Some of my not so wonderful mothering moments
have been when:
I gave them corn flakes for tea. Or chocolate
sandwiches. I must have shares in
Nutella at this stage.
I send mixed messages like “Leave that plant/computer/alone!
Stop jumping on the furniture,” and the next day let them wreck the plant, abuse
the computer and use the furniture as gym apparatus just to get 10 minutes
peace and quiet.
I discovered a dirty nappy just as we are leaving
the house and decided to let the girls in the crèche sort it when I got
there. Twenty minutes later.
I was snoozing on the couch and heard the
distinct suck of the freezer door being opened.
Screecher Creatures were in search of their third ice-cream. And I didn’t stop them. (Summer time, post-partum
bad mothering moment)
I told Oldest Boy the ice-cream van that insisted
on showing up at 7pm during the summer, was an ambulance.
One of them had a rotten cold and a streaming nose
the colour of St. Patrick’s Day. I
foolishly, foolishly took him into a
“boutique” and was forced to hide a black ensemble when he used it as a tissue.
It’s 6.30 am and the eldest appears at my
bedside. I get up. But only to park him in front of Ben 10. Then I go back to bed for another hour.
They want to go swimming on Sunday and I tell
them Sunday is the day they pull the plug and clean the pool.
The then baby decided he didn’t want to sleep at
night time. He spent the next couple of
weeks sleeping by my bedside in his buggy.
The two year old walked into crèche and announced
for all to hear that “the f*@#ing car” is broken again. They don’t get it off the ground you
know. Apparently.
I “killed” the Old MacDonald tractor toy by
stamping on it. Hard. There were only so
many times I could listen to that rhyme!
I accidently on purpose threw some toys into the
fire because if I told them once to pick up after themselves, I told them a
dozen times.
It was Christmas Eve (babe) and I toyed with not
telling the Screechers about Santy’s imminent arrival because I knew sure as
eggs is eggs; they would be at my bedside at 4am.
The baby got recycled toys out of the attic for
Christmas. In our defence, he was only 8
months old.
We spent €28 for two hours in a shopping centre
crèche just so Mister Husband and I could have a cup of coffee and a chat in
peace. Expensive bloody coffee but so worth it!
But you know what? They’re all still alive and none the worse
for it. And so are we.
I am crying laughing! Love the boutique-tissue incident, and the ice-cream van as ambulance is genius. We have been known to say the pool is closed on a Sunday but the plug being pulled is better. And as for the broken car....
ReplyDeleteI've heard of people telling their kids the ice-cream van plays music when the ice-cream is all gone!
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