No (Chicken) Bones About It

It’s 7am. I proceed to enter into a 30 minute long debate with my kid as to why she cannot keep her half eaten chicken bone (from dinner the night before) as a pet.

“But, mommy! I promise to kiss it and take it on all the walks!!”

What?
No, dude. Just no.

…I feel like 70% of parenting is just constantly saying to yourself, “why is this even a thing?”

No (Chicken) Bones About It

Shoes, Sass, and Subliminal Cool

FLASHBACK: October 21, 2013

Billie: “My horsey is so cool and I am so cool–“
Sissy: “Hey, cool kid, your shoes are on the wrong feet.”
Billie: *looks down* “Aw, man!!”
Sissy: “I betcha feel real slick now, dontcha?”
Billie: *holds up her hand* “Ok, OK! Who told you you could keep talkin’?”

…we’ve got plenty of sass to go around here, folks

Shoes, Sass, and Subliminal Cool

The Language of Loony

FLASHBACK: April 1, 2013

::Billie Translations::

What she means: “why, thank you mother, I do believe you are a delightful chef.”
What she says, “Mommy, you da best maker!”

What she means: “Greetings, sir or madam, pray tell what are you up to?”
What she says: “Aye, Bay-beh, whatchoo doin’, bay-beh?”

What she means: “I am overwhelmed with excitement.”
What she says, “I got, like, ALL the HAPPIES!”

If we’re being honest I like her take on the English language better…

The Language of Loony

A Little Bit of Both

FLASHBACK: November 23, 2013

I just walked in on Billie desperately cupping the poor dog’s face with both hands while pleading, “tell me. Just tell me! TELL ME WHAT YOU WANT TO BEEE!!!”

When I inquired as to why we were screaming at the dog like some wack job televangelist she replied:

“Jazzie won’t tell me what she wants to do with her life, mommy!! I need to know what she wants to be- I NEED TO KNOW!!”

Um. I didn’t have the mental capacity to explain to her, you know, basic animal biology so instead I just told her that Jazzie wanted to be a Lion and paint rainbows with her mane.

So now Billie is in the other room making the dog a Lioness Headress thing out of plastic bags and watercolors.

I can’t tell if I’m a lazy parent or a brilliant arts and crafts teacher.
…That’s true for most days, actually.

A Little Bit of Both

Social Etiquette: We’re working on it.

FLASHBACK: November 4, 2012

Billie’s taken to memorizing my shopping list and screaming it in the middle of the grocery store. I pity the poor old lady who stopped us to compliment Billie on how cute & sweet she was. Billie’s response?
“POPCORN AND MEAT!!!!”

The lady just glared at me & walked away. There’s really no recovering from that.

Social Etiquette: We’re working on it.

The weirdo in me honors the weirdo in you

FLASHBACK: November 12, 2011

Dad: “Your daughter likes to tie up the limbs of her stuffed animals.”
Me: “Um. That’s worrisome.”
Dad: “Oh, You have nothing to worry about. You don’t have to date her.”

…It’s always illuminating when the parents come to visit…

The weirdo in me honors the weirdo in you

Mandatory dance parties should be a thing.

It’s 3:30am. I jolt awake and roll over to see Billie, wide eyed and smiling, at my bed.
“Mommy. I think we have to dance.”

Uh. Hell yes we do.
And we did.
And it was awesome.

I didn’t even think about it, guys. My kid was like, “dance party?” And I was like, “duh.”

Except now I’ve been up since 3:30 and I have a super long day ahead of me.

Damnit.
…When am I going to realize that I’m the parent in this relationship?

Mandatory dance parties should be a thing.

Since We All Need Bunnies.

FLASHBACK: August 17, 2012

There were grandiose promises of going to the water park before naptime today. Billie put on her “babe-ing” suit and was ready to go when I discovered that she had broken into the refrigerator and emptied the entire contents of her almond milk on the floor. I think this was partially my fault. We were talking about being brave and fearless while watching Dora the Explorer do random gymnastics moves today. She wanted to be brave, too, I guess, so she said she was “milk skating.”
I could’ve killed her.

Instead, we sopped up the mess and I told her that, because mommy had to mop the entire house (which, of course, had milk tracked all over it by a certain milk-skater), she had to go down for a nap- thus no water park. Well, until after nap at least. She was devastated. The whole, “we will go later” argument doesn’t compute to a two year old. I might as well have told her I had, single handedly, burned the water park to the ground and then danced on the ashes. Fits were thrown. Tears were cried. Curses of “you’re a MEAN MOMMY” were heard throughout the neighborhood. Still, it was naptime.

And then the thunder started.
See, we just came back from a two-month hiatus in California. I had forgotten all about the mid-day thunderstorms that plagued our quaint little part of Louisiana. Half of me felt vindicated. Like, “See? We couldn’t have gone to the water park anyway! Who’s the mean mommy now, sukkas!?” And then the other half of me remembered: Shit. Billie’s afraid of thunder.

I walked into Billie’s room to find her huddled desperately in the corner of her bed with her hands over her eyes. She was shivering in fear held to the bed by the imaginary threat of mean mommy going nuts on her if she were to get out. The “stay consistent” mommy in me should’ve let her ride her fear out alone. Most mommies of two-year-olds know better than to interrupt the pre-sleep-naptime process. You leave the kid alone, no matter the circumstance, and let them pacify themselves into sleep.

But, damnit, that’s my kid.

She’s shivering in fear as the thunder raps intensely at the ceiling above her, as if it wanted inside her room. Am I going to let that fear consume her until she falls into an uneasy sleep? Am I going to let her “figure it out” on her own? Should I be consistent? Stick to my guns? Why do I have the sudden urge to sit on the couch in sweats and stuff my face with ice cream while watching reruns of “The Talk?” Get it together, Heather. Make a decision.

She’s still covering her eyes so she doesn’t see me when I enter her room. I don’t bother explaining to her how futile it is to cover her eyes (especially since you can’t see thunder), I pick her up and hold her. She’s freaked out, “NO MOMMY! No! I want the bed! I want to hide! The bed!!! The bedddd!” She’s crying now.
“Can I show you something?” I ask gently.
She’s still sobbing when I walk her outside and she clutches desperately to my chest. It’s raining harder than I anticipated and she starts crying more.
“My bed! My bed! Let me hide! I want my beeddddd!”
“Wow, Billie, look!” I say, pretending not to hear her screaming nonsensical ‘mean mommy’ curses, “Look at the plants! They’re drinking allllll the rain up. And see that? The animals will be able to drink that puddle and play in it! And, over there! What a pretty flower! I bet that flower is happy for the rain!”
“Flower happy? For the rain?”
“Yes,” I say, “And look how green everything is! I bet it’s because of all this rain.”
The thunder crashes again, Billie’s clutches me tightly but doesn’t scream. I explain to her that the thunder is saying, “Hi,” and that the thunder is helping the rain feed the plants and animals (that’s technically incorrect but, c’mon, she’s two. Baby steps).
“Nooo,” she whines, “It’s scarrry.”
We’re soaked now. The rain is relentless and I’m beginning to think this lesson was more idealistic hippy thoughts than actually good practice. Shit. Well, I’m in deep now, might as well keep going.
“It is scary,” I say, “But if it didn’t happen then things wouldn’t grow. Then you wouldn’t have flowers. Or birds. Or bunnies.”
“No bunnies?”
“Nope. No bunnies.”
She thinks a minute. I watch the rain drops collect in her hair before eventually soaking into her curls. She finally sighs.

“The thunder is scary, Momma. But I’m brave. And we need bunnies.”

“We definitely need bunnies,” I agree.

We decide to go inside and re-try the nap thing. I lay her down just as the thunder roars right above us. She shakes and looks as me expectedly. “It’s OK. You’re OK. The rain will end and the bunnies will be happy and then we will go play.”
She seems to be at ease with that logic. I kiss her on the forehead and walk to the door.
“Momma?”
“Yes?”
“The thunder says hi?”
“Yes. It’s saying hi.”
“Well. You tell it I need to go ni-night.”

She was asleep within five minutes after that.
I will never cease to be utterly captivated by her resilience. Her thought process. Her.

And I think I learned something. Lately I’ve been consumed by fear. I live in a new place where can’t find a job worth having to save my life. I’m consumed with the fear of failure to a point where it sometimes immobilizes me. I often feel that, maybe, these problems are too big for me.

…But I just watched my daughter conquer something that felt too big to her.

And she did it anyway with grace and wit and courage.

So, next time shit gets too real- too scary- I’m going to think to myself, “Yes. This is scary. But I’m brave. And we need bunnies.”
…Keeps it all in perspective, if you ask me.

Since We All Need Bunnies.

This Week’s Theme? Fear.

FLASHBACK: April 8, 2013

6 months ago Billie was into Monsters.
Like, Monster everything. Monster Movies, Monster Books, Monster Socks, Monster Artwork on her wall. Being a monster was cool. Having a monster under your bed? Even cooler. This child would play “Princess and Monsters” and DEMAND that she was the monster. So, I hope you get the point when I say: she really fucking liked monsters.

Flash forward to now: she’s hovering in her bed, shaking with terror, crying hysterically for her daddy to come save her from, you guessed it, monsters.

Apparently the peaceful alliance she had once had with monsters is now over.

Maybe it’s a phase. Maybe she instigated it and told them they sucked or something. Or maybe it went to hell after they saw how much she liked that “How to Train Your Dragon” movie and the monsters were like, “WHAT. We’ve let this kid into our hearts and caves (monsters live in caves… right?) and now she’s gunna ditch us for those fire breathing sell-outs? Eff that noise. This bitch is toast.” And then they went all ape-shit and hid in her dresser drawers forcing her to go days without wearing underwear.

Oh, yea, she doesn’t want to wear her underwear anymore.

Because of the monsters.

Not that I can really blame her- especially since the kid wears two pairs of tights, a skirt, leggings, and knee high socks ALL AT ONCE. It takes everything in me to not be like, “Meh. You’re covered there anyway, kid. Have at it.” But then I have that vision of her falling ass over tea kettle on the playground, crotch to the world like some Bad Mom Bat Signal. So she wears underwear. And the monsters don’t eat her. Hell, those chickens don’t even show up. But that doesn’t seem to matter to Billie. Thus me standing over her dresser drawers every morning with a stuffed Lion and baseball bat. You know, for protection. From the… imaginary… monsters.

Christ. Either I’m a rockstar mom or I’m just as crazy as she is for enabling this behavior…

Either way- let’s hear it for Daddy who swooped in and held her until she fell asleep in his arms. I would’ve done it guys, really, but I had the audacity to suggest that the monsters were just manifestations of her inner fear of not having complete control in her life. As a direct result, I was banned from the monster recovery party.
Three year olds just don’t get psychology.
Hacks.

This Week’s Theme? Fear.

Since I Haven’t Posted In Awhile & I Owe You A Tantrum Themed Post

FLASHBACK: August 28, 2012

Dude. Two year olds scream. Like, loudly. 

Sure, there are beautiul moments that I have with Billie. Epically poignant and gorgeous in all the right ways. But then there is the rest of the time. 

Doug is going to be a graduate professor this year. That, coupled with being an all around badass and losing 20 pounds this summer, warranted getting him a new wardrobe. So we headed off to the Gap to lavish him in the finest clearance aisle slacks and flannel his financial aid could buy. 
Now a two year old in any store is rough. But the fashion concious spawn of Doug & I in a GAP? I can’t accurately describe the hysteria. Picture a Justin Beiber concert. In Japan. With fireworks. But with more tears. THAT is my daughter in a GAP. 

In order to give Doug some privacy while getting his style on I made the valiant decision to walk her around the store. By myself. 

WHY WOULD I DO THAT? 
Walking a two year old around a clothing store is like taking a pack of wild dogs to the butcher’s shop & expecting them to wait patiently in line behind the counter. Worse than that? She found the damned Princess nighties two seconds after walking through the door. She was running up and down the aisles screaming, “I’M A PRINCESS! I’M A PRINCESS!” while all the middle-aged black women in the store looked at me and shook their heads. I attempted to grab one of the nighties from her and she tries to kick me and then straight up screams, “NOOO MOMMY! You’re hurting me!!! I’m hurting!!!”
Seriously? I’M hurting YOU??

So now I’m THAT parent. I’m the one with the screaming kid in the middle of the crowded store. And she is just playing into it, too. The more people who stare at me the stronger her scream gets. She’s like asuper villian who feeds off awkwardness. I finally ended up telling her we were going to go see daddy’s new clothes and taking her outside instead… A total cop out, I know. You always think, as a parent, that you’ll just sit there, in the middle of the crowded store, and reprimand them and then it’ll all be better. You think to yourself, “Well, if something like that happens then it’s a teachable moment and so be it.”

Well, fuck that, guys.
There’s no such thing as a teachable moment when you’re in public with a screaming toddler. 
You think you’re going to calmly rationalize with them and warn them of the consequences should they not listen? You think you’re just going to explain to them that this is not acceptable behavior and they’ll magically stop? Right. And then real life happens and you & your thrashing devil child are the reason for the “Clean up on aisle three” announcement reverberating throughout the overly crowded Albertsons. 
I’m not saying it’s impossible. I’m just saying it’s a process. It’s tough to take a small child into a store without them being an asshole and embarrassing the crap out of you. But if you don’t do it then they’ll never learn and you’re eight years in the future wondering why you’re the parent with the 10 year old who can’t sit through a meal in a restaurant. So you pay your dues. You endure the looks. You take the screaming child out to the store time and time again knowing full well that you’re handling the equivalent of decade old dynomite. That baby so much as sweats and your entire afternoon is blown to smitherenes. 

But I digress. The afternoon went better after she had a 10 minute time-out in the car (with the AC on, of course… but, dude. Timeouts in public are hard. Like, they require a delicate choreography to them) then we bought her light-up shoes because she said the Robots wanted her to have them…

Normal parents reward their children for being good. I reward mine for being weird. You can all thank me when she becomes a bad ass futuristic sci-fi writer.

Since I Haven’t Posted In Awhile & I Owe You A Tantrum Themed Post