You've gotten some killer advice. Most of this is echo:
- Change into street clothes BEFORE you get home. Either at work, or see below. Not wearing work clothes I've found to be EXTREMELY energizing. The "ahhhh, I'm human again." Thing. I have a strong suspicion that this is the whole "dressing for dinner" concept that middle and wealthy families have used for hundreds of years.
- Take a 15-30 minute break at a coffee shop/ cafe/ wherever that is super close to your house. Curl up, read a book, watch a bit of TV, change your clothes, take that "self time" that lets you face your life with a smile instead of an "OMG".
- Be EXCITED right when you walk in the door. Kids know when you're happy to see them. Even if 2 minutes later it's "Okay mommy has to _________ now" your kids get the "I'm so happy to see you!" jolt/fix, and it will stick. Not every day, but over time. It builds up tremendous "banked" good feelings.
- Don't set yourself up to go from one job to another. This equals job 1, then job2= cook, then job3=housecleaner. Talk about exhausting. Crockpots are fantabulous. So are frozen meals. Save cooking for when you have time to shop/play/cook/& not lose your mind... and make it a FUN time, and get the kids involved (aka days off).
- Double stress sucks. At one point in my life I found myself spending all the time with my son stressing about the homework/schoolwork I wasn't doing, and all the time I was doing homework stressing about my son. Ummm... backwards. It took a few weeks, but I finally realized that a) I can't do both at the same time (because my schoolwork was subpar as was my mommy-ing... now some people can do both... I'm just not one of them) b) I was doing things totally backwards. So I compartmentalized (that was the part that took a few weeks). Time with my son was HIS time, and when he was asleep THEN I could stress about school. It was a HUGE lifesaver.
- Kids have been "useful" for thousands of years. It's only in modern day society that more kids are a "burden". They follow us around, getting in our way, for durn good evolutionary reason. They're trying to learn from us. So put them to work!! :) They will NOT do a "good job" most of the time (but hey, if only one square foot of the floor gets mopped, that's one square foot *I* didn't have to do. Kids can do a lot more than most people let them... and to them "grown up work" is fun. Give them a bottle of windex and let them go mad on the windows (hey... they PUT most of the smudges there!), have them put all of their own clothes in the wash, and hold them up so they can put in the soap. See the amazing powers of how a room can be swept for an hour, and never have enough dirt in one place to need a dustpan. Have them stir batter, grate cheese, rip lettuce, get silverware in the wrong places. Gradually they get better at these tasks. JUST BE SURE NOT TO REDO THEIR WORK. Give them tasks that you either don't care that much about (we had the CLEANEST cabinets for 2 years, because while I cleaned the counters my son cleaned the cabinet faces), or redo them long AFTER bedtime, if it IS something you care about. They'll be proud they helped... and it sets a pattern of them helping (which is huge). Don't wait until they're old enough to do a "good job" at the task, or it will be too late. And kids are smart... if you redo their work, why should they do it to begin with?
Anyhow... hope some of this helped. Oh... and don't forget tylenol. It's almost impossible not to be cranky if you have a headache!
:) R