Is it just me or did
anyone else have all the answers before
the kids came along? Remember all those
supermarket trips where other peoples’ kids were pitching fits all over the
place? What about early bird meals in
restaurants where the little blighters gave you indigestion? I recall going to see Shrek or some such at
the cinema once. I was outraged,
absolutely incensed that there were kids at it.
How dare they? Shur, I couldn’t hear a bloody thing with
them shouting and roaring, in general not watching the film at all. Naturally enough, I knew how to put manners
on them all and give the parents a few pointers to boot. Super Nanny Jo Frost wouldn’t get a look
in. I was such a gobshite. Even when the kids did come along, I was smug and all knowing, content in the absolute
knowledge that mine would behave perfectly all of the time. Oh, how the mighty fall. And then it happened.
Our wonderful, perfectly mothered (mostly), cheerful (usually),
independent (always!) firstborn, let loose with his first proper sentence. Ok, so it was only two words, one after the
other. But it was with perfect clarity
and they were in context. The foreign
language type nonsense he had been using was suddenly perfectly coherent. He
told his daddy to shut up. I still remember
that feeling of dismay. It wasn’t nice
to hear the same child who had just the night before, gone from me to Mister
Husband and told us both individually that he “lobbed” us. (For those who are not fluent in toddler-ese,
he was saying love.) And now here he was, pointing a very determined Peter
Pointer at the man who had been part of his creation, and ordering him to shut
it. I felt shock directly after dismay. Where had he heard such an order? We, his parents, certainly never spoke to one
another like that. For a fleeting moment
I wondered was our eldest a mind reader. But I got over it and life moved on. It was a number of years later before he
decided to insult again. And this time
it was me in the firing range. He
thought it was funny to call me, his mother, the person who gave him life, a
fat arse. I rounded on him, telling him
whilst that certainly may be the case, no son of mine was ever going to comment on
my extra poundage. Too long, too wordy I
know but I think he got the message. I
will overlook a lot; in the grand scheme of things most of them are not that
important. Equally, I think it shows
that you are the bigger person when you can back down and say that you are
wrong and change your mind about something.
It does not make you weak and it does not mean your kids will walk all
over you in the future. But sometimes, unfortunately, you have to be the parent
and not the friend in an attempt to invest in your future relationship with
your kids. But what happens when you have a gaggle of
kids around the same age, and all looking forward to a trip to the pool. The oldest one, for example, acts up and you
threaten to withdraw the treat. It’s not
fair on the others, so what do you do?
Answers on a postcard please. I
reckon when they are older this can be sorted out by following through on the
threat and letting the others have their revenge on the perpetrator. That’s not really fair though either, unless
of course, a list of cage fighting rules is drawn up. It might seem harsh, but sometimes, as I am
discovering on this epic journey otherwise known as motherhood, tough love
really does work. On a recent occasion, I was told to
zip it by the same Screecher Creature No. 1.
This, it should be pointed out, but without condoning it, was picked up
from one of those dastardly American cartoon shows. Or else the school yard. Please, I asked of him, don’t bring it
home. That day I discovered, implementing a toy ban
works quite nicely. It broke my heart to do it, it really did, but the shrieks
of laughter from the other two miscreants only encouraged him to say it again
so the toy ban was implemented. When we
go to do our weekly shop, the boys go straight to the toy aisle where they pick
out something plastic-ey for a couple of euros.
Complete rubbish but they love it.
Friday nights bedtime is all talk of what they are going to “pick out”
the next day. Except this one time, it
wasn’t going to happen for Screecher Creature No. 1. The toy ban had well and truly been put in
place. There were tears. He begged.
He pleaded and he promised to never ever say “zippit” again. You betcha it would never happen again and
this was the only way to ensure that it didn’t.
For once, I followed through. I
enlisted the support and assistance of Mister Husband. How on earth were we
going to do this, I wondered. It’s not
fair on the others to include them in the embargo, but I couldn’t in all
consciousness have them select their crap pieces of junk with Screecher
Creature No. 1 looking balefully on. In
the end, with the offender still begging and pleading his case the whole way to
the supermarket, Mister Husband and I hatched a plan. We may have been cutting off or noses to
spite our face, but it was decided that Mister Husband would bring them into
the book shop whilst I whizzed around with the trolley. It worked a treat. There were no brightly coloured plastic items
bought. Instead, they got crappy
children’s TV comics for twice the price the junk in the supermarket would have
cost us. I’m still not sure who got the
better deal here.
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