Natalie's Corner

“Because you told me not to.”

Sunday, July 18th, 2010

Earlier tonight my son drank water from the kiddie pool in our backyard.  Let me repeat myself.  My son drank the water from the kiddie pool in my backyard tonight. Before I go any further, allow me to explain he was well cared for today.  He was not suffering from lack of attention, dehydration or malnutrition.  At the time of the incident he had drank plenty of clean water, eaten many healthy snacks and two of three meals for the day.

I have been told that many kids have had a drink of pool water, or worse, and survived.  That does not change a thing.  I am still beside myself.  It is not only upsetting because my son drank water that he had been playing all day, but due in part to the conversation we had shortly after the incident.  Allow me to share an excerpt as follows:

Mommy asks, “Why did you put water from the pool in your mouth?”

Child’s reply,  “Because you told me not to.”

Mommy, (complete with feeling of brain exploding), “Because I told you NOT you, you decided to drink pool water?”

The child replied with a tentative look.  “Yes.”

I was bewildered, sad, worried he would get sick and ANGRY all at the same time.  I am typing while my son eats his dinner.  My brain craves to have a discussion with an adult version of my preschooler right now.  “What on Earth were you thinking?”  The logical part of my brain understands that kids must test boundaries and experiment, but what is the right response when they do something wrong ON PURPOSE?  My son is no stranger to time out, but I usually understand his behavior.  This act seemed to be ludicrous and purposeless to me.

I realized standing next to the pool with the sun beating down and my last nerve in danger of frying that I was at a parenting inflection point.  Instincts were firing off commands to my brain as I desperately clutched for a clue.  I silently sorted through my thoughts one by one:

Of course, the first instinct was to scream.  Quickly passed over that one.  What good would it do?

The second instinct was to take a few seconds to mentally kick myself for all the nights I did not let him cry himself to sleep.  I did not want him to know an extra moment’s sadness.  Funny where your brain goes, isn’t it?

The third instinct was to punish.  Time out?  Send him  to his room without dinner? Cancel the next Disney trip?

Nothing felt right.  After a few silent moments, the oxygen made it’s way back to my brain.   I realized that although frustrating ( infuriating), this is behavior is mostly normal.  What is important is to calmly explain that we are done in the pool for today and that tomorrow I expect that he will keep the water where it belongs.  I think that was the right choice for me, my son, and his (inevitable) future therapist bills.

Life has moved on.  Routines have taken place.  Shoes in the drawer. Hat on the hook. Hands washed.  Dinner prepared and eaten.  My son seems to have forgotten the whole incident and I am left wondering if I made the right choice.  I am strangely comforted at this moment to be a working mother.  Not because I won’t miss my angel, tests and all, tomorrow.  I will.  That said,  tomorrow at work, even if someone does something I told them not to do, they likely won’t inform me they did it just because I told them not to!

Father’s Day

Sunday, June 20th, 2010

Father’s Day Blog Post.

I was out and about with my family yesterday and I popped into the boutique next to my husband’s favorite coffee store.  The sign hung over the register.  “Shop today for you, celebrate Father’s day tomorrow in style… if Mommy’s not happy nobody is happy.”  I could not help but smirk.  A ladies specialty boutique that only has women’s jewelry and handbags had done their best to boost sales on a tough weekend for them.

It is Sunday afternoon and after a delightful day at a local beach, my son and husband sit watching the US OPEN golf tournament.  The other man in my life, my brother, is playing in a golf tournament in another part of the state.  Golf was my father’s game too.  Me?  I never understood the affection people have for the game.  I learned how to play at a very early age and played the requisite Mother/daughter, Father/daughter tournaments growing up.  I have only played in a handful of charity matches since.   With the right company on the right day is can be almost fun, but it is usually played in warm weather (hot and humid) around water (buggy) for hours.  Hmmm, no thanks.   Yet, I would not trade any of my experiences with my family at the golf course.   It is part of who I am.

No. I did not inherit my Father’s love for golf, but he did bequeath to me his tenacity and his work ethic.  Unfortunately, I inherited his lack of patience and his temper, too!  (That’s another post altogether).

Happy Father’s Day to all the great, yet perfectly imperfect Father’s out there!

The World is FLAT

Sunday, March 14th, 2010

Scientifically, I admit that the Earth is round. This blog does not ascribe to conspiracy theories such as a flat Earth or that Americans have never landed on the moon.

When I say the world is flat, I mean the corporate world.   The traditional hierarchy of class systems has changed.  Inside corporations the world has become, if not flat, then at least flatter. Today, CEOs receive emails from individual contributors. Fans can twitter some of their favorite music stars, actors, or celebutantes.  At EMC, we see this play out over and over again.  People who are willing to ask, and have the credibility to see things through are given amazing opportunities.

We see examples of extraordinary things happening to people who are willing to ASK in the world as well:

No idea if the event (below) was truly spontaneous or planned.  It could have been a publicity stunt, but I want to believe it was someone who took a chance.  As women many of us feel that we should not risk it unless we are 100% certain of the outcome.  I say, ask yourself what is the worst that could happen?  Careful what you wish for it might come true!

As a mother I was happy for Austin.  I was even more proud of his Mom.  She taught her son to Believe that with hard work and preparation ANYTHING is possible.  Rock on, Austin!

John Mayer & young fan Austin – Belief

Family Friendly AND a Pay Cut!

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

Working Mothers and the 5% pay cut.

Thank you for all the emails of support. Many have reached out to me as fellow working mothers who are feeling the effects of the economy. For those who do not know, EMC announced a 5% base pay cut for employees. I have read through the emails and I can relate to all of the emotions within them. Believe me I did not bounce up and down for joy when reading the internal EMC announcement about the pay cut. I immediately went to that “knee jerk” place of what this was going to mean for me, my family, and our situation. The truth is that it took a critic to snap me out of it. In the blogosphere EMC took heat saying that this decision shows that EMC is not a family oriented company. I was angry, because for me, this decision shows that the truth is the opposite. EMC is thinking about us as a family. WE are saving 2000 jobs.

Think about it, if you sibling or parent were in trouble wouldn’t you sacrifice to help them? A small pay cut to save 2000 people is the right medicine, even if it is a tough pill to swallow for some of us. Polly Pearson posted a tweet from our all hands a post saying that there was applause at an employee all hands when this decision was discussed. EMC is made up of many incredible people. Smart people that are aware that banding together is the right choice for our business and our families.

I admire that the executives took pay cuts first, and will take another along with the rest of us. I think it is right that the least paid levels of employee will NOT be asked to take a cut. These are not pretty times in our global economy. I am comforted by the fact that I am on a winning team and that I genuinely believe EMC has a very bright future.

Dad always said,  “When the going gets tough, the tough get going”. LETS GO EMC!

P.S. Dad also said, “When things are too tough for everyone else, they are just right for a Corridan.”  That is another blog post for another day, but suffice to say I think I am in the right company at the right time.

Be the CEO of your life

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

Successful working mothers share one trait in common.  They are the CEO of their lives.  They take responsibility for their lives, their happiness, their boundaries and their success.  They are able to prioritize on the fly and have the gift of perspective.  Many of the women who wrote in the Working Mother Experience book talked about the concept of CEO of your life either directly or indirectly.  One woman went so far as to give titles to each member of the family!

One amazing thing occurred to me while reading the book.  The traits are the same everywhere in the world.  Working Mothers cherish their communities and take charge of their lives.   The women who wrote inspired me with their skills.  We always worry about getting it all done and having work and life balanced.   What I got from reading the book was that balance is not defined as a constant even keel, but the ability to emerge from moments of chaos with a plan or path back to balance.   We have not failed when our lives are out of balance unless we give into the chaos and feel powerless.

One of the reasons working mothers thrive so well in the high tech workplace is that they have mastery of concepts like teamwork, accountability and delegation.  Their negotiation skills are well practiced.  Any mother who has ever talked a toy out of a toddler’s hands at Toys R Us without a scene, into a dentist chair, or to leave a birthday party is a fierce negotiator.

The one role that working mother CEO’s could use some more bench strength is in marketing.  We are statistically less likely to talk about our successes and strengths as our male counterparts.  We have proved we are fast learners so this gap will likely fill in soon.  We have come far from the Rosie the Riveter days.