October 25, 2009
1. Losing My Religion
2. Shiny Happy People
3. Everybody Hurts
I’ve just read a Sunday supplement piece about a businesswoman who says her spare time is spent “relaxing with the children.” A dazzling light has broken through the heavens and rays are streaming down. I think relaxing with the children would solve my entire life. My spare time is spent cleaning up after the children, nagging the children, cooking for the children, refereeing the children, yelling at the children and hoping and hoping they’ll fall asleep so I can sit down. This morning, they would have slept in till 0830, only someone changed the clocks. It has been a very long day indeed. I offered Son 1 aged 5y 1m a trip out, but he wanted to stay in, watch telly and make cakes. I will Share Time with them, I thought. I sat down. Son 2 aged 2y 1m climbed up on the table with the glass top. “Get down,” I said. “That’s dangerous.” He ignored me. I picked him up and put him on the ground. He climbed up again. “No,” I said. “It’s dangerous.” When he got up for the third time, I went downstairs to the kitchen, Refusing To Pay Attention To His Behaviour. I made fairy cake mix. I mixed yeast for bread-making. The boys trailed downstairs, pulled chairs up to the worktops and bickered. I struggled with the dough. ”If it’s a bit sticky, add some more flour,” said Annabel K. It was liquid. We poured half a packet of bread flour in. I gave two splodges to Son 2, and 2 to Son 1. Son 2 ignored them and ate butter from the packet with his fingers. Son 1 tried to make animal shapes like the picture, but just superglued his fingers together. I put his chair next to the sink so he could wash his hands. Son 2 was up there in a flash. Rubber gloves, sponges, cups, knives and tubs were all flung in. I took him upstairs and he screamed and squirmed in protest.
We watched “Big.” Many many years ago, The Man and I were Tom Hanks fans. Way before Philadelphia. Way before his films got meaty and meaningful. “Big” was always a favourite, and I’d bought the DVD cheap and never watched it. I told Son 1 the story outline. “A boy wishes he was Big, and his wish comes true.” The film started. Son 1 got his first sight of Josh, aged 12. ”He’s already Big,” he said, giving a little window into his world which has stayed with me all day. He lived the story: ”Can he change back?” every five minutes till I put him out of his misery. At the salient point: “Is he going to stay Big?” And “Why doesn’t she make a wish too?” as Josh’s girlfriend runs after him. “What would you wish for if you found that machine?” I asked. “I would wish for every day to be my birthday.”
Spaghetti hoops and home made bread rolls for lunch. They ate the spaghetti hoops. Nanna came round and we iced the fairy cakes. I gave the boys dolly mixtures – a gift from Nanna last time – to use as decorations. Very few made it on to the cakes. They iced and they drew, oblivous to the sprinkles stuck to their faces like multi-coloured five-day stubble. They ate cakes for pudding after tea, and were high as kites when I took them upstairs for bed. I bathed Son 1, got him in his pyjamas and cleaned his teeth. I bathed Son 2, got him out of the bath and he hid under the towel to play “boo,” like normal. He came out, giggling, burped, and then threw up all over me, getting my hair, ear, arm and trousers. It was fish for tea, and it stunk like seal vomit. “Clear it up, it’s horrible,” said Son 1. I gathered up soiled towels and clothes, showered, and changed into my pyjamas. There was a loud thump from the bedroom. Son 2 had tipped a Christmas Cactus over on the carpet, breaking the plant and scattering compost and plants over the floor. I cleared that up as well.
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sunday | Tagged: annabel Karmel, baking, Big, cake decorating, childhood, children, christmas cactus, clocks changing, family, motherhood, parenting, relaxing with the children, Tom Hanks. Nanna, vomit |
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Posted by smileandwaveboys
October 24, 2009
1. Two Faces
2. The Lone Ranger
3. Comedy Tragedy
Best Friend’s birthday party today. We had a present and a card but no wrapping paper. So. The plan was to go into The Town with Granny and Grandad, where we would also buy a scarey mask for Son 1 aged 5y 1m, to change one of his Dressing Up outfits into a Ghost Pirate for Halloween. Before G and G arrived, the children were Very Hard Work. They did well in playing on their own in the lounge for about an hour while I tidied and did washing and hoovered. But then Son 2 got tired, they started bickering, Son 2 started squealing and needing me… Son 1 went nuts because I was trying to be sympathetic to Son 2… and I Could Have Done Better. G and G arrived and they were still hard work. We pushed them both into the Town, Son 2 in the Big Pram in the hope he’d sleep, Son 1 in the buggy because he refused to walk. It was Perfect.
I got Son 1 a Marks mask (say that fast a few times each day and keep your jawline trim.) We pushed them down to The Square for coffee to make Son 2 fall asleep. Son 1 was still wrecked with tiredness, and alternated between being a cuddly on-the-knee want-my-mummy’s boy and a sulky nightmare. He had a hot chocolate and an apple muffin. Son 2 woke up. I pushed him round the Square and The Museum, remembering the scores of times we did it when I was on maternity leave, hoping he’d fall asleep. He never did. ”Do you want to go back to sleep, or go back to the cafe?” I asked. “Hot choc choc,” he said. Son 1 fed him bits of apple muffin, and then they both sipped through straws to share Son 1’s chocolate. They looked adorable, and Granny and Grandad both took pics. We went back. I stopped in the fishmonger’s to get some sea bass for tea with Nanna tomorrow. I caught up Granny and Son 1 further on. “Son 1, where’s your mask?” He hyperventilated. “Sorry Mummy.” I power walked the 3/4 of a mile back to the cafe, where it was still in the booth we sat in. And then, worried about Son 2, I walked home with it as fast as I could.
Grandad decided he was going to rest, but Granny came to the party with us. Son 1 wore Captain Hook and carried his new mask. Son 2 wore the same bat costume he had last year when he was 13m: http://mumsnet.com/blogs/serenedays/2008/10/26/four-candles/ Aged 1 – 2. It’s supposed to last. Son 1 and Best Friend ran round together the whole time. I was up, down, inside, outside, following Son 2. A mother was there I hadn’t seen for while. She had an appalling time last year, (see http://mumsnet.com/blogs/serenedays/2008/04/12/the-lesson/) and I still ache in sympathy for her. We chatted; she’s brilliant. I hope. After the cake and candles, Son 1, Best Friend and Son 2 picked blackberries at the bottom of the playground. ”Pop” went a balloon. Back home we said goodbye to Granny and Grandad who are leaving early in the morning. Son 2 accidentally punched me in the eye so hard he knocked my contact lens out. “Bring me a mirror!” I begged Son 1, who brought me my Chanel compact, broke it into bits, dropped the powder on the floor and then rubbed it all into the lino. At least I found the contact lens.
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saturday | Tagged: Best Friend, birthday party, Captain Hook, childhood, children, contact lens, dressing up, family, Granny and Grandad, HAlloween, motherhood, parenting, pirate mask |
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Posted by smileandwaveboys
October 23, 2009
1. Big Boys
2. New Boys
3. Hello Boys
The Rat Man says we can ring him if we find any more bodies, and he will come and clear them up. This is a Good Thing, as The Man has left on another Business Trip. Unfortunately, The Man cannot remember which Rat Man we are using. He found him in the Yellow Pages, he’s very nice, and he’s been back in his discreet, unmarked van to check his boxes and put more toxic waste in them. But frankly I’d tolerate a van saying THIS HOUSE HAS RATS with a big arrow pointing at us if it meant his mobile number was stencilled on the side as well. The Man left at 3am, so yet again I am wandering around like a zombie. Son 1 aged 5y 1m ended up in the Big Bed, and came down shortly after I got up. He used to flit around like a little wraith. He now sounds like a team of rugby players coming down the stairs. It was slightly spooky listening to him… knowing there was no other adult in the house and yet hearing great clunking footsteps powering down. And then a little figure in Lightning McQueen pyjamas pads in, holding his willy and rubbing his eyes.
I had to go to The City, which is the best part of a two-hour drive away. When I’d finished, I went into The Shopping Centre, because I’d promised Son 1 I’d go to the Disney Shop to look for squirty toys to take on holiday. And then… Hold The Front Page, Don’t Faint, Shoot Me Down In Flames… they had a set of Peter Pan figures. Including The Children and The Dog. This is an Excellent Thing. I have spent hours on the internet, trying to find the children for Son 1. I have trailed around Disney Shops (Oxford Street: “Yes we’ve got them upstairs because they’re not very popular.” 20 mins later: “Sorry we’ve sold out.”) We have plastic Peters in several sizes, a finger puppet Peter and Wendy, three or four Captain Hooks, a fair few crocodiles, several handfuls of Indians and Lost Boys and pirates, pirates everywhere. Son 1’s Peter Pan obsession began with a charity shop Disney book I bought for 49p in Feb 2007. He got his first Peter Pan things the following Christmas, and he has longed for John and Michael ever since. So what I’m saying is, yes I bought him yet another toy. No, I haven’t thrown out/sorted out any of his old ones. And yes, Son 2 aged 2y 1m had to have a Nemo squirty toy bath set to be fair.
There were comments about more presents from Granny and Grandad, who were waiting with the boys because I was way too late for Wonder Nanny. Never mind. The Best Thing today was The New Swimming Costume. Not the one I wanted, not one I would have picked out… but it’s slimming, it fits nicely and it was in the sale. I was excited for a few minutes because the label said 14E. In better light, I realised that was the Australian sizing. I’d been worried I was stuck with the skanky baggy swimsuit for the holiday. I got put off the Bravissimo website because I needed to think of a password. (Really sorry, can’t. Got a pile of passwords to remember anyway, and a head so full of Other Stuff that not one more fact can be jemmied in. ) I tried another website. Ordered a beautiful costume on Wednesday. Ticked the box for faster postage to beat the strikes. And got an email saying they’re not expecting them in till next week. Today really was my Last Chance. I don’t think I’ve worn a halter neck in my life but Granny thinks it’s great.
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friday | Tagged: business trip, pirates, Captain Hook, Peter Pan, Nemo, parenting, children, family, motherhood, childhood, The City, Lightning McQueen, swimming costume, rat man, Granny and Grandad, Disney Shop, Wendy, John and Michael |
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Posted by smileandwaveboys
October 21, 2009
1. Orienteering
2. Endurance
3. Deliverance
A rubbish night’s sleep. Son 1 aged 5y arrived at about 0230 and then couldn’t/wouldn’t go back to sleep. The Man, on his first night back from his Business Trip, gave up on us and de-camped to the Double Bed. In the end, secret co-sleeping advocate that I am, I put Son 1 back in his own bed, put the fan on, lay down with him till he went to sleep and trudged off back to the Big Bed. I still couldn’t sleep. I was Tetchy and Touchy in the morning. But managed a sudden and sustained Cheer Up when I got into a pair of size 14 trousers.
We went swimming at the Hotel Pool with the Wednesday Friends. The older brothers were still in school. I forgot Son 1’s rash vest, and was uber anxious about his bright red spotty chest. Molluscum and eczema. Great combo. He couldn’t have cared less. Jumped in, splashed round, dived for sea horses and swam and swam. He did one width, and then when I wa-hayed and clapped… swam back across the other one. And turned round and swam back again to get me to do it again. A little lesson in how much he’ll do for approval. So I put him on my back and swam across with him giggling all the way. Son 2 was great, his fists full of toys he wouldn’t let go of.. and still managing to kick his legs like mad to keep afloat. At one point when he was getting tired he just hung in the water, watching the others. I used to take Son 1 to swimming classes every week, and he started swimming in armbands at around 2. And Son 2 has never had a swimming lesson, and has started swimming in armbands at… er… 2.
We met Granny and Grandad and The Man for lunch. The boys were so tired they only just hung in there, but we made allowances and got away with it. Back home they watched telly, I slumped on the sofa. Having Son 1 back on Wednesday was a Good Thing, and it made me realise how much I miss him. Son 2 was remarkable. Didn’t sleep in the car after swimming, didn’t sleep in the car after lunch. Didn’t sleep or lie down in the afternoon. And this was after an hour of intense exercise in the pool. By tea he was collapsed against me, picking out the brocolli from the pasta shells. But by pre-bath reading, he had six books and was still trying to get me to do a seventh. He passed out pretty quickly at bedtime, but has just, as I write this at gone 10pm, wailed and wailed and wailed for me. We left him. We are neither of us capable of walking up a flight of stairs to go and see him.
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wednesday | Tagged: childhood, children, co-sleeping, family, Granny and Grandad, hotel pool, insomnia, learning to swim, motherhood, parenting, sleep problems, swimming, Wednesday Friends |
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Posted by smileandwaveboys
October 19, 2009
1. I Don’t Have To Runday
2. Let’s Go Make Some Noise
3. Funday
Son 1 aged 5, and Son 2 aged 2y 1m slept through, and so did I. Son 1 stayed in his own bed. This is a Very Good Thing, as I am Truly Knackered. The first day of Half Term. Son 1, who has issues with Monday morning, eg: http://mumsnet.com/blogs/serenedays/2009/09/29/payback/ was dancing on the Big Bed at 0630, spinning round and round with his arms out. “And me!” said Son 2, in raptures, trying to get up there. They had breakfast. We read. We went upstairs. I read Son 2 Lost and Found and then put it on from the EPG while I had my shower. I zoomed around, they lolled. I wore a silk print frock, with that last-time-this’ll-be-out-this-year feeling.
Back from The Office, Granny and Grandad were sitting at the table while Wonder Nanny served fruit and yoghurt for pudding. The boys, who I’d seen through the window sitting perfectly, both went into orbit. Ran off from the table, shouted, raided the fruit I’d bought and took one bite out of everything, fell out over satsumas, shouted, snatched, pushed each other over. Son 1 span round and round. And shouted. Yummee. Just for me. “They’ve been exceptionally well behaved today,” said Grandad.
I told G and G about the dead rat, and got Granny to supervise Upstairs while I took the bins out. I somehow didn’t fancy dragging dustbins through Rat Alley in the dark. ”Grandad!” called Granny. “Are you going to help Serenedays?” “Don’t worry, I’m fine,” I called back. But still I heard him get up from his chair. That’s nice, I thought, he’s still coming down. Nope. Grandad, who has never previously entered a bathroom with boys in, pelted upstairs to help Granny. Not a rat man then. I saw no critturs. I relieved Granny and Grandad, and conditioned and combed Son 1’s hair. He was not happy. I don’t think there’s anything there, but I can’t really see. One for Wonder Nanny. I’ll give Son 2’s a go tomorrow when The Man is back. Lifestyle Guru Hairdresser says her children never get nits because they’re so rabidly antisocial they never put their heads near anyone else’s. See? Even head lice can be A Good Thing. They mean your child has social skills.
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monday | Tagged: childhood, children, family, Granny and Grandad, half term, headlice, Lifestyle Guru Hairdresser, Lost And Found, motherhood, parenting, rat, sleeping through the night |
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Posted by smileandwaveboys
October 19, 2009
1. Rendering Unto Caesar
2. Why Take Ye Thought For Raiment
3. Suffer The Little Children
How To Halve Your Shopping Bill. Walk to Tesco Express, instead of driving to the Superstore. Take a Big Pram, a large partner and two small children. The grown ups are allowed one basket each. You are limited to what you can put under The Pram or carry home. And you have to race round like it’s a trolley dash because of bored, misbehaving children trying to sneak Halloween sweets into your shopping. The Man took Son 1 aged 5 to choose a breakfast cereal. They came back with Chocolate Cheerios. “If we get those then we will never get them back on normal Cheerios and that will kill our main snack/emergency meal/blood sugar lift option,” I said, barely looking up from the Mild Chedddar. Son 1’s face crumpled. “But I said he could choose what we wanted,” said The Man. ”Fine. Get them. See what happens.” “They’re not Cheerios,” The Man tried. “Look, they’re Wheetabix.” “Fine. Get them.” “Well how am I supposed to know? This is the first I know about your new rule. You should have said something.” “I did. Yesterday. When we were discussing how to get Son 1 to eat breakfast before school, and you said you’d seen Chocolate Cheerios. I said they’ll never eat normal Cheerios again if we get them.” “Oh yeah,” he said. They trailed off together and came back with a Variety Pack. So. Half price shopping. The baguette broke on the way back, and so did the handle of the big box of (special offer) Fairy… but otherwise I feel we saved money, burned calories and even gave up drinking because we couldn’t carry any wine home. Value Was Had.
Granny and Granddad are visiting this week. They turned up with fairy cakes and flapjacks for Son 1 and Son 2 aged 2y 1m. The boys couldn’t be bothered to leave the toys and telly long enough to go and let them in… but when I said There Is Cake they charged downstairs. The Man went off on his Business Trip. G and G went off to check in to the Hotel With The River View. We went upstairs into the Big Bedroom, because I want to move Son 2 out of 9m to 12 m clothes. I want him in 18m to 24m, but I have a nasty feeling that because Son 1 was bigger, he was in spring/summer stuff at that age. I am The Mother So Efficient She Had Two Same Sex Children At The Same Time Of Year. And they’re different bloody sizes. Have some more cake, Son 2.
The Vicar rang on Friday to ask if we were going to Tea Service this afternoon, so we thought we better had. Granny came too. We did David And Goliath. The boys made cardboard and silver foil shields. They did ok in the service – legged it during the Lord’s Prayer, but at least they started off still sitting in the pew, and then scoffed their dinosaur shapes, cheesy mash and veg tea. In the bath, Son 1 Sang Hosanna. I tried to explain the words to him, without committing myself. “You can’t say you don’t believe in God, Mummy, or He’ll die,” Son 1 told me. Eat your heart out Richard Dawkins, all you need is Peter Pan. At his christening, well over three years ago, he was given a My First Bible, with child-friendly language and child-friendly illustrations . Time to break it out, I thought. We did David And Goliath. We did Noah. I left Son 1 looking at it while I put Son 2 to bed. When I came back he’d found pictures of the crucifixion. “What are they doing?” “Seeing how long they can stay up there,” I said, quickly closing it and flicking backwards. Jesus in Gethsemane, being kissed by Judas while Romans stood about with spears and torches. “And what are they doing?” “Going On A Bear Hunt,” I said, putting it away and getting out You Choose. ”Did they catch one?” “I think so.” Wrong on many levels, I know, but he’s five, it was late, and I am a moral coward.
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sunday |
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Posted by smileandwaveboys
October 16, 2009
1. Fed And Watered
2. The Breezes And The Sunshine
3. Soft, Refreshing Rain
Son 1 aged 5 and I arrived at School. It’s Harvest Festival Day. His class, all dressed as scarecrows, is singing a song. Son 1 will pop up wearing a straw hat. I said I would try and get there. And was then told the time. 2pm. No bloody chance. “Are lots of parents coming?” I asked Mrs Smiley. She smiled, as she always does. “Oh yes. There’ll be a very good turn out.” Outside the school, I rang Nanna, and Wonder Nanny. They can go. “Have we got to take something?” asked Nanna. “I’ve got strawberries.” Nope. I sent in a bag of groceries earlier in the week. I hunted high and low in the cupboards. I found two tins of Lite Evaporated Milk which were Best Before Apr 2005… and a tinned Fray Bentos steak and kidney pie so old it didn’t have a sellby date. I looked for things I wouldn’t use. But deducing that someone getting a School food parcel would not feel too grateful for Chestnut Puree and Aubergine Pesto, I put tea, coffee, tuna, baked beans, soup and tinned tomatoes in a bag instead.
Not the easiest day I’ve had at The Office, mainly because I did 16 hours yesterday and I’m knackered. Halfway through I remembed a snag in the Harvest Festival plan. I’d promised Son 1 an after-school trip to Tesco. Last night Son 2 aged 2y 1m had done some blackbelt tantrumming because I wasn’t there… and Son 1 had behaved beautifully. Plus he’s managed to get up for School for more than 6 weeks. I rang Wonder Nanny. Can they take him to Tesco as well if he wants to go.
When I got back home Son 1 was throwing small plastic balls which transform into aliens around. Son 2 was sitting in his highchair eating strawberries and sweets, giggling. ”I wan’ si’ on Mummy’s lap.” It was late, so we rounded the up for Books And Bath And Bed. Maybe The Man was making up the behaviour last night. Could this shiny-cheeked cherub with dancing eyes, sitting in the shower, laughing and splashing Mummy, possibly be the roaring banshee who was put to bed without a bath, without teeth cleaning, and without anything? Teenaged Niece bought the boys new pyjamas. Son 1 was dashing in bright red Lightning McQueen, Son 2 in oversized bright green Buzz Lightyear. Another Good Thing: Son 2 seems to be getting a bit bigger. If it carries on he may even get into 12- 18m trousers…
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friday | Tagged: Books and Bath and Bed, Buzz Lightyear, childhood, children, family, Harvest Festival, Lightning McQueen, motherhood, Nanna, parenting, scarecrows, school, sellby dates, tantrums, Teenaged Niece, The Office, Wonder Nanny |
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Posted by smileandwaveboys
October 14, 2009
1. What Do You See, You People Gazing At Me?
2. Scrumptious As The Breeze Across The Bay
3. Marshmallow Mouthfuls
Son 1 aged 5 and I got to School on time, after another disturbed night and, subsequently, a bit of a sleep in. Back home, Son 2 watched Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. It is slowly dawning on me that he thinks I’m in it. He has, throughout his obsession, sat watching it, saying: “Mummy,” and putting his face against the screen. Now. If I were a lot thinner, if my hair were longer and natural instead of short bottle blonde, if I wore hats and sashes… there is a certain pointyness to my nose, the way I know all the songs, and the lashings and lashings of mascara…. I am Truly Scrumptious.
A text from a Wednesday Mum. The Beach By The Garden. 10am. Son 2 aged 2y 1m and I can’t get anywhere by 10am on a Wednesday morning. Son 1 aged 2y 1m had a 0930 swimming class at the Town Pool, and I was out striding the mile and a half over there at 0845 every week. Just can’t do it any more. Son 2 and I got there at 1045. Two Wednesday Mums, two three year olds, and our old friend from Breastfeeding Group and her second, now a year old. One Wednesday Mum has just run a half marathon. Pang. I dug a sandcastle, I went down to the water to bring back bucket after bucket of water. Son 2 made himself a little bed out of his towel, my towel and a pram blanket. I read a comic to a three-year-old. Son 2 got up to listen. One Wednesday Mum left. ”I wan’ a wee wee,” said Son 2. “Do it in your nappy, darling,” said She Who Doesn’t Want To Toilet Train Till We’re Back From Holiday. ”No. I wan’ go on toy toy.” “Come on then.” Off we went to the loo. I changed into my swimsuit while I was there. Son 2 played, and I went for a swim in the sea. In October. Hooray. I thought the water was flat until two successive waves smacked me in the face, filling my mouth with saltwater. It was cold, but it was great. I came out. ”I can’t go in,” said the running Wednesday Mum. “I just can’t do cold.” I wasn’t that cold. This is the difference between someone with no spare flesh, and someone who has built-in layers of goose fat to keep her warm.
Son 2 fell asleep in the Big Pram, so The Man and a work colleague came out for lunchtime burgers. Son 2 of course woke up, furious. He was tired and hungry and loud. No. No. No. No. No. No. He wouldn’t let me take him out of the Pram, he wouldn’t be cuddled, he wouldn’t eat…it took about 15 minutes to get him back to us. Then he sat demurely eating his chips. When we had coffee, he wanted hot chocolate. I took him to the counter. “Tell the lady what you want.” “Hot Choc Choc. Peez.” He has ordered his first drink.
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wednesday | Tagged: Beach By The Garden, Big Pram, childhood, children, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, disturbed sleep, family, hot chocolate, motherhood, parenting, sandcastle, swimming class, swimming in the sea, tantrums, toilet training, Truly Scrumptious, Wednesday mums |
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Posted by smileandwaveboys
October 13, 2009
1. Avoir Fatigue
2. M’Aider
3. The Couleurs King
I have been awake since 3am. Ellen MacArthur did five months on five minutes’ sleep every four hours. Or something. I could so see her off. I woke up, couldn’t get back to sleep, went downstairs, made a cup of tea, went back upstairs, got my Book Club book and went back down to the Double Bed for a peaceful middle-of-the-night readfest. A little figure came padding down from the Big Bed. Wordlessly and glassy-eyed, Son 1 aged 5 plonked himself in the Double Bed. Mrs Smiley’s voice echoed in my head: “How’s his sleeping?” I switched off the light. “My head is still hurting.” I gave him a slug of Kalpol. He didn’t sleep; I didn’t sleep. He eyebrowed vigorously and clamped himself to me. After a very very long time, Son 2 aged 2y 1m wailed.
After an hour at The Office, my voice had gone again. “I’ll go home and work there,” I told a colleague. I didn’t make it. I found if I kept my head down, said nothing and drank lots of hot drinks, I could manage. I did a mad run round the shops at lunchtime. I have… erm.. burnt Son 1’s tummy by putting neat tea tree oil on his molluscum. It’s made his eczema flare up. I asked Teenaged Niece what she put on her eczema. “HE 45″ she said. I wasn’t going to take her word for it. I was going to ask the pharmacist. Only all pharmacists in the Big Town take their lunch between 1pm and 2pm. “When can you guys make it? OK. That’s when we’ll shut up shop.” So. HE 45 it was. And some allergy-for-children medicine.
Back late, and Son 2, the Cooler King, was shut up in his cot in a darkened room, having a raging tantrum. ”He’s been horrible,” said The Man. ”He wouldn’t eat his tea, he wouldn’t have a bath, and I only just got his teeth done.” I got Son 2 out, and he sat on my knee, quietly panting, his head against me. I took him into the other bedroom. Son 1 had a French lesson today, and was singing something about quelle couleurs. The Man and I were baffled by the verse: Hoar, jaune, bleu, vert. We eventually worked out that the problem was our dodgy accents. Our rouge features the same sound as kangaroo. Son 1’s has a throaty soft French “r” and a “g” that rolls into the “j” of “jaune.” I gave him the anti-allergy medicine. And then read the ingredients. Sugar and alcohol. Nice. I really want to give that to my five-year-old.
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tuesday | Tagged: allergy medicine, childhood, children, eczema, ellen macarthur, family, French, insomnia, molluscum, motherhood, night-time waking, parenting, sleep problems, sore throat, tea tree oil, Teenaged Niece |
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Posted by smileandwaveboys
October 12, 2009
1. Tessellation
2. Acute Angle
3. Fearful Symmetry
Son 1 aged 5 came in the Big Bed in the night. Fast asleep, his little body seeks mine. Arms, legs, hands, touch, touch, touch, snug, snug, snug, following me around the bed. I really don’t think there’s a childcare book I haven’t read, so yes, I know I should be giving him the great gift of learning to sleep independently… but surely anyone seeing the unconscious behaviour of a small child in bed would conclude they are biologically programmed to sleep with their parents. We of course are not biologically programmed to work ourselves into oblivion, which is why it all gets tricky.
And which is why I get every bug going. I still can’t speak, so I couldn’t go into The Office. The weather was heavenly, so I decided to help it recover by taking Son 2 aged 2y 1m to The Zoo. He loved it. Monkeys, lemurs, ducks, deers, warthogs… “Next one! Next one!” Lions, lynx, zebra, penguins, snakes, reptiles, frogs. He walked and walked. “I wan’ see lion. I wan’ see lil farm. I wan’ see clip clop (= horses = zebras.) After two hours I had to give up and we drove back. Son 2 fell asleep almost instantly. I thought a sherbert lemon from a bag my colleagues left would help my throat. The bag and the sweet wrapper crackled. ”I wan’ tweetie!” came a cry from the backseat. At home I needed a rest. Son 2 wouldn’t lie down with me, so I went into the boys room, got into Son 1’s bed, and let Son 2 play with his cot and soft toys on the floor beside me. I closed my eyes. Something heavy smashed into my forehead so hard it nearly popped my eyeball out from the inside. It was the lamp from on top of the headboard. Son 2, playing with the on/off switch, had pulled the flex and brought the heavy metal base down on my temple from two foot up. The imprint is a trench in the bruise on my forehead. Being positive, at least we now know it’s dangerous. It would have cracked a little boy skull like an eggshell. “Mummy. Bump. Light. Head. Ouch.” said Son 2.
The Man collected Son 1 from School and the boys had the Sunday roast leftovers for tea. Just when I thought they’d finished and could be shooed up to bed, Son 1 reminded me that I’d said they could have jelly tot lollies for pudding. ”Ok, you can eat them outside as a special treat and we’ll read some books while we’re out there.” The evening was glorious. We sat beneath the fading sunflowers, and read Son 1’s school book. The boys gobbled the last pea pods off the plants we’d grown. Son 1 was happy to have his bath and go to bed with Son 2. He dashed upstairs, sprinted into the bedroom and caught the side of his head full pelt against the doorpost, so fast and so hard he ricocheted off like a billiard ball. He screamed, and cried loudly and horribly. I scooped him up, gave him a large slug of ibuprofen and made him an ice compress in a tea towel. His left temple is grazed and bruised. My right temple is dented and bruised. On the same day, within three hours of each other, absolutely unrelated accidents. How does that happen?
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monday | Tagged: accident, al fresco, childcare books, childhood, children, co-sleeping, expressive language, family, garden, head injury, lamp, learning to talk, motherhood, parenting, peapods, sore throat |
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Posted by smileandwaveboys