The questionnaire |
IT WAS the end of May 2006 and we were enjoying very
unseasonably good weather. Oldest Boy
was 12 weeks old and particularly cranky.
I did my best to quieten him and two days later my mother
noticed a little white corner peeping through on his bottom gum. His first tooth! Hence the crankiness.
Fast forward approximately 6 years. Toothache and decay deemed it necessary to
have 5 of those precious baby teeth pulled.
Four months shy of his ninth birthday and he (almost) has a
mouth full of adult teeth. Yesterday the pesky one in the front finally fell
out.
The first tooth in more than a year. Of course there was mention of the tooth
fairy and he entrusted me with his pearly white for fear he might forget to
leave it under his pillow or worse, lose it.
Before he went to bed he handed me a questionnaire for the
tooth fairy, grilling him/her about his/her name, age and best friend.
At first I thought he was setting a trap. I had visions of him scrutinising my handwriting
the following morning and accusing me of being the tooth fairy.
I wish! Imagine being
that small and dainty. Although why I would
want to collect teeth is beyond me!
But no, it seems the child was genuinely interested in how
old his tooth fairy is, and any other information he/she might care to share.
He was still awake when I retired for the night. It is quite possibly a sign of things to come
that I am asleep before him most nights. Anyhow 6.30am this morning saw me drag
my sorry ass from the warm depth of my bed and tip toe across the landing.
Hugely aware of how it was automatically guaranteed he would
wake early to see how much money the tooth fairy left, stealth was
paramount. I was also expecting the dog
to appear as is her wont when she hears my steps on the landing. She has a tendency
to sniff the face of the sleeping person to wake them up. Usually mine.
This could not happen.
Tippy tippy toe so as not to alert the dog or waken the
slumbering boy.
Steady hand going under the pillow looking for the note. He also had his tooth in a tin.
All of them were right under his head. Another trap I thought.
I managed to get tin, pencil and note out of the room and with
the dim light of the bathroom to guide me, answered his questions on the note in
the smallest handwriting I could manage.
Part two was getting them back under the pillow.
I didn’t hang about once I’d returned them and sure as eggs
are eggs, he appeared 15 minutes later.
He was delighted with his note and €2 coin. When I suggested he take it into school to
show his teacher, he declined.
I suspect he feared he would be laughed at by his
classmates.
And so it has started.
The growing up, the doubting, the suspicion. I have already been asked if the Easter bunny
really exists.
I fluffed my way through it as best I could.
At least he has written proof the tooth fairy exists.
Abigail got a fairy door for her birthday and regularly sends questionnaires to be filled in lol the advantage is the fairy door is downstairs and teeth are left on her doorstep instead of under a pillow, it really helps :)
ReplyDeleteI love those fairy doors. I found several teeth in my dressing gown pocket last night! oops! I may have a word with Elvis!
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