Wednesday, June 29, 2011
No. I See the Car Wash.
If I rated my patience level today on a scale of one to ten, it would be about a....well....
HALF.
I knew from the moment I woke up and could hear my heartbeat in my eardrums that it was going to be a long day.
My blood pressure had to be approximately 250/185.
I hadn't slept well.
It's hard to sleep well when every two hours you wake up to find you are sequestered to the right 1/6 of the bed because your four year old has snuck in somehow, AGAIN, and is taking up all the space.
Half of Justin's body was on the floor.
We have asked her before how she justifies laying diagonally for hours in a bed that is not hers and she just replied,
"That's just how I sleep here."
We carry her back.
She shows back up.
A preschool Houdini, of sorts.
And you never feel her get in.
She's a night time ninja.
I had to get up early to greet my new daycare baby Jaxson who comes at 7:15.
A perfectly acceptable start time for most humans.
MOST who are not of the opinion that morning should start at approximately 10:00am.
I just felt off
I was crabby. Snappy.
And coffee didn't help, either.
Then I was just crabby AND cracked out.
What about put me over the edge today was the constant eating the kids did.
Literally every 10 minutes I was being beckoned to find crackers or locate yogurts that weren't 'too cold.'
The moment I'd get settled from making one snack, they'd ask for another.
ALL DAY.
The list of things Tessa ate went something like:
* An entire adult sized bowl of cereal
* three bowls of bunny crackers
* a cheese stick
* a Greek yogurt
* a quarter of a watermelon
* 20 strawberries
* a turkey and cheese melt on whole wheat
* 3 graham crackers
* 3 cups of juice
* one glass of milk
* one glass of water
And that was all before noon.
And also I'm not even kidding.
The neighbors probably thought I was doing some sort of child deprivation as I yelled out, "Don't even THINK of asking for another snack before lunch."
Then I had the GENIUS idea to skip nap time today and just put them to bed early.
After all, we were going to have to take Alena to the orthodontist at 3:00 anyway and why cut into their nap time to drag them out? Why not just let them stay up?
Bad, horrid, awful, wretched plan wrought with woe.
After the snacking, the whining started and NEVER STOPPED.
"Mama! Tessa won't leave me alone in the bathroom!"
"Mama! Tessa's trying to wipe me!"
"But I don't want to wear pants!"
"I want to squish the snails first."
"But I don't LIKE those shoes."
"Mama! Tessa's eating MY snacks!"
But all of these complaints, as silly as they sound, PALE in comparison to the meltdown of the day award that goes to Tessa for the fit about....drum roll, please......
WHO GETS TO TELL MAMA THEY SEE THE CAR WASH.
Beloved family game.
The girls play this game daily. Every time we're parked at the corner of Piner and Coffey Lane, one of them yells out, "I see the car wash!" and they giggle.
After all, car washes are quite hilarious, no?
Well today, Chloe saw the car wash first and was first to report sending Tessa into an absolute crisis mode. There was snot. There were tears. There were swollen, and I think possibly glowing red eyes.
She seriously needed some sort of hotline to call because that girl came unglued.
"CWOWIE!!! I WANTED TO TELL MAMA I THEE THE CAR WASH FIIIRRRRSSSSTTTTT!"
Pretty sure you could see the van rocking from behind.
And that's when I completely lost it.
"Tessa! Stop! I see the car wash! I ALWAYS see the car wash. As a matter of fact, I see the car wash before EITHER of you because I ride in the front. I see it every day. But say it! Say it now! Tell me again. Tell me a MILLION TIMES THAT YOU SEE IT, but after that NO ONE gets to tell me they see it. Only I get to say it. I see the car wash! I SEE THE CAR WASH!!!!!!!!"
And then that thing happened to me. That thing where you re-hear something you've just said and you cannot believe you just said it. You can't believe that ridiculous thing came out of your mouth. You hover above your own body for a bit.
I wondered how I had just had a nervous breakdown over a car wash, and had I REALLY yelled out "Don't even ask for another solitary crumb" earlier?
I daydreamed of a random safari truck screeching by and having a hunter shoot me in the carotid artery with a tranquilizer gun rendering me unconscious for at least two hours.
I thought about being drugged and abducted and put in a trunk and whisked away for ransom.
Both of these options lending a nap, at least.
I stepped on the gas.
Tessa's head spun around.
We pulled into the driveway.
She was still muttering some unrecognizable sentences as she vibra-breathed.
Something about a balloon. Something about shoes. Something about the car wash.
For a brief second, all I could think about was lemonade.
Then I hustled their little butts upstairs so fast there may have been smoke.
I helped them brush their teeth. I didn't even care this time that they only brushed for 20 seconds and most of that was spent sucking the toothpaste and trying to brush the cat with their spin brushes.
Jammies flew on.
I sang the worlds fastest and probably least settling lullaby.
Then I kissed them goodnight, threatened their lives if they called for me and pulled the door closed.
But not before Tessa meekly muttered,
"Mama.....Can I have a banana?"
Which I pretended not to hear.
Especially since she'd had two actual dinners. Full. With sides.
I know it may sound mean and unmotherly, but it was primal survival at that point.
I have few plans for tonight.
One is to lay flat on my back as far away from the kitchen as possible - well - maybe not. That would be Alena's room and a pre-teen's room is frankly scary.
Another is to watch copious amounts of TV. TV that does NOT include singing or dancing or animated penguins. Not even a HUM of Chim-Chim-Churi.
And last, I will google "Mini Refrigerators" so that I can fill one with perfectly proportioned cheese-its and juice boxes and who KNOWS what else. Whatever's on coupon, I guess. 6 for the price of 5.
Because I'm sure we'll end up on a talk show for SOME reason some day.
Might as well be that.
Sounds like Tessa is going into a growing spurt. Enjoy. Love your blog. Reminds me of when mine were small. Five in all. Ten years apart. Wouldn't trade those years of anythings, even though naps were in short supply. The fun continues as they bring their emerging families over for spontaneous visits and refrigerator raids. Now, though I can say, "Sure, help yourself."
ReplyDelete