I read somewhere that when you have kids you
might as well hand them a baseball bat or similar, stand back and let them at
it in your house. Apparently it will
save you loads of trouble having to watch your things die slowly. They compared
it to removing a plaster. Just rip it
off. Kinder and less painful in the long
run. Whoever “they” are “they” weren’t
wrong. About the demolition derby that
is. Especially most particularly when
you have boys. Two and a half years ago,
my sister in law very kindly cleaned our house when I was sectioned. Oh ok, by
sectioned I mean Caesarean and not remanded in a Looney bin. But she came away
from the experience muttering about how “they even draw on the walls!” They, in this case, being our boys. I can spend an hour tidying up with little or
no difference but Mister Husband, on the other hand, would put Aggie and Kim to
shame after only 10 minutes. Another witticism,
of which I am particularly fond, was sent to me via e-mail. It said “be the kind of person who, when your
feet hit the floor in the morning, the devil goes, oh shit. She’s up.”
I am not this person. But my kids
are. And Satan, for what it’s worth, I
hear ya buddy, I hear ya. Chatting to a
friend with two kids, she confided that both she and her husband have their
dinner of an evening standing up at the kitchen sink. The kids see them there; think they are doing
the dishes so they leave them alone to eat in peace. Other peoples’ stories
such as this are incredibly heartening.
I think, thank God I’m not alone.
I love our boys, of course I do,
that’s a redundant statement, but sometimes, just sometimes, I wish they were a
bit quieter. A bit more introspective.
Godammit, I can’t even watch re-runs of Malcolm in the Middle any more. I keep wondering which of our lot is going to
be Francis or Reece. Lois, I feel your
pain. I’ve been reading a book for a
number of years now. I have finished it; I just keep going back
for further explanations and reasoning’s. I keep it in the door of the car for handy
reference when I’m caught at lights or in traffic. It’s called Raising Boys by Steve
Biddulph. It offers fantastic
insight into the intricacies of the male species, starting from birth right up
to that troublesome age of manhood. I’m
getting great mileage out of it. But
Steve, there’s still 4 of them and only 1 of me. I am outnumbered slightly and can be at sea
most days. Naturally enough, Steve those are the days when all of your
reasoning’s and calming logic goes right over my head. I don’t care that one side of their brain
works while the other side takes a power nap, and this, in your mind, is the
reason why they piss all over the floor
whenever they see a toilet seat. I just
want someone to come into my house and put manners on them! Oh, and clean up the piss! Another annoying
little idiosyncrasy kids possess is their fondness to rat on each other. Girl Cousin was staying with us one afternoon. Both she and Screecher Creature No. 1 enjoy
similar positions in the family. Girl
Cousin is an only child and the oldest granddaughter. Indeed, she is, at present, the only
granddaughter. Screecher Creature No. 1
is the oldest in his family and the oldest grandson. There is a year between the two of them but
despite that, they get on quite well.
Girl Cousin is used to a lot of one on one attention and our poor lads
are used to, well, fighting for some.
Girl Cousin plays nicely and doesn’t occupy much space. I know this to be true as I have witnessed
it. Our boys, on the other hand are a
law onto themselves. Boys have to explore everything. And loudly.
Girl Cousin tidies up after herself and likes things to be in their
place. My lads use the furniture as gym apparatus,
toys get flung everywhere on an hourly basis. They punch, hit, and kick
each other. Girl Cousin is polite and quietly spoken. The only one louder
than the boys in this house is me. I
firmly believe I have a damaged vocal cord.
The one I reserve for screaming at them.
A big huge part of me was looking forward to this “play date” as I was
interested to see what the shift in dynamic might bring. But my eyes were opened, as it were, when
Girl Cousin came to play. Within 10
minutes of her mother departing, it appeared there was a whistle blower in the
camp. One of “the boys” was “moving the
buggy.” It seemed I had a little helper
on my hands and she was determined to keep them in line. Later on that evening
she appeared again to inform Mister Husband and me that “the boys are throwing
clothes everywhere.” I think she was a
little bit taken aback at the swiftness of Mister Husband’s reaction. The boys were indeed, “throwing clothes
everywhere” and having a great old time until Mister Husband appeared on the
scene and put a rather abrupt end to the fun and games. Later on that evening when Girl Cousin had
gone home, it transpired that she “told” them to do it. Of course, the
Screecher Creatures didn’t stop for a minute and think for themselves. It seems though, regardless of gender, they
all like to rat on each other. I suppose
it’s a kind of protection racket in a basic sense. Tell on the perp, they’ll get their asses
kicked by someone else and I’ll live to see another day. Today Screecher Creature No. 3 was heard
roaring from the bottom of our (considerable) garden. Like the Doppler effect, the sound from far
away was getting closer and the power of the tattle tale was so strong, he
battled his way through knee high, withered, stiff bits of dried grass and
thistle to complain that one of the Screecher Creatures “hit my neck.” It wasn’t even a good tell-tale, bordering on
mediocre in fact. It wasn’t worth his
while especially when, tale of woe told, he obligingly turned on his heel and
went back the way he came, struggling through the tall grass again! But I can
talk. As soon as Mister Husband walks in
the door, I’m off. I rat on each and
every one of them. Sometimes he laughs, sometimes he shakes his head, sometimes
he pats me on the back and says “there, there.” To sum
it up, I think it is fair to say that all kids great and small, are fond of
tittle tattling. And in some cases, the
mammies are too!! How many of us have
used that old chestnut “wait till your father gets home?” As I thought, a
pretty good show of hands. Another
saying springs to mind; they didn’t get it from the ground!
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