What's it been? Six weeks since my last post? Yeah, I'm getting lazy. Or as a friend pointed out this weekend, it's hard to write when the bucket is empty. Nothing seems out of the ordinary enough anymore to write about. Until suddenly it does.
One day, my sweet daughter came in the kitchen all excited and breathlessly explained to me in about 200 words that she had changed the toilet paper roll all by herself.
All of a sudden Fiona can hit a baseball and Danny can catch a football and Owen, well, um, he's kind of a pain in the bum. So some things take a little longer to change.
Owen is a handful these days. He's loud and
belligerent. I've had to wrestle him out of the public eye and into the
van, kicking and screaming (him, not me), all the while afraid
someone will call the cops thinking the poor child is being abducted. He
also truly believes that anything he has touched within the past 30
days belongs to him and no one is allowed to touch, look at or play with
that item. Danny summed it up best.
We're having a bad Owen, Danny says. Indeed. I want to remove my eardrums.
He's
also exploring the potty. Since he's my third child, I am not touching
potty "training" with a ten foot pole. I'm just letting him figure it
out. In the mornings and evenings, he often just sits on his little
potty which sings when he pees in it or when you push the little button
under the pot.
Pee not coming out. I push button and pee will come out. He then proceeds to push the button under the potty fully expecting his pee to come out. Oh, if only it were that easy!
We've also had two more rounds of the stomach bug. Owen was the first to fall.
Look at this, Owen exclaims after throwing up in his hand. He'd never thrown up before. At least he was perky.
I want a marshmallow for dinner, Fiona says after a day of throwing up. I think my stomach can handle a marshmallow.
You have frog in your throat. We got to get it out, Owen exclaims. He was coming at her with a back scratcher. Toddlers are so literal.
Here's a phrase I never, ever thought I'd utter ...
You two stop shooting each other with your penises, I tell the boys. They were running around naked after bath time, wrestling and, well, you know.
And another ...
I going to eat on trash can, Owen tells me as he stumbles around the kitchen with a big bowl of refried beans that he sets atop the trash can.
Don't eat on the trash can. You're not a hobo, I tell him.
And another ...
Stop flipping my flip flop around with a spatula and get in the bathtub. Don't even ask me why there was a spatula on my bedroom floor.
And still another ...
I swear if you don't settle down I'm going to tie you up. (Hey, I was desperate. My husband was working a double shift on a Saturday and the kids were jacked up.)
Why you going to tie me up, mommy? Owen said sweetly.
I also once threatened to glue their bums to the grocery cart if they didn't stay seated. I think they understand hyperbole better than most children.
Hey, there's popcorn on those trees, Danny says. The white flowers are coming out on the trees. I will probably call them popcorn trees forever now.
What is she saying, mom? Danny asks about a lady on the radio.
I don't know, honey.
No, you're supposed to know. You're an adult. You know more, he says belligerently.
Look, mom, Owen says as he and Danny are watching the Dukes of Hazzard on YouTube.
No, she doesn't have to look, Owen. It's not her thing, Danny replies.
My kids are obsessed with poop ...
Owen, stop climbing the windows please. (Yes, I actually had to utter that phrase.)
Yeah, that's what I don't do because I'm six and I pooped, Danny explains. I have no idea how poop came to be mentioned here. His brain is such a mystery to me.
I just had one little peanut come out of my butt, Danny informs us. That's weird. I poop peanuts now.
She's going poop. [Fiona] did her poop dance, Danny tells me.
After a less than stellar report for the day, Danny informs me: It was dad's fault. He gave me sugar for breakfast.
Till next time.
2 comments:
I am often stunned and amazed at what comes out of my mouth when I'm dealing with my kids, too. It a bewildering job, this mothering gig.
Welcome back, I've missed the Overheards. And I will forever think of Popcorn Trees now just like after 47 years my family still calls Broccoli "Little Trees" and toilet paper "Wiped A Tish"
Donna
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