Notes from Mother’s Journal: Burn Those Shoes

Along with dolls that whine at you and Kraft Dinner Flavoured Crackers, today’s thing I don’t understand: squeaky shoes for children. Not shoes that squeak; I used to have a co-worker whose shoes were creaky, like an old door, which was good because you could hear him coming (if the crunching celery wasn’t a dead giveaway – dude ate more celery than Saint Aardvark in a heat wave!) (hint: that’s a lot of celery) but I mean when the shoe people put a little squeaker INSIDE the shoe so that every step goes SQUEAK. Have you ever seen a child walk? SQUEAKSQUEAKSQUEAK …SQUEAK…SQUEAKSQUEAKSQUEAK

My question: shouldn’t that person get kicked out of the library? Or off the planet?

Also, if you have been reading this blog for 5 years (haven’t you?) you might remember (Well, you MIGHT) that I posted about this once before. A month before I got pregnant with Trombone. Those were the days. (worth reading for the comments alone)

Today’s Evil Squeaky Shoe Allower was attending to an 18 month old who, apparently, wouldn’t put on any other shoes this morning. ESSA (aka, his mom) said he wouldn’t put on any other shoes this morning! So – there you go.

Don’t get me wrong. I know from the will of a toddler. Choose your battles, right?

1. Why do you have the shoes in your house? BURN THEM. Then he’ll have to choose another pair. Kid has, like, three words, right? What’s he gonna do – call a lawyer?

2. Of course he loves them best – they make noise. Children like to make noise. Your job is to CURB THEM. If I can get the incredible shrieking banshee, aka Fresco, to shut up in the library, anything is possible. Anything. I can bend time and travel faster than the speed of light. I just went back in time and burned your kid’s shoes. You’re welcome.

3. Sock feet will be just fine in the library. I declare it.

4. I’m sorry, strange woman. You seem nice enough. I make it a policy not to tell other people what to do with their children but MY EARS MY EARS MY EARS.

And because I can’t let a good rant come between me and my desire to be even-handed and less judgmental:

– maybe she can only afford one pair of shoes
– maybe she had 18 piles of shit to deal with this morning and just decided – hey, suck it, world
– maybe the child’s father just left and the shoes had been a birthday gift
– maybe the puppy ate the kid’s other shoes

And now I want to write a sappy country song about the squeaky shoes.

Daddy gave the box to me / all wrapped up real nice
Mommy said, hooray for you / now how’s about a rye on ice
Daddy said, get it yourself / I’m sure you know the way
now come on boy, just pull that ribbon / and then go out to play

Ohhhhhhh Daddy gave me squeaky shoes / and then he went away
I wear them every night to bed / and every single day
I hope he hears them squeaking / and remembers to come home
oh Daddy gave me squeaky shoes / and then went off to roam.

*sob*

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Cars

Have you ever seen someone singing along to the radio in their car? It is the most hilarious, wonderful thing, I think. I love to see people enjoying their lives. As long as the window is rolled up and I don’t have to hear what you’re singing, I think you should sing it loud.

I leave my window rolled down because everyone should be exposed to my awesome singing and also, my car smells. I have to roll the window down. There are 400 fishy crackers and raisins wedged in all the cracks and crannies of that vehicle. We have cleaned it since we came back from our vacation but there are more fishy crackers plumbing the great depths of the car every time we go out in it, which is several days a week. Rotting fishy crackers, yum.

Who can I pick up? Anyone? Carpool?

The other morning I was driving Trombone to preschool and there was a woman in a car behind me. While we stopped at the light I glanced in my rearview mirror and she started singing. Like, opera singing. Or something that involved her opening her mouth so big she almost made her eyes disappear. It was a long light. I watched her and watched her. She was either singing opera or practicing musical theatre. She furrowed her brow and shook her head around and banged on the steering wheel. She was smoking a cigarette; she took an angry drag. She took an angry drink from her travel mug.

Then, at the next light, I realized she wasn’t singing after all. She was having an argument. With the radio? Or with herself? Or with a person who was not in the car? There was no one else in the car.

At the next light I watched her carefully. Her mouth had stopped moving. Now she was just staring out her window, holding her cigarette in the same hand that was on the steering wheel. Her other hand came up and shoved her hair out of her face.

I can’t help it, I want to know what is going on. Who died. Who hurt her. Whether she eats breakfast. Whether she’s ever tried to quit smoking. Whether she is a low level waitress or a high level executive.

A car is a kind of sanctuary, which I think is one reason – a sympathetic reason rather than a selfish “I hate other people” reason – why so many people continue to drive and eschew public transit. On the bus, she’d be That Lady on the Bus. In her car, no one knows anything about her. She is in a space capsule, sealed off from humanity.

There is only me, wondering, but I don’t get to know for sure.

I like to picture her showing up to work, where she is a department manager. She has meetings to attend and people to discipline and reports to write. And no one knows that she rehearses her day in her car every morning, where no one can hear.

Real estate agent, maybe.

My kids wanted to go outside just now. We made it two houses and the neighbour boy, the nice one, invited them into his house. The TV – a much larger one than ours – is playing the movie Cars. They all three are standing there, staring at the screen. The neighbour boy’s grandma, who doesn’t speak English, came out on the porch with her espresso and shrugged at me. “Cars,” she said.

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The Puzzle

Yesterday I bought a new puzzle. At WalMart.

I know, I should buy the fair trade, organic, shade grown puzzles but I was at the mall with Fresco and I was looking for rubber boots for Trombone (surprisingly difficult to find, given that it pisses rain here 6 months out of the year, yet all I can find is SNOW BOOTS. Really? Really!) and I needed something for Fresco to hold onto while I looked for rubber boots so that he wouldn’t remove all the shoes from their racks and / or run off to smash an HD TV.

Yes, he loves puzzles at the moment. It would be a suitable distraction.

(And yes, I did find plain rubber boots in size 11 for Trombone at WalMart. I knew I would, but it was still my last resort.)

It would be quick and easy to select a puzzle, I thought. But first I had to find the puzzles, which was hard because:

a) the first four isles were Toy Story Stuff
b) Fresco loves loves loves anything Toy Story related.

I had to pick him up and put my hand over his face while I hustled past the shelf with the Talking! Musical! Buzz Lightyear! Then we bustled past the Thomas the Tank Engine displays with only a quick glance at the Smurfs (Smurfs are back, apparently) and finally I found the puzzle shelf. One shelf. Slightly bigger than a breadbox. It contained, in the appropriate 24 – 50 piece jigsaw range:

– glow in the dark puzzles
– 3D puzzles
– puzzles that are holograms
– puzzles that are magnets so you can do your puzzle on the fridge?? because having a kid sit in front of the fridge is convenient for everyone?
– one puzzle that didn’t do any tricks. It had kittens on it.

It is hard, it turns out, to find nice, 24 – 50 piece jigsaw puzzles that are not FANCY or MAGIC. Why would a puzzle glow in the dark? Are you DOING puzzles in the dark? Turn a light on!

I wanted to buy the kitten puzzle but Fresco didn’t want it. He wanted the magnetic one because it was a Toy Story puzzle and he loves Toy Story because Trombone loves Toy Story and also we already have a Toy Story puzzle and kids like things that look like the things they already have. And also TOY STORY.

“No,” I said, “not that one. How about this one? It has kittens!”
“Don’t like kittens,” he said, “like BUZZ LIHHHYEEAH! To infinity! And beyonnnnn!”

Eventually I distracted him with a Thomas the Tank Engine puzzle (you know I am desperate if I am choosing Thomas because I don’t like that Thomas, not one bit) that claimed to be a Magic Hologram and we brought it home and took it out of the box. Which is when I fully understood the implications of a HOLOGRAM puzzle. Like puzzles aren’t hard enough, this one’s pieces look one way now and whoops! another way when you look at them from over here.

Trombone did the puzzle, no problem. Of course, he is 4 and it’s rated for 3s and over. Fresco tried to do the puzzle and got exasperated. I tried to do the puzzle and it gave me a headache.

I know. It’s WalMart. What do I expect. But come on – a puzzle is a simple toy, easy to make, box, ship, sell. It doesn’t have to do any additional tricks – the trick is, it’s a bunch of pieces of cardboard that, when you put them together right, make a picture! THAT is the trick.

Luckily I am not a parent ten years from now when the puzzles, when assembled, will come to life on your table, tell you a Disneyfied story tangentially related to the puzzle, and then charge your credit card for the privilege.

/grumpy old lady out.

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ControverSunday – Devil Spawn Edition

This week, which is almost half over, the controversunday topic is When Bad Kids Happen to Good Parents. You can write about it too, iffin you want. Go, read Kathleen’s post and leave your link in the comments.
There’s a badge, too. Accidents has it.

badges

Fact: Four year olds are bossy. They have been bossed for four years and they are done being bossed. Now they are bossing. They are, in fact, The Boss! They will boss anything smaller than them. Cats, siblings, beetles, stuffed animals, cereal. Sometimes they try bossing things bigger than them, which can be illuminating.

Having a four year old is like having a job review. Now that someone else in the house wants to be boss, I am hearing a lot of my bossiness coming out of a little person’s mouth. Not just words, but tone. Not just tone, but TONE. As in, don’t take that TONE with me.

Turns out, little people are always watching you and how you behave. Everyone says this and I have heard it said. I sort of got it when the kids were mimicky-parroty and I was all, oh now I have to stop saying “fuck” because the children will imitate me. Which is why I swear so much on the Internet, because my children can’t read yet.

But it gets worse. When they get older they imitate not just your words but your emotions. They imitate your very being and they see that being more clearly than you do. They see your mean face and your funny face and your exasperated face and they try those faces out on themselves in the mirror, on each other, on people over whom they have some power.

Lots of this isn’t going to “stick”. Trombone is still figuring out who he is, in relation to me and to other people. He’s trying on a lot of disguises, to see which one fits best. There are other elements of his personality – his ability to empathize, his respect for other people – that are intact, even as he is blustering and bossing his brother. (Who, I might add, is having none of it.)

I have changed – I am trying to change – my tone of voice and the way I talk to my kids because now that I hear that exasperated voice and those mean words coming out of my son’s mouth, I am ashamed that I sound like that. I wouldn’t want me to talk like that to me if I wasn’t me.

I mention this in the context of the “bad kid / good parents” discussion because the way our kids see us can show us how we’re doing as parents. It gives us an opportunity to evaluate ourselves and change course, if need be.

I don’t think there are ‘good’ parents with ‘bad’ kids. I don’t think those words, “good” and “bad” are at all applicable when we are discussing the subtleties of human nature and behavior. Food can be good, as in edible, or bad, as in rotten, and that’s about it. Everything else in the world is more complex.

I think there are parents who don’t listen to their kids and who don’t respect their kids, and those kids learn to not listen to anyone or respect anything. Those kids behave very poorly indeed, toward their parents and toward other people. But the parent is still the first teacher. If a child* shows no respect for anyone, I have to assume that he has not been shown any respect by the people closest to him. (* I’m talking about kids who are not mentally ill or disabled.)

Some kids are born more challenging than others. Some are more stubborn, some are louder, some are risk takers. All of those facets of a child’s personality have good and bad qualities about them; a parent’s job is to help the child learn to participate in society without compromising himself or hurting others.

My most challenging moments as a parent come when I forget to see my kids as themselves; with their own personalities inborn, their own challenges and strengths. I get wrapped up in what their behavior is saying about me, what people are thinking about me as a parent when they see my kid throwing stones up in the air to see how they fall. Say it with me: It’s Not About Me.

When I think it’s About Me, I get embarrassed by their behavior and when I am embarrassed, I am more likely to treat them like misbehaving pets than the humans they are. What I try to remember is that it’s just behavior. Normal, developmentally appropriate behavior that it is my job to correct if necessary or let them figure out the ramifications of, if it’s safe.

An illustrative anecdote, if you will.

Last summer we were in the petting zoo at the park. Trombone, all of 3 years old and 3 feet tall, was talking to the rabbits and the suddenly the sheep started running towards him, bleating loudly. He freaked out. I had to scoop him up and Fresco up and go running for the safety of the gate. We did not return to the petting zoo for the rest of the summer. I joked about it a lot, not to him or in front of him, but when he wasn’t listening, because I was embarrassed that he was scared of sheep. I was embarrassed that he was scared of anything. I wanted him to be tougher, to be braver, to stand up for himself. Because when he freaked out, it made ME look like the mom of a wuss.

Yes, I would have felt the same way with a daughter.

My scorn for wusses is something I have been fighting with for many years. I believe intellectually – and firmly – that showing your weakness just yields more offers of support and how can we be stronger if we don’t acknowledge where the weaknesses are and that crying is cleansing BUT in my emotional DNA I still have a little line of code that says no crying, no weakness.

It is important to me that my kids feel free to cry and show their emotions, even if it makes me uncomfortable, even if it causes a “scene” because in the grand scheme of things, what do I care what a bunch of people at the park think? I am helping a human being build a lifetime of emotional health here, versus one 15-minute span of embarrassment and frankly, don’t most people expect children to scream like idiots for no reason? So when they cry – and oh, do they ever – it makes me tense but I have to allow it. I breathe through it. I offer unconditional support.

Except for those special days when I am over the crying. I am not that sympathetic on those special days but you know what? I was a human being long before I became a parent. And sometimes, kid, you are a drama queen.

Anyway, the sheep. It was his business. My job was to support him, to not invite any sheep over, to talk in a reasonable fashion about sheep and how self-absorbed and dumb they are and then to wait patiently for him to get over it. And that’s what I did. And by the following year, he remembered the incident but was no longer concerned about sheep at all.

And that, though it was hard for me, was the respectful way to deal with his sheep phobia. It was hard for me but it was harder for him. I am an adult, dealing with frustration. He is a 3 year old dealing with something that scared the crap out of him.

End anecdote.

Theory: If we are willing to listen – really listen – to our kids and admit when we’re being assholes, even though they’re littler than we are – ESPECIALLY because they’re littler than we are – then we go a long way toward helping our kids grow up to be people who listen and admit when they’re being assholes.

Shorter: Do as I do, and I will try to do better.

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Boobs

I’ve been thinking about boobs a lot lately. Every time I look at the World, I see more news about boobs.

Big boobs. Little boobs. Concealed boobs. Displayed boobs. Breastfeeding boobs and breastcancered boobs. Boob jobs. There was a guy in the news who paid for his daughters to have boob jobs. Half the people were mad at him. The other half thought his daughters looked SuperHawt! There are right boobs and … no! Not left, but … wrong boobs.

The right boobs wear the correct size bra. They are restrained appropriately and displayed like a plate of cake for only those people who are meant to see them. The right boobs only draw attention to themselves if they are allowed to do so: from strangers if the boob’s owner is looking for love, or from the boob owner’s partner, if the boob owner has found love. Your babies can see them. Other people’s babies can’t see them. Children who are no longer babies CAN NOT see them or they might get hungry!

The wrong boobs are the kind that are in your face when you don’t want them to be. Mostly this means Ugly Boobs. Or, boobs that are being used for the owner’s own purposes – as a tray for food, as a handy place to warm chocolate chips – without regard for everyone else in the world’s enjoyment.

Quick test: are you using your boobs for someone else’s enjoyment? (where “someone else” does not include “a baby” and where “a baby” is younger than 2 years old [or some similarly arbitrary line])

If yes, you are using them correctly.
If no, you are using them incorrectly. Cease. And. Desist.

Young boobs good.
Old boobs bad.

Fat bodies and boobs bad.
Skinny bodies and boobs good.

I’m not sure who decides which boobs are right and which are wrong. I think it might be Everyone. There are a lot of strange rules. Why are nipples supposed to be covered? Why aren’t boobs supposed to sag? How come we’re all wearing the wrong bra size but no one tells the bra people to make bras to a fucking standard? Why don’t doubleAs come in colours other than white? Is it because we assume smaller breasted women are virgins?

Boobs boobs boobs. Everybody has some but men’s are much smaller. Some people have theirs made bigger and some have theirs made smaller. Some people have theirs removed entirely, because they are sick or because they don’t want to get sick or because they don’t want any boobs on them.

Lately, some singing lady is shooting whipped cream out of her boobs to make fun of something. I’m not sure what she’s making fun of. My boobs would totally shoot whipped cream if I jumped up and down long enough. Anyway, people are mad about that because it makes the children hungry and now they have to buy more food for their children. You know why there’s an obesity epidemic (note: there might not be an actual obesity epidemic) ? Because there are BOOBS EVERYWHERE. We’re all SO HUNGRY.

Sometimes, they bounce when you run.

When I lift my arms over my head, mine disappear.

Boobs.

Now go! Give your boobs – or the place where they used to be – a hug! They deserve it!

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