My kids have some lovely toys. They really do. One of them is a particular favourite. Of mine, that is. It is a little tin with 10 very realistic
looking bugs inside. It was bought at
Dublin Airport by one of my sisters on her happy holidays as a present for Screecher
Creature No. 1 and he loved it. He
carried the lady bird and the dragon fly with him everywhere. And then one day the lady bird got pushed
through the hole in the bath. Down the
back. Never to be seen again. So now the tin contains 9 bugs. The only reason there are still 9 bugs left in
the tin is because their anal mother does not allow them play with it any more. I did say it was a favourite of mine, didn’t I? Occasionally Screecher Creatures No. 1 and 2
will remember the Bug Tin and request it.
It distresses me because while they are playing with it, I hover like a
fervid OCD sufferer and bite my nails. I cannot relax. “Where’s the dung beetle?” I will cry out in alarm when he goes
missing. “Don’t let him (Screecher Creature
No. 3) have two, Conor. He’ll lose
them.” And then, the first chance I get,
I am scooping them up and counting them obsessively to make sure they are all
present and correct. It’s the only way
they still have them. There is no such
thing as longevity with my boys. They also have all the little Toy Story
characters that came from those €2 machines you see in the shopping
centres. Buzz, Woody, Jessie et al came
in about three or four little parts and I super glued them together to be forever
frozen in stance. Then they
“disappeared” into the lads’ memory boxes.
As a keepsake for their own children. Yes, the irony of this is not lost
on me. But such things have been known
to come back into circulation and who knows, they could very well be a collector’s
item one day. The boys are also the
owners of a gorgeous wooden Noah’s Ark.
This was a present from Santy in crèche a number of years ago. It came complete with Mr. and Mrs. Noah and a
whole ensemble of beautifully painted wooden animals. I say “came complete” because an elephant was
kidnapped on the day. I can still see the little girl clutching it but I didn’t
know how to grab it from her hand without incurring the wrath of her
parents. The only reason this, too, is
still in existence is because I “minded it.”
I put it In Storage Upstairs. The
Screecher Creatures have no memory of it.
It’s just too good for them to play with. This morning Screecher Creature No. 2
requested his Spiderman jigsaw book. This
is a favourite and I admit it makes a regular appearance despite there being
eleventeen hundred pieces to it. It came
out from Storage Upstairs and Screecher Creatures No. 2 and 3 played with it
for all of ten minutes before it was abandoned in favour of something on the
telly. I collected up the pieces a grand
total of 5 times. Head wrecker. It
lives in an old Hoggis Figgis bag and I had forgotten that the bag also
contains another hidden treasure; two little wooden trains with carriages that
are made of initials to spell the names of our two oldest boys. I bought them at a French market. They used to have pride of place on a window sill
in our old house but would be destroyed in an instant if they were left
unattended today. So what are they allowed to play with I hear
someone asking down the back? Well,
everything else. See, our lads are very
much outdoorsy types. If it’s wet and
mucky; all the better. The trampoline is
probably the best thing that came to live with us. It gets used each and every day without
fail. They are also great little
builders and love to construct whole cities out of their bin of blocks. Despite the fact that we plant acorns and
conkers every year, the volume of paper they use for drawing has probably
doubled our carbon footprint. And how could I forget how much they like to
torture each other? For boys who have
never seen wrestling, they’re bloody good at it! I suppose the Chinese burn trick was picked
up in school and sure, once you’ve been the receiver of one, you know how to
give in return. At this stage I truly
believe every male has an innate knowledge of how to administer a dead leg. Head locks are a bit trickier but if their
mother can master one (purely as a mechanism to get their coats on!) it would
follow that learning is born of demonstration.
Wedgies made a brief (get it?) appearance but must not have been a gratifying
skill as it died a death.
Thankfully. That’s one injury I
don’t fancy explaining to the GP. There
is a gadget, however, that holds them spellbound and is the cause of many loud
and raucous arguments; Mister Husband’s phone.
This is often used as a bribing tool and equally, a new game will be
downloaded if they behave themselves when we’re out and about. It’s a business phone and naturally enough it
will ring on occasion. Usually
in the middle of a very difficult level on some game or other and the Screecher
Creatures think nothing of disconnecting the incoming call. Lemme tell ya, hell hath no fury like a small
boy when his game is interrupted, or indeed when he loses a life, thanks to a
pesky client not having the sense to know better and hold off on his phone call
until the game is finished. Currently, I
am promoting teamwork and encouraging them to play nicely together, with
varying degrees of success. Although
there might be a nice surprise in the near future. Mister Husband has put his very excellent
technical and drawing skills to work and drawn up an impressive blue print of a
one roomed play house for them. Hold it
right there!! That sound you just heard
was my brain screeching to a halt. A one
roomed play house for them? In keeping with my customary practice of
removing their playthings, I fear this one will suffer the same fate. Except of course I cannot remove it per
se. More like move into it. Now there’s
a thought. I wonder, could it be sound
proofed?
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