Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Doubting Seth

I had a very strange conversation with my three-year-old last night.

Sethie is still allowed to have a pacifier at bedtime. I learned my lesson when I took Thomas's pacifier away when he turned three and the child never napped again. I'll milk the napping as long as possible. But Sethie is a little too cognizant of his. He hides them around the house. He has special spots for them and if I take one away because it isn't bedtime yet, he will occasionally produce another one unexpectedly. He's like some kind of binky pirate--he has booty stashed all over the house.

The only official spot for the binky is what we call the "bink box", a little tin box that sits on a shelf in his room. It's where I deposit all the hidden binks I unearth around the house. Because the binks get spread out, it's often empty and at bedtime we end up doing the binky scour, so I try to locate at least one before we head upstairs to avoid the binky search-and-rescue operation. Last night, I spotted a bink that Sethie had left by the couch and dropped it in the bink box. As I was reading Thomas his bedtime story, Sethie stopped by the room--it was just like the look-in from the sergeant in all those police procedural shows: he stuck his head around the corner with a hand on the frame and gestured toward the stairs with a thumb, but instead of saying, "Captain, there's someone here to see you", he said, "I need to get my bink. It's downstairs."

I told him, "No--I grabbed that bink and put it in your bink box. Go look in the bink box."

Sethie paused and actually tilted his eyebrows. Then he said, "Mommy, I left it by the couch. It's downstairs. I need to go get it."

Ok, sergeant. "No it's not. I picked it up and brought it upstairs. Go look in your bink box."

Once again the eyebrows. "I don't think so, Mommy."

Mind you, Sethie is under three feet tall and weighs less than thirty pounds. He was wearing superman pajamas and holding his favorite green blanket. And I was having a discussion with him in which he was being SKEPTICAL I had actually acquired the bink and placed it in the box.

He was doubting the veracity of my statement. Is he supposed to even be capable of DOUBT at this age? Where is that developmental milestone listed? Age 3: "Speaks in complete four or five word sentences. Can throw a ball overhand. May doubt you are telling the truth and be determined to follow his own gut instinct."

Thomas was staring at me. I stared back. He started laughing into his shoulder. Finally, I said to Sethie in my Don't-Mess-With-Me-I'm-the-Mom voice, "IT'S IN THE BINK BOX. GO LOOK. NOW."

Sethie shrugged and walked out of the room. "Ok, Mommy, but I don't think so." I heard him head down the hall, uttering a few more, "I don't think so"'s as he went.

Of course a few seconds later, I hear him shout from his room, "Oh, right! It IS in here. Thank you, Mommy."

Next time, kid, I'll take a lie detector test.

Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Sethism Redux


Sethie, trying to get himself out of his car seat the other day: "Uh, a little help here?"

Friday, September 18, 2009

Sethism


Me, in the car, on the way to preschool: "Sethie, do you want to go to preschool this morning?"

Seth: "Yeah!"

Me: "Are you sure?"

Seth: "Yeah!"

Me: "Are you really sure?"

Seth: "Yeah!"

Me, realizing my giddiness at his new adventure is making me annoying, but I can't stop: "Are you sure you're sure?"

Seth: "Mommy, let's not speak anymore."

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Thomism

Thomas came up to me today and said, "Mommy, I saw a cartoon that said math was only for ugly people."

I was a little startled and said, "Well, T, you understand why that statement is really wrong, right?"

He said, "Yeah. It's also for grownups, right?"

Monday, July 27, 2009

Freak out


To you stay-at-home moms out there, ever have one of those moments where all your kids are somewhere else while you're at home doing whatever and then you COMPLETELY FREAK OUT BECAUSE WHERE THE @#&#%*! ARE MY KIDS? You think for a second that maybe they're napping, but wait, it's morning, or they're outside, but wait the swing set is empty, or OH NO I HAVE LOST THEM! But then you remember. They're somewhere else (like a friend's house or something) and you, while crazy, are not a bad mother who has misplaced them somewhere. I mean, I've tried explaining that one to Nate and boy, it never goes well. "So wait...what happened to the kids?" "Uh, I had them just a minute ago. Let's see--I was in the kitchen and I think I set one of them down on the counter. I could have sworn the other one was in my bag..."

So I'm having a quiet morning here with my poptart while T is at summer camp and a good friend is having Sethie come over and play with her two-year-old and after about every third bite of delicious nutrition-free frosted berry sweetness, the quietness gets to me and I do the WHERE THE @#&^*! ARE MY KIDS? freak-out. All summer, I've always had one of them with me. While T is at summer camp, Sethie is at home. While Sethie is napping, T and I work on reading. After Sethie gets up, the three of us go bike-riding or pool-swimming or backyard squirrel-scaring--you know something appropriately summery--and then we have dinner and they trade bedtime stories for a little extra Wii Lego Batman action and then they go to bed and I take a breath and Nate comes home.

I AM NEVER ALONE.

What do you do when you're alone? I was going to clean my upstairs bathroom this morning. Oh yeah. To be clear, I'm not some kind of clean freak who gets excited to get rid of the kids for a moment so they will stop polluting my pristine environment. That bathroom hasn't been cleaned for at least two weeks. Maybe longer. The bathtub grout mold is sprouting condominiums. The soap has fuzzies. Yesterday, the leftover hair clippings from Nate's razor picked it up and walked off with it Lilliputian-style and I haven't seen it since. So yeah, I should probably clean the bathroom while there is no one around to bug me.

At some point, I am going to be alone a lot more. T is starting full-time school this fall and Sethie is going into a two day a week preschool and I will become, at least for six hours a week, unnecessary to their immediate well being. I can't clean the bathroom twice a week (okay, I probably could, but I'm not going to). Besides, the cleaning never really ends. Clean something once and in a few hours it has become uninhabitable again. (well, uninhabitable for humans over the age of 21. Pint-sized miters can live quite comfortably in heaps of dirty laundry for many months, so long as they have remembered to pack in crackers and peanut butter) So that's a waste of free time. I have other things I used to more aggressively pursue: writing, and reading, and game programming, and pastry-baking, and violin-playing, and etc. and furthermore and whatnot. Is that who I still am?

If so, why in my free time am I still wondering WHERE THE @&%#*@&! ARE MY KIDS?

Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Groundhog Day

Last year, we occasionally spotted a sneaky little varmit toddling around our premises. He was so sneaky, we never got a good picture of him, even though we concluded he lived in the woodpile next to our shed. We named him, for obvious reasons, Phil.

See if you can spot Phil in the one picture we managed to land of him:



Well, turns out we prematurely labeled Phil. Maybe he should be "Philamena" or something? Because as of a few weeks ago, Phil and his new household have actually been venturing out on the lawn in broad daylight to munch on our clover. And for once we got some good pics. The kids are all kinds of silly happy that we have these little friends sharing our space.

Good luck, Phil. And feel free to take the fam out for some clover any time.







Tuesday, June 02, 2009

My Sweet Dream

Thank you for eight wonderful years.


Sunday, May 31, 2009

Thomas and the Beach Boys

I realize after a long absence, I'm doing a flurry of posts here, but it's mostly because we bought a new camera and then couldn't find it, used the old camera to film a few things, then couldn't find that camera, then used another old camera before finding the very newest camera which had some REALLY old stuff on it and only recently locating the newer, but still old camera. It's been a camera circus! Spam!

Anyway, I took this video at Thomas's kindergarten field day where they had prepared a dance in gym class to a Beach Boy's song. Note that the video cuts out in the middle because my new old camera had a very limited battery life, not because the randomly synchronized jiggling on the part of the kindergarteners is not absolutely adorable. :)


Spam Spam Spam Spam!

Dad, this is for you. Sethie extols the virtues of spam and even does a spam dance:


Mr. Monk and the Case of the Impressionable Children

It's entirely possible that my addiction to murder mysterites is beginning to adversely affect the kids.




The actual Monk theme song. Note that Sethie's "interpretation" starts about a third into the song.



The other day, Thomas noticed a small speck of green paint on the carpet upstairs. He said, "Mommy, look! Green paint! Like it came off someone's shoe!"

I said, "Hmmm. We'd better be careful what we track in here."

He said, "Oh no, Mommy. I think it's a clue!"

I said, "A clue? To what?"

He said, "A murder."

Monday, April 06, 2009

Suggestion box

This is to all the moms (and kids and former kids) out there on what to do with spring break time? We're planning a few adventures this week to places like museums/science centers/etc., but what do you do on a day like today with thunderstorms outside and no planned activities? The kids can only play with their toys and look at their books for so long (i.e. before they start hounding me...)

If anyone has a great suggestion on something unique and fun to do, let me know. I'd love to hear it!

Sunday, March 29, 2009

To Each According to His Needs and From Each...

In a loving marriage, we each take the jobs that best fit our abilities and so reasonably divide our skills that we might both provide AND benefit. For instance, I am the weekend morning breakfast maker. This morning, I made a Challah bread French Toast that was so mind-blowingly tasty it didn't require any syrup. Seriously.

And Nate is the spider killer. Now I actually think spiders are pretty cool, provided they are outdoors and observe the restraining order that says they have to stay outside a 20 foot radius of my person at all times. Pictures and documentaries are okay. In the house, all bets are off. But spiders are clever. They know I am incapable of touching them without getting a serious case of the heebie jeebies. So when they think I'm alone, they start the approach. Most the time, though, they don't get far before the great hand of Nate comes smashing down on them. But Nate spends a lot of time at work during the week. Sometimes I'm forced to track a spider's movement for hours, if not days, until he is available for the killing. So I have to take a chance when I have one.

This is a picture of a spider that I just forced Nate to get out of bed and kill. Now before you point fingers, in my defense, he was going to work super early in the morning so I wouldn't have been up to tell him about the spider then, spiders have been known to crawl in and out of people's noses while they sleep (thank you, to the documentary Arachnophobia for that little tidbit), and this one had freakishly long legs.



Still, he's probably going to kill me when he wakes up in the morning and remembers.

But hey, I'm not totally useless, you know. It's just spiders I can't kill (and also house centipedes. Have you seen those things? Google it. SPAWN OF THE DEVIL). I did put an end to another dangerous vermin tonight, with my bare hand no less:





Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Keyboy Cares for Evil Baby

I think the measure of a person can most clearly be taken when they are woken up in the middle of the night by a screaming child. 

Me for instance: I transform into a flashing-eyed, gravelly-voiced, snarling beast who growls rambling invectives that have "go back to sleep!" somewhere in them.

Nate actually doesn't get woken up in the middle of the night by screaming children. Sometimes he does get woken up by the Beast who demands to know how in the name of all that's holy he can sleep through all that howling. At least he has an excuse since he has to get up far earlier in the morning than the Beast does, but at 2 am, the Beast is not usually cognizant of or sympathetic to a reality that is still several hours away.

But on with the story: Sethie is claiming his two-year-old territory quite aggressively these days. Nursery at church has suddenly become a POW camp. Grocery shopping is a hostage situation. Maybe I'm just not used to it because Thomas spent most of his two's like Poppy in Happy-Go-Lucky: recklessly blithe. He may have gotten hurt a lot, but you'd never catch him unhappy. For the most part, Sethie is happy, too, and everywhere we go, he charms the pants off everyone (which is a little awkward...). But that's if we going somewhere he actually wants to be. If not, Enter the Dragon.

We call this face "evil baby", which Sethie thinks is hilarious and will perform on demand: "Do 'evil baby', Sethie!" He bunches up his fists and tightens up the muscles in his face and he looks like he's about to go all Chucky on you. It's funny, but sometimes we worry because, well, is Evil Baby really in there? I jokingly call the kids "Children of the Corn" sometimes if they're really driving me nuts, but maybe I'm just encouraging it...

So driving back from tangentville to Main Story Street, Nate and I made a series of mistakes last night that drove our otherwise sweet Sethie to don the Evil Baby mask, sort of like when Bruce Banner warns a group of thugs "Don't make me angry...!", but the thugs just laugh and keep harassing him anyway. Surprisingly, Sethie has no trouble going to sleep, as long as Thomas is with him. They have their bedtime routine with baths and teeth-brushing and a getting-dressed contest that culminates in the winner getting his bedtime story first. And then we have prayers, everybody gets tucked in, and--usually--silence ensues.

Last night, before Nate and I went to bed, we decided to peak in on our boys (Mistake #1), just to make sure....I don't know, they were still in there? Well, Sethie was in there, eyes open. I imagine he's like any of us who occasionally wake up in the night, but if you feel safe and you don't think there are other options than just lying quietly in bed, you'll lie quietly in bed. Obviously the magical appearance of Mommy and Daddy must have seemed like another option to Sethie. When we tried to leave, he started to cry. This was around midnight and our brains were tiredness-addled, so we concluded (Mistake #2) that the best option to get him to go back to sleep was to bring him into our own bed.

There's a reason why tiredness causes more car accidents than alcohol consumption. It makes you stupid. You forget that you have never had a child in your bed who didn't think it was 1) entertaining and 2) not a place to actually sleep. You also forget that you have never gotten a good night's sleep either with any child next to you. Sethie's new thing is asking what everything is/has/does and will repeat the question incessantly until you give him an answer that satisfies him. The heater came on: "What's that, Mommy? What's that, Mommy? What's that, Mommy?" The light on Nate's Blackberry blinked: "What's that, Mommy? What's that, Mommy? What's that, Mommy?" One of us actually had the gall to fall asleep and snore a little: "What's that, Mommy? What's that, Mommy? What's that, Mommy?" I adjusted one-tenth of an inch in bed: "What you doing, Mommy? What you doing, Mommy? What you doing, Mommy?"

Finally, around 2 am, I started to remember all the other times in which bringing this child into bed with us has worked (0). So I gently told him it was time to go back to "Sethie's bed", scooped him up, and carried him back into his own room (Mistake #3).

Had this been a movie, ominous music would have begun to play to a close-up of his otherwise adorable face contorting, malforming into....Evil Baby!

Sethie started crying. Actually, crying is not the word for it. Crying sounds almost cute. This was Unholy Misery unleashed. I looked around to see if angry villagers with pitchforks were going to start storming our castle. I put him in his crib, zipped up his crib tent, gritted my teeth, and decided to leave him there, hoping that he was just tired and the sounds of damned souls emanating from his room would eventually cease. But as I was leaving, I heard a different sound: a tired, confused, and plaintive "Mommy?"

Thomas. Normally he can sleep through anything (my favorite story is of the time we were moving out of NYC to our current place and we had stacked all our boxes in Thomas's room, so he was sleeping on the floor of our room. I got up in the middle of the night, forgetting he was there, and stepped on him. I mean, full on him, with all my weight. He didn't wake up. He said, "Oof." That was it), but I had let loose the Furies into his room, and who could blame him for not snoring through that? So I couldn't just leave him in there with the howling sirens of Doom. I went back in. 

Here, though, is the measure of us. My goal was just to get Sethie to a point where I could go back to bed. I admit, I had no sympathy for him, even though he was clearly in crisis, but it was a two-year-old crisis. Not important! Even though it was my fault he had woken up in the first place! But Thomas did. He had been jarred awake in the middle of the night by air raid sirens issuing out the lungs of his little brother and what does he start saying but, "Sethie, Tommy's here. Tommy's here" in a kind and soothing voice.

"I want to see Tommy," Sethie hiccupped. I showed him that his brother was still in the other bed. That at least made the crying stop, but I still couldn't leave or it would start all over again. So I sat on the floor in my skivvies and sang a lullaby that I learned from Nate which is repetitive and sleep-inducing and found myself both shivering and nodding off. But every time I tried to inch out back out the door, Sethie would start to cry again. Thomas seemed to sense my rope was ending (kids always know when you're about to lose it before you do). He said, "Sethie, do you want Tommy to sing to you?" Sethie said yes. 

Thomas didn't know the song I was singing, but he gamely joined it, happily bumbling through the words alongside me. When I stopped singing, he kept going. I backed out of the room. I heard him say, "Sethie, do want Tommy to sing you a new song?" Sethie said yes. Thomas started to sing a song he had made up, one about Keyboy, his invented superhero, and bad guys, and saving the day. Sethie stayed quiet. I went back to my own room. I lay in bed for a little while afterwards, listening to Thomas take care of his little brother and thought what broad shoulders he had, on top of which to lay the solace of a little, sad soul. 

I never heard another word the rest of the night. Thank you, my brave Keyboy. And I'm sorry, my sweet Evil Baby. You both deserve great things. I'm so grateful that you have each other.

Sunday, March 01, 2009

Sethism


Me to Seth who is repeatedly jumping up and down: "What are you doing?"

Seth: "I'm thinking!"

Me: "What are you thinking about?"

Seth, stopping and throwing his hands up in the air: "I win!"

Thursday, February 05, 2009

A Beautiful Envelope

When we first moved in here, we heard a rumor that John Nash--the famed Princeton professor and subject of the movie A Beautiful Mind, which won Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Actress at the 2002 Academy Awards--was actually a neighbor of ours. Someone told us that they thought he lived just down the street somewhere. We didn't really think much about it after that, but yesterday, the proof was in the mail. Wherever he lives, his address is close enough to ours that a Dr. Jackson in France had misaddressed an envelope to him and sent it to us instead.






Nate thought we should try to find out where Prof. Nash lives so we could deliver the letter to him ourselves and maybe have a chance to meet him, but I didn't want to risk losing it or damaging it in some way, so I took right back to the post office. 

Prof. Nash, wherever you are, I hope you get Dr. Jackson's papers. I did my best.

Wednesday, January 07, 2009

Thomism

Thomas, singing, while I make lunch: "If you give me a sandwich, you'll get a kiss."
I joked, "What if I don't want a kiss? Can I get a car or something?"
Thomas, still in sing-song, "No no no/you'll only get a kiss/that is all we sell at this."

Thursday, January 01, 2009

It's the End of the Year as We Know It

And We Feel Fine. Happy New Year!



*Note, there is a higher quality version of this video on Facebook.