Category Archives: mom

Mommy’s Story: Whose Mouth is it Anyway?

Recently Michael’s mommy brought him to Ms. K’s in the morning, taking over my burden as I had to get to work extra early.

He usually clings to her quite a bit, probably thinking that if he latches on hard enough, he can keep her from leaving him.

She ended up carrying him inside. He just didn’t want to go.

She tried to cheer him up.

“Would you like me to come get you after nap, before I pick up your sister at school?”

No answer.

“Would you like some chocolate?”

No answer.

“What’s the matter?”

Softly, with as few words as possible, he said he was a statue.

“Well, can you at least nod your head when I ask something?”

He rolled his eyes and gave short little derisive snort.

“My mouth is not working.”

“It’s not?”

“No. It won’t start working until yours stops.”

Saturday Matinee

Michael’s was “helping” his mom with dinner. Being vertically challenged, it’s not a simple task for her to reach the box in the top cupboard, given the depth of the cupboard and the amount of other items blocking the box, so she needed a step stool and a helper.

“Michael, hold the box of macaroni while I put the rest of the stuff away,” she said.

Daddy and Michael made a special trip to the store later.

The Apple and The Tree

Following are some excerpts from my own mother’s writings about her life as a single mother in the suburbs of Sacramento, California dealing with three boys: Nine, Eight and Three. The three-year-old she refers to so often is me.

If blogging were around in 1967, she would have had one. As it is, these are transcribed from hand-typed pages, yellowed and tattered from age.

Tuesday, February 7
Three year old running around singing the song of the camp fire girls. SING WO-HE-LO, SING WO-HE-LO… etc. Then he comments on how he wants to be a Campfire Girl – the fact that he is already aimed on the pathway to boyhood doesn’t seem to deter him. Then it dawns on me – it’s the mints. The campfire mints that we bought and which are rationed out in all too small amounts to suit his greedy little sweet-tooth. I suppose he thinks that if he were a Campfire Girl he would be in on the ground floor, so to speak, and get his little hands on all the mints he wanted. So after lunch I bribe him with one to go outside so that I may write for a few minutes.

(I remember a lot of instances from my childhood of being bribed to go outside.)

Thursday, February 9
Unfortunately, I have passed the point of clear thinking for the day, if I ever came to it, I’m not to sure by now. My mind has mostly been on how unbelievably cold a house can get when it is permeated by this foggy drizzle through every pore.

This evening the nine-year-old was showing his two brothers how people dance when they go out on dates. It got pretty funny when he was trying to put his arm around the small one’s waist and waltz around. Then the eight-year-old was showing us a folk dance that he learned in school which involves clapping hands over head. A three-year-old’s arms are not yet long enough to meet over his head and it was funny to see him laughing like a fool and clonking himself in the head trying to clap his hands.

Friday, February 10
Am still trying to recover from the shock of seeing that strange, unfamiliar glow in the sky. Felt like a mole who has just popped his head out from the underground for the first time. However, this phenomena brought with it some assorted ills. For instance, the crumbs on my kitchen floor not only stood out in bold relief, but today they cast shadows which got longer as the day grew shorter. Growing weary of watching this unusual sight, I got out the vacuum, which hasn’t been at all well lately, and after playing shuffleboard for awhile it begrudgingly picked some of the stuff up.

Tuesday, February 14
Today will reign supreme in my mind as one of the worst in the history of mankind, at least in our house. Starting with a fruitless search for a bunch of misplaced valentines with a few assorted other tragedies at the same time. Actually, the simple act of getting up in the morning is an over-whelming crisis to me and usually if I do that with relative lack of discomfort I feel pleased.

When I went out to the garage, the car gave a lurch forward and barged into the back of our little sailboat. I suppose I would have been grateful for the fact that it didn’t reward me by plummeting down right on the hood.

The ordeal at nursery school doesn’t bear repeating, so I won’t. Back home to bake cupcakes for the Cubscouts and cherry tarts as a present for Valentine’s day. In between phone calls and tearing out my hair, I managed to get little else done.

(I’m still curious as to what happened at nursery school. I always loved it when my own mom was there as a volunteer, even though I accidentally pelted her with a rock once. I still feel bad about that, by the way.)

Sunday, February 17th
I was talking with the neighbors, and one of them asked me if I’d ever used one of those bombs to clean my oven. I told her no, I hadn’t, but I was seriously considering using a hand grenade.

(This is just a sample of several stacks of writings my mother did. I think, like me, writing was her catharsis – a means to release the stress of parenthood. Particularly parenting a very busy set of boys. Not only do I see where Michael gets his mischievous nature, but I see where I get my bizarre sense of humor.)

No Weigh

Saturday morning. Michael and I are fresh out of the shower, and Michael spies our new bathroom scale. Up until recently, we haven’t had one.

“What’s that?” he asks.

“It’s a scale,” his mom says, and she pulls it out from under the chair with her foot.

“What’s it do?” Michael asks.

“You weigh yourself. Here, get on.” She lifts him up and sets him down on the scale. The needle swings up just a bit, and lands on about 35 pounds.

“Hmmmm…he registers about 40 pounds at the doctor’s,” his mom observes.

“Sheesh… that means I’m even heavier than I thought,” I say, disappointed in what I thought were monumental efforts to lose weight.

“Okay,” he says to his mom, “now it’s your turn!”

NO!” she roars softly.

Thinking quickly, Michael interprets her response.

“It’s just for boys?”

“Yeah, that’s right. It’s just for boys,” she confirms.

And if either one of us want to remain alive, that’s the way we’re going to keep it.

Signs That I Am Outside The Circle

Daddy is making coffee, hurrying to get out the door and off to work.

Mama has Michael set down in his spot at the table with a glass of juice and is quizzing him about his breakfast choice.

Mama: “Michael, what do you want for breakfast?”

Michael: “Uh, um, Purple!”

Mama: “Okay, I understand that.” She then moves on to ask him what he wants in his lunch at Ms K’s.

Meanwhile, I’m still puzzled. Purple? Do we have a food that is purple?

I realize that this is one of those instances where you just don’t ask questions.

Us Time

Every day, my wife and I find ourselves in an beaten-down, drained-dry emotional condition where we could easily be huddled in a dark corner of the house, weeping and holding on to each other for dear life in response to the onslaught of Michael and his sisters. Between the screaming, crying, whining, demands to be entertained and constant policing of manners and responsible behaviors, by the end of the day my wife and I are just plain spent.

We don’t gently fall asleep at night, we pass out.

They say you should take time to be together.

Sometimes, though, taking isn’t such an easy thing to do. Taking implies that there is at least some willingness on the part of the take-ee to let go.

Since we can’t seem to take time, we steal it.

Hop on over to Discovering Dad to read all about it, in an article I’ve written entitled Stolen Moments.

Then see if you can’t find a way to do something like that yourselves.

Highlights from a Birthday Dinner

Recently it was Michael’s Mommy’s birthday. I took her out to a local seafood restaurant for lobster, as it is very tasty and what she yearns for most, foody-wise.

Since Michael is our own and does not have the pleasure of changing parental venue from time to time as his sisters do, he came along with us. I explained to him, up close and personal-like, that he would need to be very good in the restaurant, because it was mommy’s birthday and it was her turn to be special.

He responded by fidgeting and looking in every direction except mine. I might as well have been describing Einstein’s theory of special relativity.

Immediately upon entering the restaurant, we were greeted by a host who asked how many were in our party. Michael was captivated by the sight before him: a large tank filled with water and crawling with lobsters.

“Daddy! I want to go see the bugs that crawl!” he said excitedly.

“Okay, we will in just a minute. Let’s get our table and then we’ll go see the bugs that crawl.” Evidently he’s been paying close attention to Alton Brown.

After we sat down, I told my wife she could relax and pore over the menu (like she really needed to – hello! Lobster! Lots of it!) while I took Michael to look at the critters in the tank.

He was fascinated with them, watching them scuttle around on the floor of the tank, climbing on top of one another, claws rendered ineffectual by giant blue rubber bands.

“I want that one!” he said, pointing to a large, very active lobster.

“What are you going to do with it?”

“I’m going to eat its head!”

Where did that come from? When I was his age, I would have tossed my cookies just smelling a lobster, let alone eating its head.

“Are you sure? It looks kind of mean,” I said, hoping to dissuade him from actually ordering lobster. I don’t think they have it on the kids’ menu, but these days you can never be too sure.

“Yes. I want to take it apart and eat its head and pull off its eyes,” he said. The cruelty! How did I raise such a sadistic child? He’s only four, how could he have built up such a store of repressed hostility already?

“Okay! Well, let’s go see what your mom is doing!” I said, hoping to change the subject to something less gruesome.

When we got back to our table we saw another family sitting at the next booth: a mom, dad and two girls who were on either side of Michael’s age. Oddly enough, our two families were the only ones seated in the area. Could the restaurant staff be trying to protect their less rambunctious patrons from the three Tasmanian devils they parked here?

Indeed so. After we ordered our dinner, the younger girl, who was probably just past two, popped up and started dancing around. It wasn’t long before Michael was intrigued right out of his seat and onto the carpet to dance along with her, sans music.

Then they started racing, sprinting around the tables in our secluded little corner of the restaurant, somehow avoiding careening into the walls and chairs as well as each other. We figured it was all well and good since we were pretty much alone. We are not the kind of parents who would let their child run wild and free in public, mind you! But in the absence of public, no big deal.

Seeing our kids playing together broke the ice, so to speak, so we introduced ourselves to the other couple. They asked if their kids were ruining our evening,

“Heck no! This is free entertainment, and they’re keeping Michael occupied. I would have paid big money for service like this.”

When Michael’s dinner finally arrived, his mom called him back. He ran up, pink-cheeked and out of breath.

“You need to eat some chicken,” she said.

He quickly nibbled off two bites, swallowed and ran off to find his playmates.

Then his younger playmate was called to her own table and had to eat some of her dinner. Michael, somewhat lacking in social graces, called out to her:

“Hey! Hey, baby thing!”

“Our daughter is named ‘baby thing,’ apparently,” the girl’s dad said, amused, to his wife.

“Michael! Ask her what her name is!” I scolded.

“Umm… what’s your name?” he asked. She just blinked at him and grinned, as only a two-and-a-half year old can do. Her father spoke up.

“Her name is Eva,” he said.

“This is Michael,” I said.

Sensing that protocol has been satisfied, off they ran again.

Mommy’s dinner finally arrived. On one of his passes, she asked Michael if he’d like some of it, since he was so interested in them before and had made such lofty statements about the manner in which he would consume them. Nope, he wanted nothing to do with it. So he ate another twelve milligrams of his chicken strips, then jumped down to dance with the girls.

Well, as they say, it’s all fun and games until someone gets hurt.

At one point during his table-side dancing, Michael bounced up under the table and clonked his skull on the underside. It was a heavy table constructed of solid oak planks, but he hit it hard enough to make the salt and pepper shakers leap two inches and land on their sides. He bent over and held his head, obviously in pain. His mom went to him immediately to check the wound and have him to sit with her for a minute. With the force of the blow and the way he was bent over, I was expecting the poor little guy to really bawl.

The girls’ dad called them over. “Michael hit his head pretty hard. We’d better let him alone for a while.”

“He’ll be okay,” I said. “It might slow him down for a few minutes but…” I didn’t even get the sentence out of my mouth when Michael straightened up and was off and running again.

“Wow!” they said. “He didn’t even cry!” That’s my boy. Doesn’t know the meaning of pain. Unless he’s delivering it. Sort of like Chuck Norris.

All in all, a fine evening out. His mom actually got to fully enjoy her dinner without having Michael jab her in the ear with his elbows every 90 seconds, and she could drink her water without fear of Michael’s batter-fried backwash.

To top it off, she got to wear a fish hat and have her picture taken while the wait staff sang “Happy Birthday” for her.

Because I don’t want to sleep on the couchlove her, I didn’t post the picture. You can use your imagination.

Happy Birthday, Michael’s Mommy!

Message from the Front

I was away on Thursday, traveling out of town on business early in the morning and returning late in the evening.

While infrequent and fairly benign, these trips always make me tense up; not because I’m anxious about business, but because I know that my poor wife has to deal with Michael all by herself.

Here is her day, in her own words, copied from the emails she sent me:

Have had a fun filled day with all kinds of adventure.

The latest thing that happened is B called. She asked for you and I reminded her you were in California. I didn’t bother to mention you were on your way back. Anyway she asked if I would answer a question regarding meat. Sure, I said.

“Is hamburger that has been in the fridge for just over a week still good? It is brown on the outside but pink in the middle.”

“What is the expiration date?”

“April 24th” (note that May 1 is the day of this call)

“Was it previously frozen? Or just partially used and put back in the fridge?”

“Yes, partially used and put back in the fridge.”

“The hamburger is probably bad and I wouldn’t trust it. It was past pull date and open in the fridge for a week. Cooked hamburger is only good in the fridge for a week! Do you have anything else to cook?”

“I will think of something. My mom will be home in 15 min so I have to figure something out.” (I could tell by her voice that she was nervous because she probably was expected to cook dinner and she is cutting it close because of dinking)

I told B if for some reason her mom doesn’t come home and she need something to eat I will be more than happy to drive by some hamburger for her to make dinner for the both of them.

————–

This morning Michael informed me that only boys can learn things.

————–

God help me!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Michael saw the “magic dough” your mom brought last weekend, So I gave him one can to play with. After opening the container we found this dried up shriveled piece of colored cement. Michael is determined to play with it and is sure he can re-hydrate it by saturating it with water. After multiple attempts by S and me it is obvious that Michael is going to be left disappointed.

I opened all the cans and showed Michael that they were all hard. The blue one has this white growth looking things and I said, “look this has funk all over it” (Yes I did say “funk”). Now Michael won’t stop saying funk and is asking why his hair has funk. He keeps opening and examine the evaporated husks of “magic dough” and asking why it all has funk.

The day just keeps getting better.

————

Through it all, I arrived home to find everyone alive and well, Michael jammie-fied and ready for bed, and my dinner waiting for me in the refrigerator.

And it was not spoiled hamburger.

Humbled, a little

Once again my wife has proven her mettle.

I have learned, over the years we’ve been married, not to underestimate her or her ability to solve a problem practically and using available materials.

We have a hummingbird feeder that hangs from the pergola over our deck. Since Saturday was such a nice day she decided to fill it up with sugar syrup. She invariably asks me for the recipe because the ratio of sugar to water is important, and boiling it is important too, in order to break the sucrose molecules down into the component glucose and fructose.

As she filled the feeder, I was busy filling up tiki torches.

She stood back, and then saw that feeder was dripping steadily. I know this occurs, because the feeder is poorly made with a loosely-fitting plastic base, circular metal escutcheon with fake flowers, and glass bottle. The escutcheon and base weren’t exactly constructed with the tightest tolerances, and so if it isn’t put together just right, it leaks. Furthermore, it can only be tightened so much because with one extra turn, the threads slip and suddenly you’re finding yourself drenched in sugar water and holding the base in your hands.

Which is pretty much what happened. After hanging it, she gave it that extra turn to tighten it up, and the syrup started pouring out. She called out to me to help, and despite the fact that my fingers were coated in tiki torch fuel and char from burnt wicks, I ran over to help. There was not much I could do by the time I got there. I tried to explain that the feeder just isn’t made well and you can’t tighten it too much.

“We should put some plumber’s tape on it to seal it up,” she said. In my head, I pooh-poohed the idea immediately. But I held my tongue, as I’m not one to hurt her feelings by dismissing her ideas out of hand. Instead, I just made more syrup, aligned the feeder’s components to my satisfaction, and tightened it up just enough.

After hanging it, my wife reported: “It’s still dripping.”

“Yes, it’s going to do that,” I reasoned, believing that there really isn’t anything to be done about it. It’s just the way it’s going to go.

“Go get that plumber’s tape and use that to seal it,” she said again.

“Plumber’s tape? Where are you going to put plumber’s tape?” I asked, hoping to explain just how it wouldn’t work so she’d drop the subject.

“Around the outside of the base, to provide a good seal.”

“I don’t think it would work,” I said. I had this image of her trying, frustrated, to wrap tape around the outside of the base as it slipped off over and over again until she gave up. Then I would just smile smugly. Yeah. That’s what would happen.

But I didn’t pursue the argument. As I said earlier, I have learned through experience that when she puts her mind to things, she gets them done and proves me wrong. More than once I have explained to her how her idea won’t work, and she has gone ahead with it anyway, and shown me, gently and without the requisite “I Told You So!”, just how right she is.

After the feeder, which I had so carefully assembled, had entirely dripped dry of syrup, she went into the house and made more.

And then she went into the garage, and searched through the hopeless mess that is my workbench, returning with a small, blue and white roll of Teflon tape.

With a closed mouth, I watched her carefully wrap the tape around the outside of the base, where it meets the escutcheon. She did a beautiful job. It was wrapped snugly and evenly, leaving a nice smooth edge. She then put a couple of wraps around the bottle itself to help snug the base to it and allow a better fit.

Satisfied, she assembled the filled feeder and hung it up.

We both watched it for a couple of minutes.

“It’s not dripping,” she said, proudly.

“No, it’s not.”

“I did it!” she said, even more proudly.

“Yes, you sure did.”

She grinned at me.

“Does it hurt, being right all the time?” I ask her this every time she pulls one over on me and proves me wrong. It happens a lot.

“Yes; sometimes, it does,” she said, still smiling.

Oh, Yeah?

Michael’s mom has just sat down to rest her injured leg, after being on her feet pretty much all day long.

Michael: “Mama, wanna come up to my room?”

Mama: “Michael, I’m going to stay in here. How about we snuggle?”

Michael: “You want to come up to my room.” (Note that this is issued as a statement of fact)

Mama: “No, I really don’t right now. But we can play legos right here!”

Michael: “Please? We need to go up to my room!”

Mama: “We can play legos right here, Michael. I’m not going up stairs right now.”

Michael: “Fine! Then I’m going away!” (he stomps into the living room)

(from a distance): “And I’m not going to be your friend! Any more!”