It hasn’t stopped raining in two
days. Non-stop. There are pictures on the internet of
abandoned cars half buried in lake puddles.
It is also two days since I got
out for a run. My head is blocked, my
temper is short, and the dog keeps looking mournfully at me. Every time I go under the stairs for the
sweeping brush or the hoover, she tags along in joyous doggy delight, just
waiting for my leg to be at the perfect angle so she can hump it. She thinks I am getting her lead down and we
are going for a run.
Sorry, Juno.
I have removed various Lego men,
broken bits of plastic toys and what not from her jaws.
Smallest Boy slept for just forty
minutes, in the car, and is a bit cross.
I have been given out to already
because “there is nothing to do around here” and “we never get to go anywhere.”
Let’s make some modelling
clay!!!!
I steal some wood glue from
Mister Husband’s toy box and mix one part to two parts Cornflour to make oddly
velvety clay.
What can we make out of it?
I suggest marbles, a snowman,
Lego men, The Lonely Beast, fruit and vegetables or just plain old moulding it
in their hands.
All stupid suggestions.
I grit my teeth because I would
say something ugly and inappropriate otherwise.
Then Lovely Liam somehow falls
into the toilet. I don’t know
either. He said he slipped and it hurts
and I was issued with strict and screechy instructions to make the pain go
away.
Liam! Why is your arse blue?
Shit! Toilet cleaner!!!!
Suppose I’d better wash him
rather than just swipe with some toilet paper.
Satisfied that a rash wasn’t appearing, I haul up his underclothes and
head off to another summons.
“Mammy! Juno’s eating something!”
Christ, the modelling clay made
of glue. Note to self: do not give Smallest Boy play dough made out
of glue. Or plastic toy soldiers. Or leave him sitting alone with a spoon and
yogurt.
“Who wants to watch something on
the telly?”
How can such an innocent question
raise havoc?
Because they all want to watch
something different, that’s how.
I fly into the kitchen and
reappear with a plastic tub containing orange and mint biscuit treats. They fight for several minutes over who gets
what.
I decide for them and throw a
handful onto the couch. “Quick!” I
say. “Before Juno gets them!”
I leave them in the scrum and
take my coffee to the bathroom.
The dog follows me. Looking hopeful.
Sorry, Juno. Again.
Still no walk and I close the
bathroom door, mentally telling her she is not getting my leg to hump
either.
Minutes later someone informs me,
loudly, that Juno is eating the curtain and because they saw her, it doesn’t
mean they have to pay for the damage.
“I’m still hungry.”
The next three hours, yes three,
are hideously filled with bowls of cereal, hot chocolates and Freddo bars,
crackers and cheese, soup, chopped up fruit, cheese strings and ham sandwiches.
Initial offers of pasta are
refused. Our kids are grazers.
It is only the afternoon of the
day they got their Easter holidays from school.
More than once I feel a slight panic over what on earth am I going to do
with them for the next two weeks.
Especially if this crap weather keeps up.
They are too young to be fed the
“it is not my job to entertain you” line.
And finally, Oldest Boy settles
down at the table to read a facts of life book called What’s Happening To Me?
Shy Boy wanders off to the
bathroom to, worryingly, lay an egg.
Lovely Liam and Smallest Boy get
comfy in front of Netflix.
It may only be a ten minute
reprieve, but that’s all I need.
Boredom is good for them. Builds character. (Of course, it might kill you. Hang in there.)
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