Shame

September 1, 2009 at 9:56 pm | In Bad Mommy Moment, Declan, parenting | 3 Comments

Well, I’ve done it.  I’ve officially broken Declan.  My colossally bad parenting has resulted in an immediate need for a swift, painful intervention.  This is worse than the nippy fiasco of  April 24, 2009.

Remember this post? Notice how the third line says, “It could lead to very, very bad things”?  Um, yeah. Well.  About that.

My breakdown in parenting awesomeness started on May 28, when that last post was written.  It started with occasionally letting Declan nap in my bed when he arose from his nap too early.   I’d lay him down at naptime.  If he awoke after sleeping for less than an hour, I’d scoop him up, lay him in my bed, and say sternly, “It’s naptime.  Go to sleep or you’re going back in your crib”.  Acting all deceptively compliant, he’d settle down and close his eyes.  Sometimes he’d even remain on his side of the bed.  It seemed like a win-win situation.  He’d get a longer nap, and I’d get blessed silence for another hour.

And I can’t say that Kevin didn’t warn me.  On a couple of occasions, Kevin could pull down the covers at night and pull out one of Decky’s crumpled blankets.  I’d foolishly try to defend my actions, saying things like, “I thought we’d just play on the bed so we wouldn’t wake up Savannah”, or “I thought I’d just get him to settle down, then put him back in his crib”.  It was pathetic, really.  All lies.

I keep telling myself, “Well, he’s going to grow out of needing a nap anyway . . . what’s the harm of letting him sleep with me for a couple months?   It’s not like he’s sleeping in our bed at night.”

Simultaneous with this breakdown of naptime protocol, Dec starting getting up insanely early.  Like, at 5:45 am.  The second the sun drifted over the horizon, he was up.  His eyes would open, he’d immediately propel himself into a standing position in his crib, and he’d whimper.

“Mommy.”

“Mommy.  All done.”

“Mommy.  Wake up time.”

“Mommy.  Mommy!  Mommy.  Eat time.”

What started out as whimpers and whines quickly progressed to crying.  Then screaming.  Then screaming interspersed with hiccuping and gasping.  All within about two minutes.  By the time I entered his room to comfort him, I think he had said “Mommy” at least 437 times.

So I hung curtains in his room.  Then I hung blackout curtains behind them.   It was nice and dark.  That worked for a few days.

Then I decided that I would enter his room, inform him that it was still night time, and leave the room, determined to let him cry until the decent hour of 6:30 am.   This did not work (although it was torture listening to him cry, so there is a small chance I didn’t really implement this intervention for a long enough time to promote it’s effectiveness).

This next detail is where my most significant amount of shame enters the picture.

When he started waking up early (prior to 6:30), I’d pick him up and bring him in the bed with us.  The first time I did this (on a Saturday morning), he slept in our bed until 8:30 am.  8:30 am!  It was like a sleeping miracle.

Which reinforced my poor choice.

Of course, he’s never really done that since.

But the kicker?  The moment of clarity when I truly knew in my heart that I had robbed my son of his ability to sleep independently?

It happened this morning at 6:08 am.  I heard him shriek, “Mommy’s bed!  I want Mommy’s bed!”.

It’s like the record stopped.  Errrrrrrrk.  Mommy’s bed?  My kid is demanding to get in Mommy’s bed?  Where on earth did he get the idea that he could choose to sleep anywhere aside from his crib???

Shit.

This is entirely my fault.

Now what?

Failing

November 18, 2008 at 11:50 pm | In Bad Mommy Moment, Declan | 10 Comments

****  WARNING:  SELF-PITYING BLOG POST AHEAD  ****

I swear there is something wrong with Declan.  The boy seems to cry ALL THE TIME.  I don’t mean, “Boy o boy, that Declan sure has been fussy lately.”  Nope.  He is 16 months, 6 days old.  Kevin and I can recall both times that Declan has had a good spell:

1.  Between months 8 and 9:  He slept through the night twice that month, and his naps increased to an hour and 15 minutes in length.  I remember us celebrating, talking about how he was “turning a corner”, etc.  At 9 months, his acid reflux relapsed and he didn’t sleep through the night again until after 11 months.

2.  For a two-week period in September 2008:  He was nearly 14 months old, he was sleeping through the night nearly every night AND he was cheerful nearly all day long.  Then, his top teeth started to come in. 

The thing is, there is always an excuse:  Months 0-11, acid reflux.  Then teething.  Then an ear infection. Then he started going to daycare.  Then he had the barfies.  Then teething again.  Then a virulent stomach bug that last over two weeks.  Then molars.  Then a boogery cold.  Then acid reflux again.  There is never a time that I cannot think of something that ”could” be bothering him.  When I take him to the doctor’s, she always listens intently and sympathetically, gives him a thorough exam, then announces that he’s teething, ear aching, pooping, refluxing, etc.  I leave the doctor’s simultaneously relieved that he doesn’t have something awful and frustrated that he doesn’t have something bad enough to explain the crying.

Kevin and I have noticed that he seems sensitive to environments that could be potentially overstimulating.  For example, he hates having the sun in his eyes.  Since we live in sunny South Carolina, this is a bit of a problem.  No matter what direction we seem to be driving, the sun always seems to be in his eyes while in the car.  Noisy, people-filled environments can cause upset, such as when we went to a Halloween party at the clubhouse in our neighborhood.  However, there are other times that he seems fine in chaotic environments.  For example, this weekend we went to a place called “Sports Connection” that has bowling (with loud music, crashing balls, cheering families, etc.), inflatables, a busy cafe, and video games.  I entered the building with dread in my heart.  Although he didn’t want to participant in bowling, he sat in my lap for most of the time (clapping when everyone else did), ate well at the cafe while bopping to the loud music, and screamed with delight as we tossed him down the huge slides on the inflatables.  Seriously,  I think it’s the most cheerful that he’s been in nearly a month.

I’m beginning to think it’s me.  He always wants me to hold him.  He will climb over objects and other children to get to me.  If I’m standing at the counter doing something, he will creep between the cabinet and my thighs and push me away from the countertop, raising his arms and crying.  Last night, as Kevin was carrying him off to bed, he cried, “Maaammaaaa!”.  He prefers me to stand holding him against my hip;  if I sit in a nearby chair, he’ll protest (to which I tell him to just get over it, because I’m not standing around holding a 26 lb toddler for hours).  At times his crying is relentless, piercing.  I can see his tonsils as he screams.  Snot runs down his face and pools on his shirt.  He reaches simultaneously for both me and his pacifier.  At times, in desperation, I place him in his crib, hand him some books (which he ignores in favor of screaming until he gags), and go hide in the bathroom with a magazine for 10 minutes.  After my 10 minute repreive is up, I return to his room and rock him as he slowly stops hiccuping and gasping.  Oftentimes, after this purging of emotion, he can regroup enough to eat his dinner and play a bit.  That 10 minutes of screaming is ugly, however.

At school, his teacher describes him as “funny”, “a good dancer”, “a good eater”, “only needs his pacifier at naptime”.  I ask, “Was he grouchy today?”  No, he was fine.  “Did he cry alot?”  No, he had a great day.  “Did he want to be held all day?”  No, he played great.  Her only mildly negative comments have been that he occasionally pushes kids and is the first one to wake from a nap.  She seems to think he’s totally normal.  Our babysitter, Jen, loves him.  Only a couple times in the year that he has known him as she ever indicated that he was fussy or whiney.  And she’s spent a lot of time with him.

Because he always seems so miserable, I haven’t done certain parenting things that I did with Savannah. For example, by this age, she was restricted from pacifier use.  Only at nap and bedtime.  Dec, on the other hand, is permitted to keep the pacifier in his mouth 24 hours per day.  I see disapproving looks from other parents as they tuck their child’s paci in the diaper bag and think, “Lady, if he were screaming right now, you’d be enjoying your stroll around the grocery store much less.”

Sometimes I think people think I’m making all of this up. 

At the doctor’s office. he always grins and waves and giggles.  She truly seems to think he’s precious.  Our neighbors fuss over him while he waves his hands and calls “hiiiiii”.  The only real inkling that someone else sees my pain is when I learned of a comment that my mother-in-law made when I bemoaned the fact that my nephew is a fussy baby.  She told both Kevin and Cheryl privately that she thought Dec was much worse than Gavin is at this age.  What?  I thought Gavin was pretty darn fussy.  Dec was worse?  Innnnteresting.

Then I think, “maybe he’s normal and I’m the one whose messed up”.  Maybe I’m really suffering from a clinical depression and I just have a negative, hyper-vigilant attitude.  Maybe I’m so depressed that I can’t handle a little crying from a perfectly normal baby.  Or maybe he’s moderately fussy and I’m mildly depressed and the combination is bad.

Sometimes I worry that people are going to think that I don’t like him, or that I don’t like being a mom.  Sometimes I find myself compulsively describing his temperament, using words like, “he’s always miserable”, “he cries all the time”, “I feel like somethings wrong with him”, etc.  As I listen to myself, I’m horrified at how defeated I sound.  I’m waiting for someone to say, “Oh, I’ll bet he has (insert name of some easily treated disorder).  Do (easy intervention), and it will get better.”  I don’t want to write how much I adore him.  I’m afraid it would sound insincere, as though I’m trying to compensate for my negative words.  He knows the place he holds in my heart–that’s all that matters.

All I know is that I’m getting worn out and irritable.  I’m afraid that I’m wishing his infancy/toddlerhood away in hopes that we can fast-forward to the happier times.  My fear is that this isthe happy time.  I’m afraid that Savannah is getting cheated.  Cheated out of time in my lap (because Dec is always there), fairness (“just give it to him, Savannah, do you really want to listen to him cry?”), healthy meals (I can’t face the thought of listening to screaming just so I can make a pan of lasagna and a salad), fun activities (no, we can’t go to Grammy’s for dinner because Declan disintergrates at 6:00 pm and needs to be in bed by 6:40 pm), etc.  She seems to love Dec, and I watch her as she mimics my soothing voice and makes statements like, “Come on, buddy, it’s okay” while stroking his hair.  But I hear myself as I say, “Please don’t cry, Savannah.  I can’t have you crying too.”  I guess that means that in addition to everything else, she’s getting cheated out of having tantrums too.

I don’t know.  I seem to be failing.  Damn.  I looked like such a good parent with Savannah.  Now I feel like I’m just hanging on. 

Pity party over. 

Peace out.

Would You Like Some Barf With That?

August 16, 2008 at 11:18 pm | In Bad Mommy Moment, Savannah | 3 Comments

I felt like such a parent today.  Like, I flashed back to my childhood, and saw a dinnertime ritual play out.  But this time I was the parent.  Or the perpetrator, depending on how you look at it.

Let me set the stage.  We were eating outside on the patio:  Me, Kevin, Savannah, Declan, Aunt Cheryl and Grammy.  We had grilled some burgers, and Grammy had made some brownies for dessert.  Savannah had cheerfully eaten her fruit and corn, but was balking at eating the hamburger (aside from chicken nuggets, she is not a fan of meat).  We told her that if she ate 2 bites of her burger, she could eat a brownie.

The first piece of burger went down okay.  At first it appeared that she ate the second bite unprompted, but Grammy busted her when she moved her napkin aside and revealed the hiding place that Savannah had unimaginatively used.  So we prompted her to eat the second bite.  She said, “I don’t want to. I don’t like it.”  Grammy encouraged her to just pop it in her mouth, and eat it really quick.  We showed her the brownies.  She popped it in her mouth and started chewing.  And chewing.  And chewing.  We continued our conversation, and several minutes went by.  Still chewing.

Finally, I prompted her to swallow it and she’d get her brownie.  She tried to swallow it . . . and threw up.  Gurgle, gurgle, BARF!  At first it was just a little barf, almost like she just spit up a bit.  But I think she grossed herself out, and another wave of nausea hit her.  Then another.  The rest of us looked on in horror as we watched it overflow onto her t-shirt.  And since barfing isn’t fun, she started to cry.  And I don’t know why, but I always laugh during these moments (what’s wrong with me?).  And I can’t even pretend not to be laughing.  Which caused Kevin to laugh.  And Aunt Cheryl.  Grammy maintained her composure, probably out of grandmotherly sympathy (and she was sitting the closest, which makes it entirely less funny). 

Barf was cleaned up.  Barf-covered shirt was removed.  Brownies were eaten.  It all ended up okay.

I distinctly remember a time when my parents told my brother (Nathan, I think) to eat his spaghetti, and it resulted in him barfing on his plate.  The amazing thing was, the plate contained it neatly.  He barfed the exact amount that could fit on the plate.  I remember being impressed at his accuracy.  Savannah wasn’t as accurate.

But there’s always next time.

Chapter 1: A Day in the Life (Alternate Title: A Series of Bad Mommy Moments)

June 18, 2008 at 9:55 pm | In Bad Mommy Moment, Day to Day, Declan, Savannah | 2 Comments

A few weeks ago, a bunch of friends of mine posted “A Day in the Life of . . .” for their babies, all of whom are the same age as Dec (more about these friends another time).  They shadowed their child all day long, snapping pictures, and at the end of the day they made a slide show, captioned with descriptions of their child’s activities.  They were all adorable, and I enjoyed looking at all of them.

I haven’t done mine.  I don’t know why.  I think because I secretly wonder if anyone would find the lives of a three-year-old and an infant interesting (aside from my friends, who would be avid viewers).  But yesterday, I woke up with the best of intentions.  I was going to snap pictures, think of witty captions, and present it all beautifully in a slideshow at the end of the day.

Well, it didn’t happen.  I took, I think, about 10 pictures, and they all occurred during dinner.  Only one was interesting. 

So, today, my plan changed.  I was going to write about my day.  Of course, since it always involves the kids, you’d hear about them too.  I mean, I can only give my best estimate as to what they might be thinking during any given moment.  My thoughts, however, are much more accessible.  So, that’s what you’re going to get.

5:35 am:  My alarm goes off.  I’m supposed to meet my friend Kelly outside in 10 minutes to go workout.  After my initial angst over having to get up so damn early, I actually begin to look forward to doing some serious weight-lifting while rocking out to some good music with 20 strangers and an instructor who likes to sing along to Kelly Clarkson.  Shoes on, banana eaten, water bottle filled;  I’m good to go.

7:20 am:  Driving home from the gym, Kevin calls and nervously asks me when I’m coming home.  He normally leaves for work at 7:40, and I’m anticipating getting a shower before he leaves.  He reminds me that a co-worker is picking him up at 7:30 because our car is in the shop getting a new tire rod.  I’m around the corner, so I rush home.  Too late.  Decky is up, and Kevin is dressing him.  Kevin deposits him on the bathroom floor as I race through my shower.  Dec gleefully opens and closes every drawer in the bathroom, and screams with frustration when he realizes that the toliet paper roll doesn’t really have enough paper left on it to make a big pile.  As I turn the water off, I can hear Savannah talking over the baby monitor.  It’s a pleasant sound.  Decky investigates the empty toilet paper roll, taste-testing it voraciously.

7:27am:  Savannah enters the bathroom, grinning, and greets me with a hug.  After I dress, we go to her room to pick out an outfit for the day.  This is when battle #1 occurs.  She chooses a pair of shorts that are too big and a gaudy, sparkly hand-me-down t-shirt that if I allowed her to wear would convey the following message, “My mom thinks I’m going to work at Hooters and read while moving my lips when I grow up” (seriously, why are kids’ clothes so trampy these days?  Note to self:  Put trampy t-shirt in Goodwill box).  I select an adorable pair denium shorts and a colorful tank top.  We compromise on the big shorts and the tank top.  I decide to refrain from putting a bib on her during breakfast, knowing that she’ll get the outfit dirty and I’ll be able to change her into whatever I want.  Meanwhile, Dec has pulled everything off of her bookshelf and is sucking on the cord to her baby monitor.  Oh, and he has pooped his pants.  I decide to wait before changing it, since I’m sure he’s not done pooping.

8:00 am:  Savannah is sitting in her chair with a bowl of “Dora the Explorer” cereal (good product placement, Lowes Foods), half of a banana, and a waffle.  She’s watching Curious George.  Dec’s diaper is now truly ripe, and as he pulls himself up on her chair, reaching for her banana.  She screeches, “Mommy, Decky smells disgusting!” and kicks out her foot, sending him sprawling.  I chastize her, but really, I don’t blame her.  He smells like a toxic waste dump. 

8:03:  A screaming, writhing Declan is getting his diaper changed on the living room floor.  He hates getting his diaper changed and getting dressed.  He tries mightily to crawl away, his naked little buns dimpling as he rolls over again and again.  He quiets as soon as the job is completed.  One diaper down, at least 5 more to go until bedtime.  I think about how it would be nice if diapers contained the smell as well as the actual poop, but realize his dirty buns would be seriously neglected if that were reality.

8:15 am:  Dec has been given his bottle and is systemically taking everything out of the kitchen set.  Savannah is staring tranfixedly at the TV while slowing chewing on her waffle.  I savor the fact that I’m not expected to do anything, and write start writing this blog. 

8:30am:  Dec crawls over and starts saying, “Ma-ma-ma-ma-ma”.  I take that as a hint that he’s hungry, and put him in his high chair and feed him some yogurt.  He ingests 90% of it, then grabs the spoon and flings it at me, spraying me liberally.  As he drops the spoon, I encourage him to say, “Uh-oh”.  He responds by saying “Ah” and peers over the side of his high chair.  I retrieve the spoon and he throws it again, giving us another opportunity to practice “Uh-oh”.  No dice.  Savannah experimentally throws her spoon on the floor, saying “Uh-oh”.  I hate to shut her down, but she knows better.  I explain that Decky is learning to say, “Uh-oh” and remind her that she is a big girl who knows better than to throw utensils on the floor.  I make her get off of her chair and pick it up.  She does so, with a sour look on her face.

8:35am:  I remind Savannah that she is going over to play with Ellie, our neighbor, at 9:00 am, so she needs to get her hair combed, go potty, put on her sandals, and take her vitamins.  She scowls through the combing of her hair, trying to negoitate using less rubber bands.  “Only one rubber band, Mommy” (ponytail).  I insist on three, making two little pigtails and connecting them with a third rubberband.  As predicted, her clothes are covered with her breakfast, so I change her into the denium shorts I wanted her to wear this morning and a white t-shirt.  She’s motivated to complete the rest of her tasks so she can play with Ellie.  She asks, “Can I play with Decky now, Mommy?”  I say sure, and she saunters over to him, rips a toy out of his hand, and scolds, “Don’t touch it, Decky!”.  Nice.  She sounds eerily like me.  I defend him, explaining that he was playing with it first, and demanding that she give it back.  She says, “No, I don’t want to” and I assure her that unless she gives it back right now, she’s not going to play with Ellie this morning.  She flings it at him and stalks away.  Peace reigns for about 45 seconds.  Decky loses interest in the toy, crawls over to where Savannah is sitting, pulls himself up using the chair next to her, and catapults himself onto her.  She grunts, lands on her back, and he begins to flail his arms and legs, giggling madly.  She joins the game, hugging him and rolling him onto his back.  They are both laughing.  I watch for a minute, then decide to break it up before someone gets hurt.  Oh, too late.  Dec’s head gets pressed against a toy, and loud sobs emit.  I pick him up, and Savannah looks down at her shirt in horror—one of Decky’s green boogers is splayed across her chest. 

9:15am:  Shirt changed.  I’ve mediated at least three more altercations, two of which were instigated by Decky.  All of them ended in Decky getting hurt.  I’m getting fatigued, and it’s only 9:15.  I haven’t had breakfast, my shirt is covered in yogurt, and I’m wondering where Ellie’s mom (aka:  my guardian angel) is.  Just then she arrives, puts Savannah in the wagon with her daughter, and promises she’ll bring her back when the girls stop playing nicely.  Um, does that mean I’ll be seeing Savannah in 10 minutes?

9:20am:  Dec is bundled off to bed, immediately following a diaper change and a quick read of “Barnyard Dance”.  I can hear him jumping in his crib and turning on and off his music.  I rapidly get out my dissertation supplies and start work.  Decky’s noises fade as I work, and after awhile, I snap out of my dissertation-induced haze and note that at 9:35, he’s quiet and most likely sleeping.

9:50am:  Babysitter arrives.  I retreat to the office and my books, keeping one ear open for harsh screams or the ringing phone, hoping that Savannah will hold out at Ellie’s house until I can get some revisions done.

__________________________End of Chapter 1______________________________________

 

 

The Worst Gift Ever

June 12, 2008 at 1:30 pm | In Bad Mommy Moment, Day to Day, Declan, Savannah | 5 Comments

Savannah got a terrible gift for her birthday.  It haunts me throughout the day, visits me in my dreams at night, and I’ve actually felt the hair rise on my neck just from thinking about it. 

She got a recorder.

You know, those musical instruments that every child is introduced to in elementary school? Hers is wooden and multi-colored and simple.  Just the kind of gift that will spark her imagination, allow her to play independently, and keep her busy for hours.  And it’s musical.  Music is so important for a young child, don’t you think?

Did I mention it’s the worst gift ever?

I assure you, the noise that emits from it does not resemble music.  It is piercing.  I have a permanent headache, and I suspect a brain tumor has started developing.  Apparently, in order to truly enjoy playing it, it needs to be blown into until the user is red in the face and sweating.  Saliva needs to pour out the end, soaking the user’s clothes and the chair they are sitting on.  Sometimes, when I am really lucky, the user will have just eaten some chocolate teddy grahams or some goldfish crackers, and the saliva will be tinged the appropriate color.

The worst part is, both children love this gift.  They fight over it, and seem to be competing over who can damage their eardrums the most.  When one child yanks it from the hand of the other, the scream emitting from the offended competes with the user’s best efforts to break the sound barrier.

The recorder, or the “whisker” (whistle) is not allowed in the car.  Can you imagine being trapped in a car with that terrible, terrible, thing?  Thank goodness I had the foresight to outlaw that from the start.  That might be my best parenting decision to date.

Maybe the children will soon be deaf, and it’s allure will fade?  Or maybe I will become so hearing-impaired that the sound of it will fade into background noise, similar to the sound of the running dishwasher, or the hum of the television?  Please, please, let that day come quickly.

Who got her this terrible, terrible birthday gift?  Who has to take responsibility for virtually ruining my life?

This gift smacks of Kevin.  Or maybe my parents.  Or, even more likely, my brother Nathan.  Yeah, he seems like he’d get endless satisfaction from torturing me all the way from Boston.  What a jerk.

Oh, wait.  I bought it. 

And now I have to live with it.  And Kevin can hold this parenting mistake over my head for the rest of my life.  I mean, the next time he plays too rough with the kids, causing tears and mayhem, he can retort, “At least I didn’t buy Savannah a recorder for her birthday.”  Or the next time he goes to the store to pick up diapers and comes home with a bag of cheetos, an air filter, and a 12-pack of cheap soda, he can simply say, “At least I didn’t buy Savannah a recorder for her birthday”.  And that’s it.  Argument over.  He wins.

This recorder is ruining my life.  It’s impacting my marriage, my health, my sanity, and my overall happiness.

And we haven’t even owned it for 24 hours.

Close Calls

April 29, 2008 at 3:53 pm | In Bad Daddy Moment, Bad Mommy Moment, Declan | 3 Comments

I know that you’re not supposed to compare one child with another.  Each child is an individual and should be treated as such.  That being said, Decky is nothing like Savannah in many ways.  He is a little wild man.  He’s not hyper, or over-emotional;  he just always finds a way to get into trouble.  Over the last few days, there have been several “close calls”.

1.  Kevin put Dec on the bed one day in order to let him wake me up from a nap.  He started immediately crawling around, rolling in the bedcovers, drooling everywhere.  Kevin was also on the bed, and periodically steered him towards the center of the bed if he started to stray towards the edge.  At one point, Dec was too fast, and half of his body was hanging off the bed before Kevin grabbed his foot just in time.  But not before Dec’s face made contact with the nightstand. 

2.  Dec was crawling around our child-proofed (I thought) kitchen and living room.  Suddenly, I hear him playing with the door stop (you know, one of these things attached to the wall behind the door?  The thing that goes boooiiiinnnggg when you bend it and it springs back?).  I checked on him a few minutes later and he had pulled off the little rubber white thing at the end of it, and was swishing it around in his mouth.  Perfect choking hazard.

3.  Someone (maybe me) installed his carseat incorrectly, and while going around the corner, the entire seat tilted to one side, leaving him practically laying on his side in the backseat.  I didn’t even notice until Savannah called, “Mommy, Dec is falling sideways!”.

4.  Patrick (the cat) was sleeping on the ottoman in the family room.  Dec, with his relatively newfound skill of pulling up on everything, was found clutching poor Patrick’s hair with both hands.  As I pried both of his hands away, I found they were both filled with cat hair.  Suddenly, Dec leans forward and plants his open mouth directly on Patrick’s back (he has no teeth, so this didn’t necessarily hurt Patrick).  Surprised, Patrick swatted Dec on the head and ran away.  Dec was left spitting out cat hair.  No wonder Patrick likes to go down into the sewer grate.

5.  Dec loves to play with Savannah’s kitchen set.  Specifically, he loves to pull all the drawers out, including the pots and pans, the dishes, and all the utensils, and systemically taste test each one.   One day, he experimentally grabbed the countertop (while sitting) and shook the entire kitchen set.  The toy microwave, perched on the countertop, tumbled off and landed about an inch from Dec.  He didn’t seem to notice.

6.  During bathtime, Dec insists on standing up in the bathtub.  He holds onto the side of the tub while I wash him.  Today, I reached for the soap, and he jumped, catapulting himself headfirst out of the tub.  I caught his wet, slippery body right before his head smashed into the floor.

See?  He’s a little wild man.  And this stuff just happened this week!  I’ve got approximately 898 weeks before this child reaches the age of 18.  How can I possibly keep up?

 

Avoidance: A Parenting Strategy

April 15, 2008 at 8:31 am | In Bad Mommy Moment, Savannah | 1 Comment

Savannah attends a preschool program three days per week.  The school is located in Ballantyne, a nice area of town that is filled with several office parks, green lawns, and stone and metal art sculptures.  Shortly before we turn into the parking lot of Savannah’s school, there is a building that has a large stone bird perched on it.  It’s positioned as though it’s going to take off in flight, possibly in a quest for food.  It’s a lone figure on the edge of the rooftop.  I can’t say I’ve given it much thought.

A few weeks ago, Savannah exclaimed, “It’s a bird, Momma!  On the building!“ We discussed how the bird is made of stone.

A couple of days went by.  “Momma, that bird is sad.”  When I asked her why she felt that way, she couldn’t articulate a response. 

A few days later, “Momma the bird is lonely“. I answered, “Well, maybe it will fly away and find some other birds to fly with.   She seemed to take comfort in that thought, and would simply wave to it as we drove by. 

Then, “Momma, the bird needs some friends.  I’m going to be that bird’s friend.”  Good idea. 

“Momma, the bird needs a family.”  “Should we be the bird’s family, Savannah?”  “No, the bird needs a bird Mommy and a bird Daddy and a bird Declan.” 

Hmmmm . . . not sure how to comfort her.  I mean, the bird does look lonely.

So now I drive a different way to school.

Savannah “Pearl” Nusz

March 17, 2008 at 9:22 pm | In Bad Mommy Moment, Savannah | 6 Comments

.

Has anyone seen this video?

http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/74

For those of you who don’t have time to click on it, it’s a video starring Will Ferrell and a three year-old girl named Pearl. She plays the role of his landlord, and rudely demands the rent money.

We’re not proud of it, but Kevin and I LOVE this video. We saw it for the first time when it hit youtube.com last May. At the time, Savannah wasn’t quite two years old, and while very verbal, her speech hadn’t reached the point where I could imagine teaching a tiny little girl to say those lines.

Well, now we get it. Yesterday, Kevin deliberately said, “Snap!” everytime something even mildly negative happened. Sure enough, by the end of the day, Savannah was saying “Snap!”. A few weeks ago, I was horrified to realize that not only does Savannah know the word “crap”, but she knows how to use it appropriately (as in, “Crap, I didn’t pack anymore diapers in the diaper bag!”) AND she knows how to spell it (kind of, as sometimes I say things like, “C-R-A-P, I burned dinner!” and she says “C-P!”) AND she knows NOT to say it in front of Grammy (my mother-in-law, whom I have never heard use a naughty word). In fact, she has said, “Don’t say that in front of Grammy, Mommy”. Just today she said, “Say ‘oops’, Mommy”. In my defense, I had just banged poor Decky’s head on the car door—doesn’t that warrant a “crap”? Dec thought so.

We’re not quite there yet, but soon, Savannah’s going to start repeating entire commentary to the masses. I mean, my mother has really funny stories of my youngest brother saying highly inappropriate things to people. You know, the comments like, “My mom says your dad always smells like beer”, or “My dad wonders why your mom’s lazy eye was never corrected”. Right now, revealing my addiction to the word “crap” is totally embarrassing, but I know that it could be SO much worse. And the thing is, because my mother-in-law taught Kevin so well, everyone knows it’s ME who has the terrible language.

At least I can blame the fact that she drinks milk out of her cereal bowl on Kevin. Crap, that’s not the same at all, is it?

Bad Mommy Moment #387

March 15, 2008 at 9:49 am | In Bad Mommy Moment | Leave a Comment

My child knows the words to the song “Before he Cheats” by Carrie Underwood.

Right now, he’s probably slow dancing with a
bleached-blonde tramp
And she’s probably getting frisky
Right now he’s probably buying her some Fruity little drink ’cause she can’t shoot whiskey
Right now, he’s probably up behind her with a pool-stick showing her how to shoot a combo
And he don’t know…
That I dug my key into the side of his Pretty little souped up four wheel drive
Carved my name into his leather seat
I took a Louisville slugger to both head lights
Slashed a hole in all four tires
Maybe next time he’ll think before he cheats

Right now, she’s probably up singing some
white-trash version of Shania karaoke
Right now, she’s probably saying “I’m drunk”
And he’s thinking that he’s gonna lucky
Right now, he’s probably dabbing on three dollars worth of that bathroom cologne
And he don’t know… OH!

I might’ve saved a little trouble for the next girl
A ’cause the next time that he cheats
Oh, you know it won’t be on me
No, oh
Not on me…

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