I have a very politically incorrect sense of
humour when it comes to my kids. I regularly
tell Smallest Boy it is a good thing he is cute or he’d be up on Done Deal ages
ago.
It was Saturday on the weekend they were due back to school
after the mid-term break. We, my four
boys and I, had spent every waking moment together for the previous seven
days.
Usually we have swimming on Saturday but we had been the day
before so energy and noise levels were high, having done nothing to burn it off.
I needed to pick up a couple of things in the
supermarket. With my four slightly hyperactive
boys. I admit to sitting in the car for
a few moments before entering the supermarket.
A few deep breaths later I braved it.
And in we went.
I make sure these supermarket trips are very very quick.
I grabbed the raspberries, cream and bread and approached
the check-out.
With my four slightly hyperactive boys. All of them slip sliding on the floor.
I chose the queue with the least number of customers in it
and stood in line. This is where the
trouble usually escalates with my boys.
They’re not out of control or anything but there is a lot of
high jinks. Sliding along the floor,
climbing up onto the packing shelf and general boisterous horseplay. One of them usually derives great merriment
from swinging the metal cage thing at the till, making it squeak and creak.
One of the five most annoying sounds in the world.
I spend this time hissing “sssstop” and “have
mannersssssssss.”
Sometimes I notice other people smiling at them. Of course they could be gritting their teeth but
usually they tell me “they’re grand” and “they’re only playing.”
But we are not in a playground. We are in a supermarket. There are people of varying ages and sizes
using the aisles and I do not want one of my sliding boys to bowl into them and
send them flying.
One of my worst nightmares.
Can you imagine?
Anyway on this morning when my nerves were very much frayed
and my head was very much fit to bursting with having spent so much time with
them, I gathered up my purchases and stuffed my change back into my wallet.
I glanced over my shoulder at my skidding, sliding boys and
the one who was selecting the supermarket leaflets and leaned in towards the
male cashier.
“I don’t suppose,” I began, “that you have any electric
cattle prods on sale, do you?”
My politically incorrect sense of humour in full flow.
He didn’t smile. Not even
a tiny bit. Instead he put on a most
serious look and touched his forefinger off his chin.
Was he thinking about
it? I was joking!
Appears he was! “No,
not at the moment.” He said. My smile was now stuck between frozen and
starting again.
“But we have stuff coming in all the time. Maybe next week. Keep an eye out for the
leaflet.”
“Ok. Em, grand. Thanks. Come on, lads. Let’s go.”
I swept my raspberries, cream, bread and boys out of the shop and
towards the car.
You heard it here first.
Lidl might have electric cattle prods in next week. You’re welcome.
Ooh the queues will be a mile long now that you let the cat out of the bag ;) we could all do with one of those!
ReplyDeleteDo you know, my lads would probably love them! Wonder is there a medium/high/low stun setting.
ReplyDeleteHa ha-love this!Can't imagine how you cope 4 boys-good to see your sense of humour is well and truly intact-Id be in the foetal position in a corner!
ReplyDeleteAedín, I wait till I get home before assuming the foetal position. With a bottle of wine! I let the wine make the room rock so I don't have to!
DeleteThank you Gwen, it always feels like my boys are the only ones doing this type stuff, the floors are perfect for sliding and the 3 year old calls the kitchen roll bales his castle.
ReplyDeleteI went in to Aldi today with my two boys and baby in the trolley and that was bad enough, fair play for braving it with 4. MY 5 year old tried to take about 20 of the free car stickers and when I wouldn't let him he thought I wouldn't notice if he stuffed them down his tracksuit. Classy, Next week you think, great, will keep a look out!
Sinead, I find if I stop off at the croissants first, this keeps them busy for a while! I would try pulling the "wouldja lookit those unruly kids. Where on earth is their mother?" stunt but I'd never get away with it. I'm rarely seen without them so I'd be rumbled immediately.
DeleteHa ha ha. Can I have one too?! I absolutely hate that little cage thing at Lidl, as if there isn't enough noise from my children we just have to always be looking for more.
ReplyDeleteIt's like a magnet for kids, isn't it? And what's it FOR exactly? It's not like it's big enough for parents to put their kids in so they can do the shop in peace. And definitely not big enough for us to use so pretty useless invention.
DeleteI love your Politically incorrect speak. It is me to a t and I enjoy it even more when people don't get me. I blame my mom. Am off to bed and thanks to you I'm smiling, although if i've to answer a captcha now..... my smile might end if I fail more than once!
ReplyDeleteYay! Hope that means the pesky captcha has gone from my page. Thanks for your comment.
DeleteYou are brave - I bring the girls to the supermarket but avoid bringing the small boy if at all possible. Although if they are going to start selling cattle prods, maybe I will after all!
ReplyDeleteI try to avoid supermarkets with any children... Even if it means shopping at 8pm.!! I've spent my life threatening the use of a cattle prod, you can be damn sure I'll be top of the queue next week!!!
ReplyDeleteOh I dunno how you do it with four boys. I just feed the one year old throughout the whole trip... kind works!
ReplyDelete