Tuesday, December 30, 2008
I shall never leave during a tantrum without my keys again
So, I decided to go next door to the neighbors' house to call Corin. I decided I couldn't wait around because of the safety issue, so I would suck it up and admit to Merri that my child had locked me out. Not a fun admission. So I called Corin and he said he would come home. Merri had this master-key-looking thing that she thought might work on our lock, so I went back to the door to give it a try. I didn't see either child when I first walked up, but as I tried the key Merri had given me, Evan came down the stairs, bawling. I told him again to come unlock the door, and this time he did.
I called Corin back to let him know I was in the house and put him on speakerphone to tell Evan to go to his room. This time he went. He stayed in his room through dinner and much of the evening. He also got a spanking when his father got home. He apologized to me and gave me a big hug. He promised to be a perfect angel for the next 24 hours. So, I guess it is over.
I usually don't make my blog entries interactive, but if any of you wise mommies or daddies out there have any ideas for what I could have done differently, I'd be happy to hear it. Let me stop you from telling me to hide a key outside the house. That kind of advice is fairly useless after the fact. I shall never leave during a tantrum without my keys again.
Saturday, December 27, 2008
Thankful
First and foremost, I am thankful for my sweet husband and two beautiful and healthy and thriving children. I am blessed that Corin shares my values and beliefs and agrees that it is important to pass those on to our kids. I am thankful for the precious time we had as a family, all cuddled up before bedtime on Christmas Eve, reading the story of Jesus' birth from the kids' Book of Bible Stories. I am grateful for the time we spent trying to focus their excited little minds on the true reason that we celebrate Christmas.
I am thankful that Kerry and Kate were willing to leave behind two feet of snow in New York and come spend Christmas in the balmy south. I am grateful that my kids are blessed to have two aunts who love them dearly and play with them tirelessly each time we see them. I am thankful for sweet in-laws who came from Knoxville to help us start new traditions of celebration in our home: decorating sugar cookies, being together in a crowded kitchen while everyone worked together as a team to create a yummy Christmas Eve meal, singing Christmas carols around the table after Christmas Eve dinner was finally consumed, and so on.
I am thankful for my family - 22 people strong this year - as we celebrated Christmas at Lake Hartwell, as has been our tradition for the last few years. I am blessed to have such a large, close-knit family that creates such fun chaos each year when we are all together. Though we missed my cousin Jeff and my cousin Matt's daughter Amanda this year, we were all thrilled to welcome my cousin Melissa's 12-day-old son Michael into the the family. I am thankful for Evan and Pressley's cousins Will and Abby and Sydney who make these gatherings so much fun for them.
I am thankful for all the many wonderful friends who made this Christmas season special by riding the Pink Pig with us, hosting a fun tree-trimming party, inviting me to a cookie swap, attending a Sunday School Christmas party in our home - complete with a rousing-and-sometimes-playfully-hostile white elephant gift exchange.... So many wonderful memories over the last couple of weeks.
I hope your Christmas was as merry as ours and I hope you have as much to be thankful for as we do. Next time you catch me complaining about some little insignificant thing, somebody please remind me of all the things I have to be thankful for.
Feel free to check out the several links under Albums of all of our Christmas fun.
Wednesday, December 24, 2008
Merry Christmas Eve
Merry Christmas!
Wednesday, December 17, 2008
Worst mom ever
Yesterday, we had our carpets cleaned. This means that Monday night, we had to move all the furniture off the rugs downstairs and onto the hardwood floors and all of the non-bed/ non-dresser furniture out of the bedrooms and into the bathrooms or out into the hallway. The cleaners were supposed to come between 8 and 10 a.m. At 9, we got a phone call from the company. Two technicians were out. One had rushed his wife to the hospital with a miscarriage and the other was sick. Now, I'm not a heartless person. I have experienced a miscarriage - much less traumatic than the rush-to-the-hospital variety - but, even so, I would have been hacked if my husband had chosen to clean someone's carpet rather than being with me. I get that. And, I have called in sick. I can sympathize with that too. It is hard enough to sit at a desk when you feel crappy, but I can imagine it really stinks to clean carpets feeling bad. So, I understand that things happen. The manager who called me was apologetic and offered a slight discount for the inconvenience of bumping us to the last slot of the day: the 5pm to 7pm window. It really was an inconvenience, but like I said, I was understanding.
After I got off the phone, I began to think what this meant for my day. I had scheduled the cleaning for a Tuesday morning intentionally because the kids would both be in school. Now, I was faced with keeping the kids off the carpet all afternoon and off all the towering piles of furniture. No easy task. I took them to the park until it started to rain. I was forced to bring them home, then. I fed them a snack and put them in front of the tv to try to avoid all the toys coming out and covering up the carpets. By 5:30, I was beside myself and still had not received the call letting me know someone was on the way. Finally, at 5:45 they called. They would be here between 6:45 and 7. Arrrgh! So, I hung up the phone and hatched a plan. I decided I would back my car out of the garage and bring the scooters and trikes in to create a little indoor track. So, I told the kids to get their shoes on and I went outside to move the car. I looked up as I was backing out and saw both kids standing in the doorway, shoes in hand, stricken looks on their faces and crying hysterically. "Don't leave us, Mommy!" they screamed. "We're putting our shoes on!" I felt horrible. So, I went back in and explained that I was not leaving them. I'm simply making space for them to play. So, I went to our outdoor storage closet and got out the scooters. As I brought the scooters back through the house and into the garage, Evan looked up at me - eyes still full of tears - and said (sad and horrified), "Mommy, are you giving my scooter away?!"
Are you feeling my pain? Here I am, at the end of my rope, trying to create a fun diversion for these children who have not been allowed to play in the house all day, and they think I'm a monster.
You would think I would've had a better day today, but no. Today, I started trying to put Pressley down for her nap at 12:30. I finally gave up at 1:30 because I decided that if she fell asleep that late, it would interfere with our 2:30 pick-up at pre-k. So, after we picked Evan up at school, I tried again. This time it started around 2:45 and the stubborn child finally fell asleep at 4:15. On most days, this would have been irksome, but not a total disaster. Today, however, we needed to leave the house at 4:45 to go to supper at church followed by caroling at a nursing home. So, I woke her up. BIG mistake. She cried inconsolably for 20 minutes. We were 45 minutes late to church. The only way I coaxed her out of the house was to tell her she could watch a Baby Einstein dvd in the car on the way to church. We arrived at church with a fully soaked diaper (because she refused to let me change it before we left) and completely unkempt hair. Let's just say I've had better days.
Sorry for the endless rambling. I've said it before, I'll say it again. This is cheap (o.k., free) theapy for me. I'm done now.
Thursday, December 11, 2008
It's the most wonderful time of the year
On Monday night, we went to ride the Pink Pig with some folks from our Sunday School class. It was a perfect outing. We met at the ticket booth at 6 pm, rode the train twice (thanks to Helen and her 2 rides for the price of 1 coupons), and then had dinner in the food court. From this day forward, I will always go to the Pink Pig on a Monday night. There was no line for tickets, and the employees let us actually stay on the train for our second ride rather than making us wait in the (short) line to ride again. SOOOO much easier than last year when we got there on a Friday morning at opening time and waited an hour for tickets and then another 30 minutes to ride the train. Both of the kids enjoy the ride, but Pressley was especially expressive. When we first took off, she turned to me and said, "I LOVE this train!" and clapped her hands.
All the kiddos "pose" for a picture before heading to the food court for dinner
Sunday, December 7, 2008
Seriously?!?
I said, "Did you get it? How did you get?"
He said, "Doing the same thing I've been doing. But now we have a much bigger problem."
"What?" I say.
"Come look."
Uh, oh. I don't like the sound of that....
So I went down the hall to look. What I find is that the toilet is FULL of toilet paper. I had just changed the roll late yesterday afternoon and now it was empty. So, when I say FULL of toilet paper, I mean a whole roll. Underneath all the toilet paper is a poo. Corin asked if I thought Pressley did it. My answer would have been yes if there had been no poo, but since she is not even sitting on the "big potty" yet, much less making a poo there, I was sure it wasn't her - even though she is about the right age to think that unrolling a whole roll of toilet paper into the potty is big fun. Nope, it was Evan.
I went and sat on the floor of his room with him.
"Evan," I said, "You are not in trouble, but I need you to tell me the truth. Daddy just opened the bathroom door and we found a whole roll of toilet paper (and a poo) in the potty. Did you do that?"
"Uh, huh," he said. "By accident."
"Ummmm, that was not an accident. You had to have stood there and pulled off a whole roll of toilet paper into the potty. Did you do that? You are still not in trouble, but you need to tell the truth."
A wide-eyed vigorous nod.
As of now, he still has not admitted to locking the door, but he does admit closing it. Presumably to delay our discovery of what he had done. So it is very clear to me that he knew he was doing something bad when he did it.
The good news: 1) We didn't have to call a locksmith and have him be the one to discover that scene; 2) We did not have to call a plumber. Against my better judgment, Corin decided to flush, just to see what would happen I guess. And it all went down. No plunger needed. No plumber needed. Fabulous.
The bad news: I'm not convinced it will not happen again.
So, again I say.... Seriously?!?
Thursday, December 4, 2008
I wanna wake up the in city that doesn't sleep...
Corin, Pressley, me, Evan and GranNan at Rockefeller Center
Evan, Corin, GranNan, Poppy, and Pressley watch the skaters at Rockefeller Center
GranNan and Poppy in front of the original torch
Evan and Pressley at the base of the Statue of Liberty
Evan and Pressley watch as their bears get stuffed...
Evan and Pressley "fluff" their new bears
Corin, Pressley and me in the horse-drawn carriage
Poppy, Evan and GranNan in their horse-drawn carriage