Thursday, October 29, 2009

Boredom

My oldest child Tadpole seems eternally bored when it comes independent play.

Note first off that I am speaking of my FIRSTBORN, who requires much attention and has never been as self-sufficient as any of my subsequent children.

Puzzles, games, trucks, books, cars, Legos, trains, ride-on toys, LightBrite, crayons, sticker books, craft supplies, dinosaurs, Space Shuttles, activity workbooks, shape sorters, educational toys, an entire science box filled with some of his favorite things like magnifying glasses and pulleys and compasses… oh my!… but put the kid in Quiet Time for one hour and he is completely, utterly BORED.

This, as you may guess, presents a daily challenge for me to help encourage and teach him to play on his own, discover, invent, create, and enjoy. WITHOUT bothering mommy, who desperately needs one – even one – short hour in which to experience down time (or rather cook dinner, feed the baby, or fold laundry, as is more often the case.)

In my world of chaos and activity, baby feeding and toddler taming, tantrums and sibling rivalry, Quiet Time has recently become my biggest challenge: how to understand my child enough to figure out what makes him tick. Or at least, what will motivate him to play alone for the next 60 ticks on the clock.

When we are successful at finding something that does engage him, it honestly is cause for celebration. Today was one of those days.

Pennies! Who knew that dirty pennies would drive my son to the kitchen sink where he could mix water, soap, and vinegar (“because, Mommy, that is the ONLY liquid that will truly clean a penny”) into a large plastic bowl and methodically rub Q-tips on each one, slowing bringing back some of their lost luster.

Who knew?!

Of course, tomorrow is a new day. And another challenge: what could occupy his busy, curious mind today?

Monday, October 26, 2009

Nice to Meet You

Recently our church was ‘interviewing’ a potential pastor, and he and his wife attended a church-wide picnic. Trying to get to know her and make her feel welcome, I spent some time chatting with her while the boys were otherwise occupied with their friends in the pool.

At one point, Tadpole sat down next to me and munched on some food, interrupting me occasionally to ask a random question, as small children do. In my continual efforts to teach good manners, I gently reminded him a few times not to interrupt but to wait patiently for Mommy to finish talking.

After a few of these interjections and responses, Tadpole started saying, “Mommy. Mommy. Mommy,” in a quiet but persistent voice. Determined to set a good example to the potential pastor’s wife, I sweetly turned once again to him and said “Just a moment.” He waited somewhat impatiently by my side, but quieted, and I continued on with my chat.

Just as my mind secretly drifted away from our discussion on cold Chicago winters to how proud I was that my son was obediently waiting to interject again, I heard a long, low whine and felt warmth on my feet. I looked down to see that he had accidentally peed all over my flip-flopped foot, and it had splashed onto the pastor’s wife’s feet.

Well, he hadn’t told me he had to go potty! The kid has been potty-trained with a near perfect record for over two years, so it never dawned on me that he might be interrupting for the purpose of informing me that he had to go!

Fast forward to later that afternoon when we stopped by the beautiful “our-house-was-featured-in-Southern-Living-magazine” home of some super sweet, friendly, southern grandparent-aged neighbors of ours. They had met my charming husband and showed him their gorgeous home when he attended his first HOA meeting as a new member of the neighborhood. After striking up a conversation about remodeling and gardening, they suggested he bring me by sometime to look at their house.

We pulled into their driveway as the baby was desperate to feed and Tigger had fallen asleep only two minutes prior. After sitting for a few minutes in the car, we decided it might look rather odd, so Hubby headed into the house with Tadpole and Cubby with the plan that he would explain my absence and I would follow in about 10 minutes.

As if that bizarre entry wasn’t dramatic enough when meeting someone for the first time, we had to make it even more interesting. I woke up a sleepy (thus fussy) Tigger and together with the baby we strolled up the impeccably manicured walkway to the welcoming doorstep. As I rang the doorbell, Tigger started doing the potty dance and screaming, “I have to pee! I have to pee!”

Not wanting any embarrassing repeats of earlier, I eagerly pushed the ornate doorbell a half dozen times in a row and knocked (in case it wasn’t working, of course) knowing that everyone was probably outside in the designer backyard. I had faith in my well-potty-trained son that he could make it another minute until we were let into the house and could rush through all the formalities and down the hall to the nearest potty, so I remained calm and encouraged him that a visit to the potty was only a few short moments away.

And then, at the exact same moment that my lovely and proper neighbor curiously opened her door, my precious two-year-old dropped his eyes to his shoes and we all watched the effects of two juice boxes and two hours in the pool drain out from under his shorts.

“Uh… Nice to meet you,” I stammered.

You can't imagine my recovery from that one. Embarrassing. But, I take comfort in the fact that every mom has been there at some point…

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Garbage Trucks and Drill Rigs and Ambulances... Oh My!


So I’m writing this blog in honor of the two-week anniversary of our adventure to Orlando Touch a Truck. (Hey, if I had written this the evening of the event, you might falsely conclude that I have too much free time on my hands. Anyway, I’m cool with being two weeks behind.)

Have you heard of this event? I’m telling you – not to be too stereotypical or anything – but this was like little boy heaven. Having said that, I was a wee bit of a tomboy and would have LOVED this event as a girl, and there were plenty of young girls there, too.

But when my mom’s group friend emailed us on Friday night about this event Saturday morning, it took about .45 seconds to make up my mind that we were going. Four little boys and 30+ vehicles to explore? Could any event be more exciting?

What an absolutely brilliant concept. (Not to mention genius fundraiser for the host preschool.) They bring in all sorts of trucks, construction equipment, community service vehicles, and public safety cars. Kids are allowed to sit in them, honk horns, turn wheels, touch levers, and even talk to the drivers and operators who were in uniform. Army jeeps and diggers and streetsweepers, oh my! Fire trucks and police cars and cement mixers, oh my!


Had it not been for the scorching sun and record-setting hot temperatures that day, I truly think we could have spent 8 hours there exploring and investigating. As it was, the boys enjoyed crawling into over a dozen trucks, meeting a police man, and learning about robot thingies with cameras on the end that creep into underground pipes and take pictures.

I cannot WAIT to go to the event again next year. The only thing that could make it better is if it’s at least 10 degrees cooler!

Thursday, October 1, 2009

Sleeping Bookworm

My little Tigger has always been a bit wacky when it comes to sleep. Out of all the kids, he is the one who seems to put himself to bed when he's tired, who is awake hours after the others have fallen asleep, and who naps in all sorts of crazy positions.

The latter prompted me to photograph a week's worth of napping. You'll notice that most of the time slumber has been induced by book reading... he takes after his Momma!

Day 1 - Under the bed

Day 2 - Reading his favorite, Curious George

Day 3 - Reading George again

Day 4 - Didn't make it to bed this time

Day 5 - No nap today!
Day 6 - The Incredibles made him incredibly tired

Day 7 - Notice the neat, fixed bed and animal friends... so sweet