Brothers In Arms |
With four boys in the house the odd
fight is inevitable. Or pretty much
guaranteed. As parents, Mister Husband
and I have gone down the usual road lined with threats and empty promises to
withhold treats until further notice, stop all cartoon watching and decide those
who cannot have manners and stop shouting will not go swimming at the weekend.
They don’t work. Most likely because they are never properly
carried out. I have found you need to
hit upon an immediate treat. For example
if they know the cinema is on the cards that afternoon, that is the threat to use, not something that is two or more sleeps
down the line.
We’ve all got short memories. Or in our case, a terminal dose of anything-for-a-quiet-life-itis.
We have stumbled upon a little
beauty, however. The advent and subsequent
birth of the recent Minecraft computer
game craze in which you get to be the Master Builder (Lego Movie reference
right there!)
The vaguest threat to have a Minecraft ban imposed sees exemplary behaviour
for a record 15 minutes or thereabouts.
One morning last Christmas during
the Minecraft advent, a DS ban was in
place so break-outs on the school run were to be expected.
I tend to turn up the volume of the
radio in an attempt to drown out the fracas behind me but that can only do so
much.
I was forced to employ some
distraction tactics.
“Let’s see who can find a car with
antlers and a red nose!”
“That’s so easy! There’s one.
And another.”
We approached the parish church and I
pointed out with much excitement and gusto, an abandoned Santa hat complete
with white bobble, tied onto a gate post.
“Where? Where is
it? I can’t see it!”
“Look. Over there.
Look out your window.” I tapped
at the glass and drove past the hat.
“Hah! I saw it and you didn’t.”
“No, you didn’t!” (Punch!) “You’re
only (punch!) saying that to annoy
me.”
“Ow!” (Punch!) “He (punch!)
punched me!”
Fights such as those are not just
reserved for car journeys. They like to
challenge each other when sweets have to be shared.
“They’re all the same lads!”
“No, they’re not! His are yellow jellies and mine are orange.
It’s not fair. He always gets the
yellow ones.”
“Ha!
Yesssssss! I got the best jellies
and you don’t.”
(Punch!) (Punch!) (Punch!)
It’s exhausting. But at least they’re predictable.
The other morning was the complete antithesis of their
sparring and whole hearted efforts to spill each other’s blood.
The older three boys were curled up together in one chair, deeply
engrossed in a multi-player game (both boys using their Nintendo DS but linked
up to one game) heavily in combat with Lovely Liam looking on from the side.
I was washing breakfast dishes and the conversation went
something exactly like this.
“Oh. Sorry about
that, Conor. Didn’t mean to hit you.”
“That’s ok. “
“Yeah, I was just moving my arm to kill you in the game and I
slipped.”
“I know. I said it’s
ok. It didn’t hurt.”
“Good. I’m really enjoying
this game.”
“Me too. You’re
really good at it.”
“No, you’re really
good at it.
“Yeah, I am I suppose.
But you’re really good at it too.”
“Thanks, Conor.”
“You’re welcome.”
Who are you? And what
have you done with my boys?????
I am always in awe of you as a parent of 4 kids!It looks like tremendous fun at times but I think Ive reached my limit with 2!!!
ReplyDeleteDon't be in awe. I'm a bit mental. As they say insanity is hereditary - you get it from your kids!!!!! I want to meet the person who invented wine and make them suffer a massive hug from me! *joke* *Kind of!!!!!*
DeleteI second Aedin! Four boys sounds like so much fun. I couldn't do it though... one girl is enough (says woman about to have second baby)
ReplyDeleteStop! I'm traumatised having met a school friend in the supermarket this morning. She has 3 much older lads than mine and she is being eaten out of house and home. I'm wrecked, DEMENTED trying to feed my lot so I am dreading the teenage years. I am already looking forward to my empty-nest-syndrome.
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