm most certainly not a good writer by any means, but it's one of my favourite things to do. I'm only 16, almost 17, so I know that I've still got a long way to go, but hey. Anyways, the best of luck with your novel! I'm sure it'll be absolutely brilliant based solely on this one. It's such a beauti...
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Hi Teddy! Well thank you so so much for your lovely comment, I really appreciate it! And you're doing fantastic to be getting started on your writing journey at 16. I wish I had been writing that long! Keep it up and you'll be churning out great work in no time.
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very interesting
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Thanks!
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very engaging, I liked how the mom realized there is a fleeting preciousness to having young children dependent on you👏🏼
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Thank you for reading, Odile!
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My babies are 24 and 26, but I remember these days so vividly. You captured those moments with perfection. Congrats on a well-deserved win!
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Thank you, Karen! :)
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I am tearing up as I read this beautiful story! As a mom of young kids, who is struggling to even find time to write, thank you for so accurately capturing the exhaustion mingled with moments of hope, in this time of raising these sweet little children! I love this season and am hopeful for the future as well.
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Love your comment and relate so much. I didn’t even really *begin* my writing journey until my kids actually started sleeping through the night. Because when you’re sleep deprived, everything just feels daunting. But even just a year past that “season” is so different now. You got this, momma!!
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loved it great book
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Thank you!!
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