The Thing About Other People’s Kids
Tonight I was talking with a friend. It wasn’t a new or unique conversation, by
any means, and, as the vast majority of the conversations I have with friends
currently in the exact stage of life, marriage, and child-rearing as I am do,
this one focused on our kiddos.
So there we were, looking pale, bleary, and exhausted, with
our painted on smiles. Both of us were
white as sheets, but we’d taken the time to put on lip gloss before heading out
to Bible study. Somehow, we women
subscribe to the myth that lip gloss makes us look slightly more awake and
slightly less haggard. Maybe to a
non-experienced observer it does…
Maybe, when we’re running to Food Lion at 10 PM because we
just realized that we were out of bread for lunches tomorrow, and out of milk,
and out of pre-packaged, GMO laden, sugary desserts to put with our children’s
squishy lunchbox offerings, because we’re just too danged tired to slice an
apple and sprinkle lemon juice and cinnamon on it… maybe someone we know will
be perusing the bread or milk, and will miraculously look put together, and
because we have lip gloss on, they’ll think we are put together too.
Or maybe it just reminds us that we’re alive, so that we
don’t scare the crap out of ourselves when we glance in the bathroom mirror
before heading to bed.
But I digress…
Get used to it.
It happens more often than not.
“Are you ok?” I asked.
Obviously she was ready to strangle the general population,
or curl up in a ball and sleep right there, on one of the long church
fellowship hall tables.
But I asked anyway.
“Yeah – I just… the kids were screaming their heads off at
each other in the car on the way home.
Sometimes I just don’t even know what to do. I just wish we could be one of those families… those families
that don’t have fighting kids in the back of the car all the time. They fight in the car, they fight when
they’re playing. They even get into
huge fights over who gets to say the blessing at dinner.”
“You aren’t alone.” I said.
Inside I was cheering and doing cartwheels, just a little,
because it’s always nice to know that your children aren’t the only ones who
sound like they want to kill each other on a regular basis – even over
something as sweet as saying a prayer.
[On a side note, my youngest daughter was crying
hysterically last night after she had been safely tucked in to her nice warm
bed, in her nice warm pajamas, in her very clean, cozy room. Hysterically… Sobbing to the point that I looked at my husband in a panic and ran
up the stairs like I was actually trying to burn calories.
Was she sick? Was she hurt?
Was she scared?
No. None of the
above.
She was in raucous tears because her sister had started
humming while she was trying to say her bedtime prayers.
I was incredibly sympathetic, and told her that the only
time I wanted to hear her crying in such a manner EVER again was if there was a
dire emergency, like a fire, or she was being kidnapped, and to go to sleep
NOW.
My adrenaline was in a bit of a tizzy at that point.]
But back to my friend, I tried to placate her, with a very
short rendition of our own afternoon. (As follows…)
There was a large pile of Beverly Cleary “Ramona” books on
the coffee table in the living room.
There were many more things on the coffee table as well – all of which
had magically matriculated there, seemingly overnight. Now that the girls have gotten older, I have
been drawing their attention more and more to situations which give me the
opportunity to say “if everyone in this family did… that… what would
happen?”
“If everyone in this family shoved their dirty socks under
the coffee table or between the couch cushions…”
“If everyone in this family spilled half a box of Rice
Krispies on the floor and didn’t sweep it up…”
“If everyone in the family decided to not replace the roll
of toilet paper…” <- this one is futile, just for the record…
“If everyone in the family draped their coat, books, purses,
toys, wii remotes alllll over the living room and kitchen table and in the
office and left them for someone else [ME] what would happen?…”
I get a lot of blank stares.
I pray that one day it’ll click.
So back to the pile of Ramona books…
Daughter N usually pulls this stunt, so I called her to the
living room.
“You need to put these books away if you aren’t using them
anymore.” (And they quite obviously were not being used…)
“J was the last one looking at them. She was using them.”
“J - come pick these books up – don’t leave them for someone
else to clean up.”
So Daughter J comes in, and moves them to the shelf UNDER
the coffee table, and looks up at me innocently…
“That’s where I found them.”
I called Daughter N back into the room.
I also called Daughter A, even though I knew she had nothing
at all to do with the situation – just to be fair.
“One of you put these books here. Who was it?”
*Deer-in-the-headlights-stares
“I don’t care who took them out, but they need to be put
back on the bookshelf in the office right now.
It’s not my responsibility to clean up after you, and it’s no one else’s
responsibility either. If you took them
out, all you have to do, is put them back.”
At this point I dismissed A, after confirming that she
hadn’t read those books, or looked at them, in probably years.
N and J decided to start arguing over who had taken them
out.
“I didn’t bring them out here.”
“Well I found them out here.”
“Well I never touched them, I don’t know how they got out
here.”
At which point I was more than a little PO’d, because ALL I
wanted was for someone to cart the small pile of books back down the hall to
the bookshelf, which would have taken maybe 5 seconds – and now it had turned
into a huge festival of tall tales – maybe not on the scale of Paul Bunyan, but
close enough.
“I’m giving you THREE seconds to tell me who brought them
out here and start carrying them back to the bookshelf. ONE of you brought them out here. I know it wasn’t Dad or me! The dog doesn’t read Beverly Cleary. I know we don’t have magical little
book-reading fairies unshelving our books, and hiding them in strategic piles
in the living room. They didn’t
miraculously appear under the coffee table.
SOME one put them there. Start
remembering which one of you it was, NOW.”
Blank stares.
More - “well I don’t know how they got out here” statements.
Now, there are a few things that I cannot and do not
tolerate in our household, and one of them is lying.
We aren’t fans of corporal punishment, and have given the
girls no reason to be afraid to tell us the truth. Plus, they know from past experiences that lying to us will land
them in a HEAP of trouble, while telling us the truth means they will be given
a punishment, but with a whole lot of grace thrown in…
So basically at this point I was livid.
I still, to this very minute, have no idea who took the books
out, though Daughter N had a Ramona book opened, and book-marked, on another
cabinet altogether in the kitchen, which I found just minutes after the “stack
of books” incident was over. And
considering that of the two, she’s the only one who can actually read… not to
mention other such incidences, I have my strong suspicions... But there still was not sufficient
evidence.
Cue the family meeting in which I was on the verge of total
tearful meltdown, while ranting on the subject of earning trust, privileges,
responsibilities, etc.
So when I told my friend “you’re not alone”, it may have
sounded trite.
But it wasn’t.
Because the thing with other people’s kids is that they pull
the same stunts yours do. And if they
don’t pull the exact ones, then they have their own little circus
routine, designed specifically to drive their parents batty.
The thing with other people’s kids is that they refuse to
poop on the freaking potty too.
They throw their plate of mac-n-cheese on the floor
(ceiling, wall…) too.
They kick their sister when they think no one is watching.
They say snarky things to their siblings under their breath,
OR they scream snarky things to their siblings at a decibel that should be used
only for the purposes of warning an entire city of an impending tsunami.
We’re all in this parenting thing together.
We ALL have felt at different points that we really really
really are going to lose our mind before the day is out, no
exaggeration.
Or we’ve felt like we’ve screwed it all up irreparably already
– that the character traits they have at the ripe old age of 9 are set in stone
and we’re doomed… doooooooommmmmed.
So - the next time you see that family of 16 kids in
walmart. You know – that family whose
kids are holding on to the side of the cart calmly, without trying to steal
rides on the edge and almost knocking it over, not blocking on-coming cart
traffic, not climbing on top of the toilet paper vats just because they’re
“fluffy”, not “checking” the eggs for cracks while you grab a box of butter 2
inches away, not dragging their sister out of the cart by her nearly-dislocated
arm, not secretly hiding $5 dvds and candybars under the Great Value Kleenex
and boxes of instant oatmeal, not screaming because their sippy cup is empty –
or dripping the sippy cup down 8 aisles in a “Hansel and Gretel” stunt
before you finally notice…
Just remember …
It’s obviously because they’re drugged.
-R.
Love this post and totally looking forward to reading more. Love you ladies!
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