I am as hard
as mothers come. Nothing freaks or
grosses me out any more. I have caught
vomit in my open palm thanks to several gagging incidents with food. I have scrubbed poo from under my nails. Wiped all sorts off the floor and off
hands. Put tissues to noses streaming
with the vilest stuff imaginable but fascinating all the same. Just how much snot can one child contain
exactly? Currently, I am scooping discharge out of a small ear thanks to an
infection. I have used breast milk, also
this week, to clear up sticky, gloopy eyes.
I can wipe a child’s rear end in
my sleep. In fact I think I may have
done once. I opened my eyes to see the
said body part inches from my face and a request to wipe it, or was that a
dream? I have looked in the face of
fear, which was really wide open mouths displaying chewed up food and
laughed. That poo scene in Bridesmaids? Hoo hah! Chicken feed! My favourite scene in the movie is not the
“poo scene.” I like instead where the
brash blond one with all the boys (oh God!) is lamenting their sexual
development and the resulting state of the bed sheets. You know the scene I mean. I think it’s hilarious and at the same time, up
there with Nightmare on Elm Street. Yes,
I know, I may well laugh now, it’s all ahead of me. I can just about handle the body fluids. But there is
one thing that gives me the heebie jeebies; thread worms. I’m hard but not so hard that I cannot be
broken and these little bastards almost broke me. It was winter. I was heavily pregnant and they came and
visited. Not me, I hasten to add,
although there is no shame in being infested. The child in question happens to be a thumb
sucker so re-infestation was most likely on the cards. I will take head lice over thread worms any
day. I’m still waiting on these to put
in an appearance and so far they haven’t but it is only a small matter of
time. But the other disgusting, god
awful little filthers! If I may go
into some detail here, I will try to be brief.
Head lice can be eradicated pretty quickly and effectively. Just get the bottle of stuff, apply it, comb
the hair and wash. Or is it wash and
comb? Job done. Repeat as necessary I suppose. Like I said, I haven’t had the pleasure yet,
but from childhood experience, this was the course of action. Thread worms on the other hand are clever
little shits. Excuse the language but I
find it hard to be civil when in the company of evil. These little shits have a life cycle of 6 weeks.
Their eggs can live quite happily on a surface, any surface. A teddy bear, a duvet, a carpet, a sink, a
floor, a couch, play dough, a sand box, any-friggin-where!
Turns out they are not
fussy. But I am when it comes to these
horrors. And thorough. I scalded the hands off myself that winter,
disinfecting the boys’ bedroom. All of
their cuddly toys were black bagged and dumped.
I’m not being a bad mammy, they never played with them, they were merely
ornaments, and they weren’t even missed.
Finger nails were cut so close, I almost drew blood. Bed linen was boiled to the point of being
shrunk. I am of the opinion that too clean a house is almost as dangerous as a
filthy one, but I got down on my hands and knees and scrubbed, scrubbed,
scrubbed that day. I don’t know how I
didn’t go into labour. It really is true
what they say, the apple will fall when it’s ready. I asked the pharmacists advice, especially as
I was pregnant and there was another child in the house, too young for
dosing. The pharmacists told me I would
know if the smaller boy had them as I would see it in his nappy. I encounter soiled nappies several times a
day, but was never in the habit of inspecting them. Until then.
Even the Screecher Creatures were momentarily silenced when they saw me
looking within. My head was seriously
wrecked. Boys being boys, they have a
fascination with their appendage and now every time I see a hand reaching into
a waistband, which can be numerous times a day, my heart stops. The good old worming solution that tastes
slightly of bananas is always in the house.
I make sure of it. A word of
advice here, get the liquid version. The
Cure is also available in tablet form which requires crushing with two spoons.
Too much palaver. The school is great,
they are big believers in the expression that to be forewarned is to be forearmed
and always inform parents when head lice are in the school. I practically relish finding one. They won’t stand a chance!
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