Hi, my name is Lauren and I am a screen addict.
I am also the wife of a very handsome husband (forthwith referred to as Handsome Hubby), I have seven beautiful daughters (who shall be called for the purposes of this column: Eldest, Jay, Suzuki, Gymnovert, Rocky, Wheaty and Mimi).
I am also a journalist, nerd and Catholic — not necessarily in that order.
Why am I telling you this, you wonder? Well, I’ve always liked to write and when social media became a thing, I would put bits of my written musings about my family on social media. The response was nuts.
For a screen addict like me, the dopamine hit from all the likes and comments were too much to resist so I kept doing it and, my faithful followers — largely made of my even larger extended family (seriously — I have 20 first cousins, just on my father’s side — nevermind the second and third cousins or the cousins once-, twice- and three-times-a-lady-removed) and acquaintances I’ve met (I can count the number of people I actually call friends on one hand — well, one and a bit — but I’m certainly not up to my toes yet) seemed to really like it.
Soon “you should write a book” started trending on my posts — in that at least one person would say it, once every few months or so — and if I’m not mistaken the same person may have also repeated it later — but at least two people said it.
Buoyed by this mass demand, I tried. I started compiling my posts and musing into a book and soon realised that:
a) put together in a longer format it quickly lost its appeal; and
b) so many people (with far more interesting families — seriously, one of them has a pet pig — I can’t compete with that — not with my allergies) had already gone the “life in a quirky large family” book route and I was coming up the rear. That's a rather large butt to follow and I don't like big butts, I cannot lie, especially my own.
So, I kept my musings to myself until, one day, I thought. Why not pitch this to my editor as a possible column? And here we are.
What’s so special about living in a large family you ask? Well, for one, quirky comes standard (but we’ll get to why another time).
In fact, it’s so quirky, that sometimes it sounds a little unreal, as I discovered to my chagrin. I don’t post as much about our quirkiness on social media anymore — mostly because I need to manage my screen addiction — but I do find myself talking about our adventures an awful lot. So much so that I am a bit of an annoying talker and one of my colleagues thought I was a compulsive liar.
I discovered her mistaken — and mortifying — opinion by accident. I had told her a story about something completely unrelated to my family and later when, another colleague spotted the evidence of my story online, colleague number one replied: “You mean, that was true?” — because obviously, everything online is always, absolutely true!
“What do you mean ‘you mean that was true?’ I told you that story.” I asked, a tiny bit hysterically.
She looked at me sheepishly.
“Well, I thought that maybe you stretch the truth sometimes,” she said diplomatically.
Never one for diplomacy, I replied: “You think I make stuff up?” (My memory makes this moment a little shrill but I hope that’s just the colouring of my imagination).
I don’t remember her reply but I do remember mentally recounting all the stories I had told her — and it was a lot — and even I had to admit that they sounded a little far-fetched.
For example:
And that’s just the tip of the iceberg.
So, maybe, if my truth sounds stranger than fiction, it would be interesting to read. I’ll let you be the judge. mailto:lauren.oconnor-may@acm.co.za I’d love to hear from you.
Next month:
Let’s talk about sex, baby: explaining the birds and the bees to children who really are too young to be asking about it.
* This launch edition of Living Large is sponsored by Mother of Plain Foods.
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