I am a David
Coleman fan. I really like his calm and
sensible approach to raising a family and his theories on family life. Being a family man himself, he knows what he
is talking about (I hope!) and approaches the job and all it throws at us in a
lovely, calming way. Youse lot can just
smell the “but” can’t ye? Well, here it
is. (Adopts whiney voice for effect) But
David, it’s easy for you to talk; you’re not surrounded by the little
terrorists 24/7. I try, David. Honest to God I do, but (there it is again) they
just won’t listen to me. Everything he
advised me to do through the pages of his books, I nodded my head at in total
agreement. Where I fall down on the job
is pretty much at the first hurdle; when it comes to applying what I’ve just
read. A quick mental message to my own lovely mother here - I now get where you
were coming from when you used to snarl at us from under your breath “anything
for a quiet life.” It’s just easier
somehow to give in. Yes, I know, David,
but not in the long run. Tell you what;
book me in now, well in advance for Teens in the Wild. I’ll see you in approximately 8 years’ time
and you can say “I told you so,” to my face.
I may as well confess here that I have already failed miserably in
trying not to pigeonhole my kids, another one of David’s “don’ts”. I have often introduced Screecher Creature
No. 4 as “the good one” due to his placid nature. According to David, if you label your kids
they tend to grow up essentially believing their own hype. So, Clever Clogs knows she’s intelligent but
believes that she’s Plain Jane. The pretty one is aware that she is attractive
but feels she is not the sharpest tool in the box. Well, David, again you have my full
permission to rub my face in it when we meet up on 2020 in the West of Ireland
somewhere because we have already tarred one of ours with the contrary brush. This one is worse than several bags of
cats. Out of all our Screecher Creatures,
his waking up at night is the one I dread the most. He is stuck halfway between sleep and wakey
wakey. Confused and annoyed he likes to
vent his frustration by roaring.
Loudly. He will inform me that he
hates me and he hates me looking at him. But when I leave the room he is enraged at
being left alone. If things don’t go his
way, he can turn on a dime faster than you can say Jack Sprat. He will switch from spontaneous hugs and
squeezes to full on vitriol. Doors are
there just for him to slam. His beloved
collection of books are missiles to be hurled across the room. His skinny little four year old body (oh,
oh. Have I inadvertently on purpose
revealed his identity?) shakes with ill-concealed temper and exasperation. And when it’s all over, he hauls his
exhausted, skinny little four year old body to bed where he sleeps off the
tantrum for a couple of hours. If he
remembers all the drama when he wakens, he doesn’t let on. The thumb goes in and he plonks himself down
in front of The Pink Panther or whatever cartoon his brothers are
watching. But on the plus side of
things, when it comes to body image we, as a family, cannot be faulted. None of us are very body conscious, and I
think that’s a good attitude to have. After
all, we’re all naked underneath our clothes.
But I would like to drive one point home to the Screecher Creatures and
that is how important privacy is. It’s
been several years since I visited a bathroom, any bathroom, without my
entourage. When I need real privacy, I have
to bolt for the loo when their backs are turned. One day, after my walk, not only was Mister
Husband sitting on the closed toilet seat with the baby on his lap waiting for
me to return from collecting a towel and some clean clothes, but the other three
had dragged in chairs, lined them up and made themselves comfortable. It was like the front row at the cinema! I didn’t care how urgently any of them wanted
or needed to talk to me, I sent them all packing. I bet Gwyneth Paltrow doesn’t encounter such
paltry problems in her perfect, idealistic homestead. Her tip for last week was “women who want a
happy home should give up work and care for their families full time” [sic]. It’s a pity money talks because it comes out
with some dreadful crap at times. Anyway,
I wasn’t entirely happy with myself today.
I went to the shops without my will power and there, parading itself in
all its gorgeousness, was a tin of chocolate Kimberly’s for a measly five
euro. Sure, I couldn’t leave them
there. They came home with and again,
sure I couldn’t leave them in the tin.
Aye, Run Fat Bitch, Run and all her good intentions, ran straight out
the window. I’d say the lads got one
biscuit each out of the tin. Would you
reckon I have a problem if there is a compulsion to hide all evidence of my
binge? The empty tin was stuffed in
under the recycling stuff so Mister Husband wouldn’t see it and tell me that I
was only fooling myself. So, instead of
standing in front of the bathroom mirror in the morning, as is recommended by
the writer of RFBR, shouting “you fat bitch!” at myself, I cut out the letters
in bubble writing and pasted them to the press door in the kitchen. (See picture on this post) It’s supposed to be
a visual reminder of the two stone I have already lost (couldn’t resist
sticking that in there!!!) But now the Screecher Creatures keep asking me what
it says! I’m in another quandary. I am well aware that if the Screecher
Creatures were Little Misses, such a sign would never be made. But I did make it and it’s up on my kitchen
press for all to see. Mister Husband
told them straight out what it says, and now Screecher Creature No. 1 wants to
know what a bitch is. Oh hell.
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