OH, HOW I have changed and grown. This is not my first mid-term break hence the
fact I will not be found sobbing somewhere.
Fact is I was really looking forward to the break. Couldn’t wait in fact. A whole week off school which means we are
not tied to the clock.
Okay there is one appointment that we have to keep but I can
live with that. The rest of the time we
are free as birds!
And today was a bank holiday. Where the clocks went back.
The clocks changing would have thrown me into a frenzy a
couple of years back. I lived in fear
and absolute dread of that extra hour. Let’s
face it; only those in their 20’s and 60’s benefit from those three thousand
six hundred seconds.
I had to Google that.
Anyone else *read those with kids* are forced out of the scratcher at the ungodly hour of 4am because their anti-sleep toddler is usually up at 5am.
I had to Google that.
Anyone else *read those with kids* are forced out of the scratcher at the ungodly hour of 4am because their anti-sleep toddler is usually up at 5am.
I was that parent. I still
have not managed to gather the words that come even close to describing the
horror and upset I experienced during those dark mornings.
Anyway I am not there anymore. Thanks be to god.
This morning I was gently woken at 9am. 9am
on a bank holiday Monday morning. I’ll
take that.
The boys were downstairs; possibly watered and fed. Probably not but I didn’t care.
Much.
It was 9am.
By the time 10am rolled round I was up and dressed, the boys
were fed, a picnic was packed and the kennels down the road contacted to see if
they had doggy day care room for Juno.
They did.
Lovely Liam felt it necessary to leave strict instructions
and roared out the window “don’t torture her!” before we scorched off towards the
M9 in the direction of Dublin Zoo.
Because the Dublin City Marathon was taking place we thought
it best to park in the Red Cow and take the Luas as far as Heuston Station and
then *don’t tell the kids* walk to the Phoenix Park and the zoo.
There was a near miss in the car park where one of the boys
declined to heed the “no running! We’re
in fast car territory” warning.
It was a lesson learned for all of about 5 minutes but we
have to go with what we’ve got.
It was great. We were
jammed into the Luas like sardines complete with buggy and spent the next 10
stops telling the kids to mind the door, hang on and we’re not there yet. Our kids are bolters and an open space or
door to them is a signal to run.
It was a great day and if I were to do a monetary breakdown
it would look something like this:
Picnic supplies in Lidl €16
Parking in Red Cow (for the day) €4
Luas into the zoo (return) for 4 kids and 2 adults €16
Admission into the zoo €55
Coffees & ice cream in the zoo €12
Doggy day care €10
Gift shop (pocket money from nana) €24
What‘s this Carlsberg says:
A fun family day out where we are guaranteed exhaustion at the end of
it? Priceless.
Mid-term break: you haven’t
broken me yet and I’m not about to let you!!
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