The book Lyla picked for me to read to her and Rowan at bedtime was something by Madonna. I hadn't seen it before, but I suspect it came from last Saturday's gift opening marathon with Julie's side of the family. A children's book written by the singer of "Like a Virgin" will be a perfect gift for a kindergartner, someone thought.
Spoiler alert in case you plan to read this book yourself, but it's about a group of girls who shun another girl because they're jealous of how she's perfect in every way. Then there's an Ebeneezer Scrooge-like dream in which a fairy godmother shows the four of them--simultaneously, because they're all, like, having the same dream at the same time--that the shunned girl's life really isn't so perfect after all. Among other things, the girl's mother is--oh boy. I closed the book.
"Uh, I'll be right back." I headed downstairs with the book and found Julie.
"Julie! This Madonna book is about a girl whose mother is dead. What do I do!? I'm halfway through the book and the kids are waiting."
"I think it's fine."
"Seriously? I don't think it's fine."
"Well, then you're going to deal with the kids' wrath."
Back upstairs, I told the kids I didn't want to finish the book because of something sad in it. They could pick any other book as a replacement.
"WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH!" they replied in unison.
Earlier this year, my friend, a mother of two who blogged here, died of cancer. I admit that perhaps I overreacted to this children's book due to the rawness I still feel about her. But I wasn't prepared for what Lyla said next.
"Daddy! We know the sad thing is that her mom is dead! We know! Can you please just finish the book?"
Rowan chimed in, "Yeah, Daddy. We know she's dead."
So I finished the book. Lyla and Rowan listened intently, and then they went to bed. And of course I came to the simple realization that by trying to protect them, I was really just protecting myself.
Thanks a lot, Madonna.
Wednesday, December 24, 2014
Saturday, January 4, 2014
Wardrobe malfunction
On Monday, Julie and I took the kids to daycare so we could live a day in the throes of childless debauchery, a spiral of destructive, overindulgent behavior glorified by the dumbest rappers. I'm pretty sure Lorde's writing a song about us as we speak. It's called "Ceiling Fan Shopping in the Suburbs."
Later, we picked up the kids and found Rowan in the midst of a significant wardrobe malfunction.
"Nice legs, buddy."
"Yeah. I don't have any pants on."
"Indeed."
"Yeah. I peed on dem at nap time."
"Got it."
A teacher walked over. "He just woke up. And he doesn't have any backup pants in his locker, so I was about to put him in these."
Light purple fleece girl pants. I did not smack them out of her hand, but I thought about it. See, here's how they sent him home a couple months ago:
Look again at the photo. Those are capris.
"So, the light purple fleece girl pants are the only option in the communal pants box?"
"Yep."
I glanced at Julie, who then uttered a five-word day-saver. "What about his snow pants?"
Brilliant.
Later, we picked up the kids and found Rowan in the midst of a significant wardrobe malfunction.
"Nice legs, buddy."
"Yeah. I don't have any pants on."
"Indeed."
"Yeah. I peed on dem at nap time."
"Got it."
A teacher walked over. "He just woke up. And he doesn't have any backup pants in his locker, so I was about to put him in these."
Light purple fleece girl pants. I did not smack them out of her hand, but I thought about it. See, here's how they sent him home a couple months ago:
Look again at the photo. Those are capris.
"So, the light purple fleece girl pants are the only option in the communal pants box?"
"Yep."
I glanced at Julie, who then uttered a five-word day-saver. "What about his snow pants?"
Brilliant.
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
$10,000 in the swear jar
"Man, Lyla, your sheets are totally--"
I almost said they were totally fucked up. As a child who grasps new words quickly, Lyla would've started calling everything fucked up. "Daddy, your nostrils are fucked up." Not good.
The trouble is Julie and I have always described imperfect bedsheets as fucked up. I don't know why. Julie says it's the only accurate phrase.
"Dan, you fucked up these covers."
We've assigned one of the most vulgar expressions in the English language to one of the most ordinary situations. Perhaps we need more excitement in our lives.
"I did not fuck them up."
"You and your big galoot legs fuck up the covers every night."
"Woman, do not accuse me of these crimes. You are this bed's chief fucker-upper."
Secret #1 to marital happiness: talk sweetly to one another.
The other day, Lyla helped Rowan make his bed. Five-year-olds are terrible at bed-making; best case scenario involves the sheets going from catastrophically fucked up to pretty fucked up. But you have to praise the effort. Otherwise they might go to daycare saying fuck.
I almost said they were totally fucked up. As a child who grasps new words quickly, Lyla would've started calling everything fucked up. "Daddy, your nostrils are fucked up." Not good.
The trouble is Julie and I have always described imperfect bedsheets as fucked up. I don't know why. Julie says it's the only accurate phrase.
"Dan, you fucked up these covers."
We've assigned one of the most vulgar expressions in the English language to one of the most ordinary situations. Perhaps we need more excitement in our lives.
"I did not fuck them up."
"You and your big galoot legs fuck up the covers every night."
"Woman, do not accuse me of these crimes. You are this bed's chief fucker-upper."
Secret #1 to marital happiness: talk sweetly to one another.
The other day, Lyla helped Rowan make his bed. Five-year-olds are terrible at bed-making; best case scenario involves the sheets going from catastrophically fucked up to pretty fucked up. But you have to praise the effort. Otherwise they might go to daycare saying fuck.
Saturday, December 28, 2013
Where is my timid, cautious toddler?
Julie and Rowan arrived at the train show and found a very different situation from what was advertised. Rather than a Thomas the Train festival with wooden train tables, snacks, and life-size characters to hug, it was a locomotive trade show for old autistic men.
Meanwhile, I took Lyla to Edinborough Park (a giant indoor play structure covered in microscopic fecal matter) and found a very different Lyla from the last time we were there. Where was my timid, cautious toddler, and who was this chimpanzee? I made the mistake of trying to follow her through the labyrinth for awhile. Height difference alone meant I had to crawl while she sprinted, so it was ugly, and I was lucky to get out of there with limbs, if not dignity, intact.
Afterward, we ate at People's Organic, her favorite restaurant for reasons known only to God ("Why is it your favorite restaurant?" "Uh...I don't know."). It took forever for the food to come out, but Lyla waited with patience and good cheer.
Back at home, the spoils of Christmas continued to delight.
"Daddy, did you see that!? This car is out of control!"
"Want me to teach you how to steer it?"
"Uh, sure."
In ten years, we'll have that conversation again.
Meanwhile, I took Lyla to Edinborough Park (a giant indoor play structure covered in microscopic fecal matter) and found a very different Lyla from the last time we were there. Where was my timid, cautious toddler, and who was this chimpanzee? I made the mistake of trying to follow her through the labyrinth for awhile. Height difference alone meant I had to crawl while she sprinted, so it was ugly, and I was lucky to get out of there with limbs, if not dignity, intact.
Afterward, we ate at People's Organic, her favorite restaurant for reasons known only to God ("Why is it your favorite restaurant?" "Uh...I don't know."). It took forever for the food to come out, but Lyla waited with patience and good cheer.
Back at home, the spoils of Christmas continued to delight.
"Daddy, did you see that!? This car is out of control!"
"Want me to teach you how to steer it?"
"Uh, sure."
In ten years, we'll have that conversation again.
Friday, December 27, 2013
Non-bath-night bath
We've been parents for five years now and have never won a single award for the cleanliness of our children. "My, your children are clean," a stranger has never said.
But this evening, Rowan requested a non-bath-night bubble bath. He wanted to relax after a tough day, perhaps, like every romantic comedy's female protagonist. So Julie sat up there with him while he splashed around.
After 10 minutes or so, he stood up and announced, "I wanna det out now."
Julie put down her magazine, rinsed him off, and grabbed a towel.
"I want you to mate me into a ta-toe." (Making him into a taco involves wrapping the towel around him, neck to toes, like it's a tortilla and he's a slippery piece of chicken.)
"Okay, buddy."
Then he changed his mind. "No, Mommy. I want you to mate me into a baby buwwito." (Making him into a baby burrito involves exactly the same procedure.)
Tomorrow Julie's taking him to a train show at the River Centre in St. Paul. Smart money says the instant he sees Thomas the Train, he'll aggressively release his bowels and negate the bath.
Tuesday, October 15, 2013
Counting to C
We realized the other day that even though Rowan can
recite the alphabet, he has no idea how to identify specific letters on the
page. Luckily, Lyla decided to teach
him.
"Okay, buddy, what letter is this?" she said,
pointing to an A.
"I don't know."
"It's an A."
"Yeah."
The lesson continued in this fashion for quite some
time. Then I suggested to Lyla to review
some of those earlier letters. She
pointed to the A again.
"What letter is this?"
Big smile on Rowan's face, and then: "B!" He reached out his hand to Lyla, expecting a
high-five.
"Daddy, he's not doing it right." Lyla's lip began to quiver in the telltale
pre-breakdown way.
"Keep at it, kiddo," I said. "Practice makes perfect."
Several minutes later, Rowan got one right. Lyla was ecstatic.
"He got C, Daddy!
He got C!"
Rowan beamed with pride.
"Daddy! Daddy! I counted to C!"
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Farewell
Time goes on. The world spins. The kids grow. Life happens.
I'm going to stop writing on this blog. Being a dad is still full of revelations and wacky moments, but I don't feel so compelled to share them these days. It's not that parenting is suddenly less interesting or fun; if anything it's much more so. It's also more comfortable, and being comfortable is not conducive to good writing.
So thank you for reading. God bless you. If I post here again, I'll link to it from Facebook. I wouldn't rule it out entirely; certainly I've failed at quitting before. But this time I feel done. Or at least in need of a good, long break. I want to write other things.
I don't like ending. We don't like endings, we humans. So this is hard for me. But it's the right thing, too. See you around. I'm going to go write a story.
I'm going to stop writing on this blog. Being a dad is still full of revelations and wacky moments, but I don't feel so compelled to share them these days. It's not that parenting is suddenly less interesting or fun; if anything it's much more so. It's also more comfortable, and being comfortable is not conducive to good writing.
So thank you for reading. God bless you. If I post here again, I'll link to it from Facebook. I wouldn't rule it out entirely; certainly I've failed at quitting before. But this time I feel done. Or at least in need of a good, long break. I want to write other things.
I don't like ending. We don't like endings, we humans. So this is hard for me. But it's the right thing, too. See you around. I'm going to go write a story.
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