Sunday Tribune

Struggles of a single parent and managing one’s career

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GOING to stop pretending that I’ve found a happy balance between working and raising my children. There is no balance. Most times it’s like watching a ferret on a see-saw with a bison.

My four-year-old daughter was doing impersonat­ions of us all recently. Her impersonat­ion of me – her mother, her only parent – was wildly blowing kisses and singing out, “Bye, darlings, bye! Bye! I’m late! Gotta go! Love you! BYEEEEE!”

I know I’m lucky: I wisecrack for a living. No one appreciate­s the ridiculous­ness of that more than me. I know I’m not a nurse or a teacher or a health and safety inspector or anyone else for whom having a glass of wine while working is a dismissibl­e offence.

But when we talk about the guilt of working parents (I avoided saying “working mum” there because I’m nothing if not achingly politicall­y correct, but we all know I mean “working mum”), it’s assumed that it’s the “guilt” of leaving your children to be cared for by someone else. But it’s not that. My children benefit from the SWAT team who look after them when I’m away. It’s more than guilt. It’s the awareness that soon, I will no longer be their number one favourite person to hang out with.

I am reliably and consistent­ly assured that once they hit their teens, there will appear monosyllab­ic shoegazers who my children will find infinitely more fun than me. At that moment, if I sweep into the room and announce, “FIND YOUR TORCHES! WE’RE GOING CAMPING!” I will be met with whoops of delight as they clamber up the stairs to find torches, wellies, socks and ipads.

Soon, though, their excitement will rise for different things: a text from someone they fancy, tickets to a festival, working out the PIN number of my credit card.

People often say to me, “You’re lucky your job fits so well around the family because you can just work at night when they are in bed”. I smile politely at this because, when all is said and done, you can’t make your living from making people laugh then whine about how hard it is, which, I am aware, is exactly what I’m doing now.

Comedy routines and books don’t write themselves, and sadly some idiot scattered the comedy venues all over the country, so people from Inverness don’t gather in the pub at the end of my road to see my shows – I have to go to them!

Of course, it’s not as simple as skipping out of the door when the children are in bed. Comics have to be obsessed with what we do. It whirls around in our minds all day as we make the packed lunches, clean faces, feed rabbits, play Lego, referee a squabble. The effect of this is that you’re often not “in the moment” with the most important people in your universe.

I’m writing this from a hotel room in Glasgow where I performed at the gorgeous Citizens Theatre and had a marvellous time. Today I’m off to entertain the good people of Whitehaven, then I’m off to Keswick on Saturday.

I am the sole earner in my family. My daughter was sad when I left for my tour again yesterday and complained, “Why do mummies have to work? Why can’t I have a daddy who works so you can stay with me?”. She’s too young for the “because Mummy never worked out how to be in a relationsh­ip and remain autonomous” conversati­on so I said, as I often do, “Mummy does shows so I can make money to keep our house and to pay for food and ballet classes.”

My teary child, in whose face I can still see a newborn, said, “So why can’t you get a different job, so you don’t have to go away?”

And that’s when all the “food on the table” stuff falls flat and I have to be honest with her and myself: “Because Mummy loves her job and if I stopped doing it I wouldn’t be happy – so hang in there and the moment this tour finishes, we are going CAMPING!”

Shappi Khorsandi is a comedian and writer.

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