What’s it like taking four kids to
McDonalds by yourself, you ask? Buckle
up and I’ll tell you.
First of all I turn into a girl
racer when I get in the door. I know the
best table to get (round one in the corner) and I start waving my arms like a
windmill and yelling at the oldest two to “jump in there quick before someone else sees it,” as I skin the other customers’ ankles
with the buggy, trying to get there myself.
On securing the seats, conversation
goes something like this: “Sit there,
no, sit down, and don’t move till I
get your food. What? You can do your wee’s in a minute. Please, stay
put.”
Then it’s time to get the food. My order is punctuated with several head
turns to see if there are still four of them sitting/standing on/or near the
table.
One of them usually goes missing at
this juncture. To get balloons. Hate balloons!
Happy Meals take up a lot of room on
one tray so I start waving again. Trying
to catch Oldest Boys attention to come and take them down to the table. It’s at times like this a mobile phone for a
seven and a half year old seems like a good idea.
I end up grabbing the boxes and
taking them down myself.
On getting there, conversation goes
something like this: “Where’s your
brother? He’s gone to the bathroom? I thought I told him to…..Never mind. Lookit, you
stay put. Don’t open those drinks
till I get back. Don’t open those drinks.”
Back up to the counter to collect the
rest of the order, casting anxious looks towards the bathroom doors. Hate bathrooms in fast food restaurants!
No sign of the escapee and as I am
heading down to the table with the tray of food, I spy Smallest Boy helping
himself to several handfuls of straws and napkins. Another boy runs past me and towards the
bathroom door.
I grab Smallest Boy and his
collection of straws, prop him onto my hip, and proceed into the bathroom area
to locate the missing bit of my quartet.
Conversation outside the men’s door
goes something like this: “Are you in
there? Are you done? I can’t
go in there. You’ll have to wipe your
own bum. Come one, you’re grand. Let’s go!”
Finally, all present and correct, I
settle seating arrangement arguments at the table – they all want to sit beside
or on me – and they begin to eat.
As they chow down, conversation
Bottle Watch goes something like this:
“Move your juice over, you’ll spill it.”
“Put the lid on your juice, it’ll get knocked over.” “Take the juice from Brendan. He’ll spill it.” “Use your straw. You’ll spill it all over yourself.” “That’s your juice and this is my
water. Please don’t spill it.”
Then there is a row over the Happy
Meal toy. Two Minions and one Smurfette.
“I want a Smurf.”
“How come he has a Smurf?”
“I have this Minion already.”
“Is mine?”
I grab the Minions and hunt down a
member of staff.
“Are they killing each other?” A kindred spirit in McDonalds. “We ran out of Smurfs yesterday. But we’ll have more in tomorrow.”
I explained about it being a back to
school treat and we wouldn’t be back.
“Let me have a look in the bottom of
the box.”
I returned to the table with the Minions
and peeled Smallest Boy away from my lunch, handed him his piece of burger bun
and helped the others with the lids on their drinks.
The Lovely Lady returned with two
Smurfettes in plastic bags. And
neglected to retrieve the Minions as well.
Happy days.
After that the little niggly rows
begin over the Smurfettes and the Minions.
Which are, in case you don’t know, identical bits of plastic.
“He has my one.”
“No!
That’s my Minion.”
“Where’s my smurf’s banana?”
“Is mine?”
McDonalds? With four kids at rush hour by myself? Not lovin’ it!
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