Category Archives: parenting

Literatorture

Michael isn’t much of a reader yet.

Years ago, his mom and I held out high hopes. At the age of two he knew all of his letters and their sounds, and was spelling out words he saw: EXIT, STOP, OFF, WALK, etc. We assumed he was going be reading Dostoevsky and Joyce in no time.

But despite my efforts, reading to him on a daily basis and providing him a substantial library of early reader books, Michael hasn’t willingly ventured into the realm of reading.

Quite the opposite, in fact. Trying to cajole him into reading his books is like trying to get the cat to take a bath. He drags his feet hard enough to carve grooves in the floorboards.

And he likes TV. Way too much. He is skilled – nay, he is a virtuoso – at wearing down parental will, such that an otherwise sensible and firmly resolved parent can quickly be reduced to a slathering, gnashing primate capable only of acting upon the basest instincts of survival, such as biting and clawing his or her way through the couch cushions in order to find the remote and tune in Nick Jr. or Sprout to quell the dreaded, unending whine of “mommy? mommy? mommy? mommy? mommy? mommy? mommy? mommy?”

This is a fact of which I am very much not proud.

His mom and I have decided we owe it to him to be better than this. So last night, when Michael requested TV time, his mom told him that he must first read two simple books.

This triggered his response of whining, begging, pleading and tantrum-ing as we had expected it would. But his mom stood her ground, and with each outburst she added another book to the total, which made it up to five before he gave in.

She sat down with him and opened up the first book he’d selected, which was a SpongeBob phonics book. This one highlighted the long “I” sound, and explored use of the silent “e”. And as we have done with every attempt at helping him read, we insisted that he sound out the words.

To him, this was some form of excruciating torture. I watched from the kitchen as he twisted and squirmed and nearly hyperventilated trying to compile the sounds that comprise the word “him”. He struggled. He stammered. He whined, wiggled, wobbled and tore at his clothes as his mom slowly and painfully urged him to sound out each letter and then string those sounds together into the one word.

“I don’t remember what the word is!” he protested repeatedly.

“There’s no need to remember. Just sound it out,” his mom said repeatedly.

From the kitchen I witnessed this embroilment as his mom fought valiantly to prod him into figuring out the sounds himself and as he strained to do anything to get out of doing so.

From time to time she’d say “I think maybe your daddy had better help you with this, instead of me.” This is a phrase she pulls out whenever she wants to shock Michael into proper behavior. It usually works.

I couldn’t help but think that maybe she wanted a bit of a break herself.

“Okay,” I said. “Here I come.”

“Nooooooo!” protested Michael, from the floor.

“Yup. I’m going to read with you, and mommy is going to finish making dinner.”

My wife looked up at me with pleading, defeated eyes. I smiled and held out my hand. She ascended from the couch with the grateful expression of a soul redeemed, plucked from the seventh circle of The Inferno.

“All right, sport. Sit up here,” I said.

He didn’t move. I reached down and drew his boneless body into my lap and molded him into an upright position. “Come on. Sit up straight. We’re going to get through this.”

I was determined that we would make it through without fighting. I would give him space, I would give him leeway, I would give him latitude. I would not press, I would not become impatient, I would assist him and help him see that he can do this.

I was determined.

“All right, now. Let’s look at the page. What’s Plankton doing here?”

He relaxed immediately and described what Plankton was doing.

“And what’s SpongeBob holding?”

“A magnifying glass,” he said. “And these are cans of lima beans,” he offered, brightening.

“Right! How did you know they were lima beans?”

“It says so.” He pointed out the words.

“Well that’s great. Okay, since you know this, let’s read the words. Ready? Here we go. What’s this word?”

“I don’t know…”

“Okay, what’s this letter?”

“Y”

“And what sound does it make?”

“Yuh”

“Right. What’s the next letter?”

And so it went. Letter by letter, millimeter by millimeter, we went through each letter of each word, very slowly but no less surely covering each word and then repeating each sentence to reinforce. He became more confident with each word. The sounds and the comprehension came easier to him with each page, all the way up to the last one. Slowly and surely.

In all that time I’d spent with Michael, my wife completed dinner, dessert, an amuse bouche, mastered the five mother sauces, knitted two sweaters and built a replica of the Eiffel Tower from toothpicks. Okay, so I exaggerate. It was only a model of Sutter’s Fort.

But in this time, while he grew in his ability to read, I had grown in my patience. He and I both had our victories.

The Cow gets a Pink Slip

We have a diagnosis.

Just to recap a bit, you may recall a situation at Michael’s school in which we were concerned about his behavior and were taking steps to help Michael improve.

One of the things his mom and I talked about with his teachers was the possibility of a food allergy. The medical community is well aware of links between food allergies and behavior problems. This was our first course of action, to determine whether Michael’s spurious aggression had an organic root as opposed to a psychological or pathological one.

A few days ago, Michael’s mommy took him to the doctor for a blood draw (he got a trip to McDonald’s for chicken nuggets out of that). Evidently allergy tests these days are done with a blood draw, rather than the skin scratch test. Long story short, if your blood has antibodies that are hanging around ready to go dukes with a particular allergen, the lab test will ferret it out.

And ferret it out they did. Michael’s blood has two very specific antibodies, in fact.

One of them was for milk (and thus all things dairy).

So, there goes milk on the cereal. And ice cream. And cheese – oh, wait; he hates cheese. No big loss there.

He looooooves chocolate milk, though, so we’re going to have quite a time dealing with that. And what to put on his Wheaties in the morning?

Why, of course! Soy milk, right? Right!

Wrong. That other antibody he was carrying around is the one for all things soy.

Between the two, that clears out about ninety five percent of the processed food market. Have you seen how prevalent soy is in everything? Heck, I thought high-fructose corn syrup was ubiquitous; soy has it beat by a mile.

After getting the report from the doctor, I went to the store to find stuff for Michael that didn’t contain milk or soy.

Turns out, they use soy in everything, to bump up protein content and add bulk as well as coloring, a cooking agent and as a “natural” flavor. Sheesh. Good luck finding anything that doesn’t have either milk, soy or both. Even most brands of rice milk contain soy.

I did find some almond milk that is proudly soy free, and he actually likes it. I also found some hemp milk that’s soy-less, though I feel a little wary of pouring that on his frosted flakes. I’m worried that he might get the munchies at Ms S’s midway through the day, or suggest putting on some Led Zeppelin at music time.

Constructing a proper diet for Michael is going to be a challenge, for sure.

But you gotta do what you gotta do.

History Averted

It was a near miss.

We nearly pulled Michael out of his in-home preschool completely yesterday.

There were countless reasons: alleged complaints from parents about their kids being hurt by Michael, notes that come home describing Michael’s apparent inability to sit still or stay focused, reports of Michael being overwhelmed by the noise of the music program, Michael’s own grumblings about not wanting to go each morning.

And then there was the great peanut incident of last Friday. Michael came home wearing different clothes, and he told me that he wasn’t supposed to have peanuts so they changed him. That evening I found a bag of peanuts in his lunch box, which made no sense at all. I asked one of the teachers the following Monday what had happened, and she said they were concerned that Michael had brought peanuts to school, when there is a very clear no-peanut policy (one of the students has a severe allergy to peanuts). I explained that we don’t pack peanuts; either they were given to him or he snuck them by us somehow.

And then there was the conference that Michael’s mommy was brought in to Monday afternoon, when she’d gone to pick Michael up after having a very stressful and heartbreaking day at work. She left feeling that maybe Michael wasn’t fitting in, again.

To us, this seemed identical to the situation we’d encountered when Michael was two. It was something we never wanted to face again.

My wife and I talked about it Monday evening, and decided by Tuesday afternoon that Michael would not be going there any longer. She and I would take turns staying home with him for the forseeable future. To spare him, to spare us, to spare everyone.

When my wife arrived to collect Michael and his belongings, Ms S (the owner/operator/principal) went above and beyond to explain the back story to each situation.

It turns out that there was only one parent complaining, and that situation is well understood to be a spurious clash between Michael and one other student only. She said that Michael has made tremendous progress in his ability to sit still and to stay focused. While he is overwhelmed by the sound and activity level of the music class, it is something they understand and cope with, and hope to find a resolution for.

The bottom line is that they very much want Michael to stay.

My wife and I were very relieved to know this, and were encouraged enough to change our course and keep Michael going there until summer, and after that it’s off to public kindergarten.

In the mean time his mom and I will be working to find methods for helping Michael improve his ability to consistently make better choices, to control his temper and to improve his focus.

And of course, we have Sister L to keep in mind, since his behavior patterns so far have followed hers almost to the letter. She made huge improvements as she grew, and we know he will too.

The Michael Filter

Today, Michael presents a useful tool for five-year-olds everywhere.

Hey, kids! Michael here. You know when your parents glare at you with the angry face and words are coming out of their mouths but you really don’t know what they mean? Me too! I’ve done some studying and I think I have a few of their phrases figured out. You can try these yourself and see how well they work.

Parent says: “Come down stairs now and eat your breakfast!”
It means: “Please stand in the doorway of my bedroom and repeatedly lock, unlock, shut and open the door.”

Parent says: “Do not pick up the cat!”
It means: “Pick up the cat by her midsection and rake her panic-induced claws across your sister’s knees.”

Parent says: “Okay, sport. You need to nap for at least two hours. Got that?”
It means: “Just lie here for a minute or so, then get up and run around in your room, being sure to distribute books and toys evenly across the floor for the next thirty minutes, then go to the door and call out that you’re done with your nap.”

Parent says: “It’s only six o’clock, and it’s Saturday! It’s way too early for you to be getting up!”
It means: “I’m glad you’re up! I’ve been so bored just lying here in bed. Now we can watch SpongeBob and eat Froot Loops and Pop Tarts and make noise and turn the couch over and build a fort and…” (ed: actually, that does sound kind of fun…)

Parent says: “Eat your dinner.”
It means: “Pick at your chicken a little, blow bubbles in your chocolate milk, drop your fork on the floor and plug your nose because you swear someone at the table is eating cheese.”

Parent says: “Get in the car seat and buckle up.”
It means: “Stand next to the car and play your Leapster.”

Parent says (while sister is reclining on couch): “Please stop bothering your sister!”
It means: “Place three pillows and a blanket on your sister’s face and then climb up on them and crow like a rooster.”

I hope you find these phrase translations useful. I promise you’ll get your parents’ attention!

A little sensitive?

Sometimes my little boy surprises me with his sensitivity.

I mean, on the one hand, he has no problem delivering a smackdown to any of his sisters if he feels like he’s getting a raw deal. And though his aggressive behavior has improved quite a bit, he still occasionally gets in trouble at school for roughing up the other kids.

But at the same time, he can show raw emotion about some of the darndest things.

He’s been known to cry when seeing SpongeBob get mistreated by Squidward.

He gets misty if he sees a scene on Animal Planet where a bug gets eaten by a frog.

He has been known to run from the room, whimpering, with his hands clamped over his ears when, while playing the videogame Wall-E, his little character gets trapped in radioactive slime and runs out of battery life.

Clearly, he has the capacity for empathy, particularly when it concerns animals and cartoon characters (why this doesn’t carry over into situations with his actual friends and relatives is beyond my understanding, however).

But the latest instance was truly baffling.

We were watching “Muppet Treasure Island.” Michael repeatedly asked me who were the bad guys, and whether the bad guys were going to get killed.

“It’s a muppet movie. Nobody gets killed. It’ll be fine, you’ll see.”

“Are they going to kill the bad guys?”

“No. Like I said before. It’s muppets.”

“Are the bad guys going to get killed?”

“I think it’s bed time, Michael.”

“Okay, I’ll watch quietly…”

So the story continues, the bad guys are non-violently vanquished, everyone cheers, life goes on.

At the very end is a scene in which young Jim Hawkins watches as Long John Silver escapes on a row boat. There is a bit of emotion here as the boy cries knowing that Silver betrayed him.

And at this, Michael burst into unquenchable sobs.

His mother tried to soothe him. His sister tried to make him laugh. I shut the movie off and pulled up a video of Kermit the Frog singing “Caribbean Amphibian”.

And it helped… for a while. Michael finally composed himself, kissed his mom good night, and went with me upstairs to his room.

He clambered onto his bed, and I asked him:

“So, little man, what was it that was so upsetting about the muppet movie?”

He hesitated, and then his eyes welled up with fresh tears.

“I’m not crying!” he blurted, covering his face, before dissolving once again into a wailing mass.

“Okay, I won’t talk about it again,” I said, and wrapped him up in blankets and stroked his back. “Not to worry. It’s all done and everyone’s fine.”

After books and prayers and a good night tuck in, Michael was right as rain again.

Back downstairs, my wife and step daughter tried to get me to understand just how very sensitive Michael is.

I told them I already knew, because I was the same way as a kid.

I still don’t really understand why… but maybe that’s not the important thing. Just knowing is enough.

Moving Up

Last night Michael, his mom and I went to his Kindergarten orientation.

It marks the start of his public school career; the point where he is added to the official rolls of a brick-and-mortar learning institution.

He is growing up.

He could have started Kindergarten last year. In fact, we had signed him up. But his mom and I decided that for his sake (and the sake of the other students) we’d keep him back just one more year to let him get fully socialized. We instead enrolled him in a private, in-home school that covers the gamut of preschool and pre-k learning. In essence, he’d be getting a Kindergarten education, but under much more concentrated scrutiny and nurture.

We figured we could make the decision at some point during this year as to whether we felt he was ready to move on to first grade, or whether he should start out in public Kindergarten.

We decided the latter. It was not an easy choice, but we think it’s the right one for Michael’s well being. He’s smart enough that in some future time he might be moved up a grade, so we hold out that possibility.

At the start of his orientation last night, we were introduced to the teachers, the principal, the parent volunteers, the school nurse, the administrative assistants and others who would be regulars in our child’s daily life.

Then, only ten minutes into the assembly, they called the children into two groups and ushered them out the door with the teachers to go see their classrooms.

We parents stayed behind and had time to hear the “grown-up” stuff.

But as Michael left, with not even a glance back over his shoulder, I couldn’t help but notice his mom’s eyes were just every so slightly welled up with tears. She was obviously feeling a mournful loss.

Her little boy isn’t so little any more.

As the evening progressed, we met with the nurse to go over Michael’s history of seizures and storage of his emergency medication. We met with the administrative assistants to talk about transportation and after school care. We met with the principal to introduce ourselves and suggest that we’d probably be seeing a lot of each other in the next few years.

Then we went back to the Kindergarten rooms to pick up the kids. Upon seeing us, Michael came out to loudly proclaim what he’d learned about Guinea Pigs, about how they think your fingers are carrots, and that they poop a lot.

He was having no problem getting used to a whole new school, a new class, new classmates, a new teacher, a new beginning.

He’s moving up, and it’s something that he’ll keep right on doing.

And it’s a good thing, even if it is a little sad.

Grace

Michael was tired, there was no doubt of that.

After over two hours of play at his favorite vaguely space-themed play facility, he was clearly bored with all of the play structures and bounce houses and other venues of rambunctious physical activity. We could tell, as he was now stalking other children in hopes of drawing some excitement off of whatever their lives had to offer.

One group of kids, a subset of the kids attending a birthday party, was playing keep-away with a balloon. This was an irresitable attraction for Michael, who wormed his way into their group, no doubt hoping his presence would either not be noticed or would be disregarded as merely one of the other many children in the group.

I watched their interaction for a bit, and after becoming satisfied that no ill will was shown either to Michael or from him, I turned back around and continued my conversation with my wife.

A few minutes later Michael came running up to us from the other direction.

He was grinning from ear to ear, and in his hands he held a bright purple balloon. Following closely behind him was another little boy, one of the birthday group. He was calling out something unintelligible.

“Michael, where did you get that balloon?”

“It’s mine!” he said.

“He took my balloon!” The other boy cried.

“Michael, did you take this balloon?”

“But I…” he started.

“It’s my balloon,” the little boy said again.

“Michael, give him back his balloon!”

Michael thrust the balloon at the little boy, brow knitted into a severe frown. He folded his arms and turned back toward me, but not before exclaiming “I hate you!” at the balloon boy.

“Michael, we’re done. Let’s go get your shoes.” I marched him over to the shoe caddy and we retrieved his shoes. As I put them on his feet I told him “Little man, this is not how we make friends. We don’t steal balloons, and we certainly don’t tell people that we’ve stolen things from that we hate them. This is being mean.”

He said nothing.

“Now you’re going to go apologize to that little boy for what you did.” I steered him over to the little boy, who was bouncing his balloon up in the air. His parents noticed what I was doing and asked him to pay attention.

“Go on, Michael.”

Through fresh tears, he blurted out “I’m sorry I took your balloon!” and he darted away.

“You did the right thing, Michael.”

I knew he didn’t want to. I knew he felt horrible about it; though more likely because he’d been caught and forced to give up the prize, and then suffer the indignity of having to abase himself in front of another. Either way, I wanted to be sure he did the right thing in hopes that later on in life it would come naturally.

I continued to instruct and encourage him on our way out of the building.

That’s when we heard the little balloon boy come running up, bright purple balloon in hand.

“Here. This is for you,” he said, and he handed Michael the balloon.

“Thank you!” Michael said, brightening suddenly.

“Thank you, that was very nice,” I told the little boy, who pranced off, beaming.

As we got into the car, Michael said “That little boy gave me the balloon anyway!”

“Yes he did. That was grace, Michael. You didn’t deserve it, but you got it anyway.”

Like God’s grace, His unmerited favor in the midst of our evil toward Him. Not a purple balloon, but everlasting life.

Trouble. With a capital “M”

Upon picking up Michael from Ms S’s yesterday, I was for the third time this month presented with The Book.

I do not like being presented with The Book.

It is unpleasant. It is distasteful. It is wearying.

I lightly skimmed the words in the book, wincing at reading the narration of Michael’s unprovoked aggression toward his classmates. It was more than I could bear to read just then.

According to the book, and Ms S who was standing right in front of me relaying a more thorough account of the day’s meanness, Michael had found a piece of sharp plastic and brandished it against several classmates, scratching a few of them maliciously. When asked why, he gave no reason nor did he express remorse.

Later he was witnessed throwing a toy at another boy, claiming that the boy was “the new kid,” implying that he was establishing his dominance as an upper classman.

He was also overheard telling a little girl that she’s a loser, making her cry.

Reading that just made my heart sink.

If there’s anything I cannot stand, it’s a bully. And evidently that’s what I have here. Michael is exhibiting the behavior of bully and coward.

It scares me to think how this could progress, if it were to continue into his teen years. It scares me to think what sort of adult he could turn in to.

At home last evening, instead of getting choice time or after-dinner treats, he and I had a discussion.

I explained to him that what he’s doing is not only wrong, it’s hurtful and mean, and I won’t tolerate it. I told him I would not let him veer off course. He said he wants his friends to like him, and I told him that the best way to make that happen is to be a good friend to them. Being kind, giving, loving, generous, compassionate and sympathetic are the keys to winning friends.

Honestly, I’m at a loss to explain his behavior: where he learned it, what provokes it, why he continues it.

And I’m at an utter loss as to how to address it.

I just hope and pray that God gives me some insight, and that we can get him back on the right track.

Words

It was errand time, and Michael and I were finishing out our trip at the grocery store. He’d been his usual animated self throughout our visit, chirping about this and that and asking a million questions. Finally at the checkout, I set the cart against the end of the counter like I always do, so the checker can put the bags in the cart and so Michael can’t reach the coin return, spray bottle or turntable switch that are unfortunately located right around there in the checkout counter.

As my last few items are being rung up, suddenly I hear Michael start to whimper softly: “It’s for me!”

I turned slightly to see what the matter was. He’s staring at the back wall, behind me. He repeated the phrase again, twice, each time with more urgency but just as softly: “It’s for me! It’s for meeeeeeee!”

His expression then contorted into one of utter despair, and he buried his face in his hands and wept.

“What?” I asked. “What’s for you? What is the matter?”

I tried to get him to talk to me. I looked back to see whatever it was that had his attention, and beheld nothing unusual: the back wall, a couple of store clerks, some books, a few empty carts. Nothing of any interest.

Michael continued to bawl.

“What is it? Michael, please use your words! Tell me what’s wrong!”

He would not respond to me at all.

Then, from behind, I hear the phrase. “…boy must have dropped it,” and turned around just in time to see one of those clerks hand Michael his small pink rubber ball, one that he had brought with him from home.

He clutched the ball tightly with both hands, and wiped his eyes with his sleeves.

“Why didn’t you tell me you dropped it? I would have gotten it for you,” I told him.

He remained wordless, sniffing back a few residual tears.

On the way out to the car, we talked about what happened, and how it could have been better.

“Michael, I didn’t know you dropped the ball. Do you understand? I was looking in a different direction, and didn’t see the ball drop. And the people that work at the store, they didn’t know the ball was yours at first. That’s why I asked you to use words, so you could explain what happened. Daddy can help if you explain what happened.”

What made sense to me was Michael’s point of view. I recall having this same sort of ego-centric viewpoint of the world when I was his age; the belief that everyone sees, hears and knows everything that I see, hear and know. His experience is the only real experience, and everyone shares it.

So it follows that if he dropped the ball, everyone should know that he did, and know that it’s his. He probably thought I was being mean by not caring that he dropped his ball, and that the store clerks were being mean for wanting to keep it because they picked it up and didn’t bring it back right away.

It’s just the stage he’s at right now, one that will be passed through on his way to the next stage, which will bring its own challenges. As he grows, learns and experiences, his model of the world expands and changes, and his behavior will adjust to accommodate it.

My job as a parent is to do my best to recognize those stages and to be right beside him to guide him on his way to the next one.

We practiced what he would do the next time something like that happens: he’ll use his words, he’ll tell me what happened. And, he says, it would be a better idea to just leave the ball at home so he doesn’t lose it.

I think he’ll be okay.

I Got Nothin’

While a vast portion of the United States is being buried in snow, here in Oregon it’s sunny and warm-ish.

So there’s no excitement in the weather.

I heard that Illinois got hit with a respectable earthquake last night, and lived to tell the tale.

And while we didn’t exactly have an earthquake, we did have some small adventure.

See… lately, Michael has been doing really well with staying dry all night. Like his sisters and his daddy did when they were his age, Michael has had trouble with his bladder when sleeping. Not a huge deal, but it is a hurdle to overcome. The last couple of weeks he’s hit about an 80 to 90 percent success rate. We were thinking we’d be able to ditch the pull-ups completely pretty soon.

But he’s had the occasional accident. These come on the heels of two or three successful nights in a row, when we try to see if he can make it without a pull-up.

And for the last three nights in a row he’s been dry in the morning, and I’ve been hopeful but cautious. So of course when I put him to bed last night, even though I meant to, I forgot to put a pull-up on him.

Harmonically converging with this scenario is the work schedule Michael’s mommy has had. Yesterday she worked from noon until 10:30 in the evening, and after an hour’s drive home, she’s pretty tired. Since she had to repeat the same work hours the next day, it follows that she was planning on sleeping in.

So it comes with no surprise that at 1:15 AM a very wet Michael stumbles into our room crying, waking both of us up from our sound slumbers.

His mom got him new jammies while I gave him a shower. Then I had him snuggle with his mom while I changed his sheets.

Fortunately, he went back to bed and fell asleep right away.

So… nothing earth-shattering, monumental, traumatic or shocking… just a typical night with one mistake coupled with bad timing that resulted in some lost sleep.

It could have been much worse. There could have been spiders.