Tag Archives: Parenting

Up All Night

If some of the other parents saw us right now they’d be appalled.  Or perhaps just perplexed.  Or maybe even wishing they could do the same but their schedules or weird-ass beliefs won’t allow them to do so.  It’s 8:30 pm on a school night.  My kid is not in bed.  He’s outside in the dark riding his new bike in the rare Florida chill.  His dad is home from another week-long stint in another state for work.  They are outside together;  I’m cleaning the kitchen with the calmness and solidarity that a man experiences in his man-cave or garage tinkering with motors or wood.

I find great pleasure in washing dishes and wiping the counter.  I have my Pandora stations on shuffle.  It’s my kitchen dance party.  I know the dishwasher will be loaded per my exceedingly high expectations, meaning I can fit nearly every dish and utensil in there without having to hand wash much except the big salad bowl, special cutting knife, and roasting pan.  I’m working/dancing off the calories consumed by finishing not only my plate but also my kid’s.  I know this is not a good habit.  But I hate seeing healthy home-cooked food go to waste.  He’ll be hungry again in twenty minutes.

Sometimes when he rails against going to bed it reminds me of when he was just a year old.  We have video of him playing with an empty water bottle and laughing at his older cousin as she fake sneezes in this high-pitched “Eh Cheeeewww”.  I pan to the clock and it reads 1:00 am.  The baby is wide awake and laughing as his fat cheeks dimple and his eyes widen with maniacal late-night wonder.

That video will forever be etched in my memory.  When I hear other parents talk about how their kid goes down strictly at 8:30 I don’t offer much.  I figure if they knew I let my kid stay up til sometimes 10:00 on a school night they would roll their eyes or widen them and give me the “Oh we don’t do that at our house” judgement crap.

My brother and I had a strict bedtime of 9:00.  I can still hear my parents yelling from downstairs, “Ya’ll need to quiet down and go to sleep!”  We were always whisper-chatting or playing with stuffed animals way past the nine o’clock hour.  Even though we had our own rooms we slept in the same bed til I was thirteen.  I was afraid of the dark.  Utterly convinced there was something under the bed that would reach out and grab my feet if they were too close to the edge.  And lightning?  Utterly convinced it would crash through my window and strangle me with its electric arms.

My brother wasn’t scared.  He just humored me.  Until I kicked him out when it was too weird for us to be under the same quilt.

My kid doesn’t have a sibling to share in late-night laugh-fests.  So we let him stay up and watch SNL skits or old episodes of The Twilight Zone.  Interestingly he never has nightmares.

Sharks are night owls too.

Sharks are night owls too.

Maybe it’s bad parenting to let him stay up so late.  But then again everyone has their own child-rearing style.  I like that we’re flexible.  You gotta grab these moments and drink them in, inhale them.  One day soon that laughing baby, this night owl boy, will be up all night with his buds.  And I’ll be biting the skin off my fingers hoping to God he’s okay.  I think I’ll go ahead and order my Chardonnay drip right now.

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Filed under Observations

Introducing Cherry Pearl

Intro Cherry

Hi.  I’m Cherry.  My human brother named me that as he was eating a cherry lollipop.  I wish I could get my paws on one right now.  I’m on a diet.  Not by choice, of course.  What self-preservating pug would do such a thing?

Mom is kind of stressed right now about holiday shopping and getting ready for a trip so she said I could FINALLY guest blog.  She also said she has so many stories swirling in her head she can’t focus or sleep.  I took a break from napping to write for her.  Not much going on in this head, other than dreaming of chasing those taunting little squirrels outside the window.  I will catch them one day.  Mom always asks, “What in the world would you do to them if you caught them anyway?”  To tell you the truth, I haven’t really thought that far ahead.

Hmmmm.  I hear a rustling in the kitchen.  Mom’s getting into the chocolates this early?  She must be stressed.  Next thing you know I’ll hear a cork pop.

So I’ll tell you a little about me.  I was born on Leap day.  I don’t chew on shoes anymore (no it was not me who busted Mom’s flip flops, she did that herself).  I do still rustle through the trash every now and then.  I make some crazy noises when I yawn, or eat, or sleep, or see another dog I know.  There are lots of dogs on my block.  Spencer and Buddy are my favorite.  Mom gets embarrassed when I sniff and lick them in their happy places.  She says I linger there a little too long.  You don’t see them complainin!

Last week I got into some of Mom’s dark chocolates.  She couldn’t believe I ate the wrappers and everything.  She almost blamed it on Dad.  I was fine.  But then last night Mom and Gramps fed me a carrot.  I barfed that up all over Mom’s favorite chair.  Dang diet.

I hope I see you all again.  I’m gonna go lick myself then take a nap.  Hey, what would you do if you caught a squirrel?  On second thought, don’t answer that.  Mom doesn’t eat mammals.  Or rodents.

Squirrel

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In a Crowded Room

In a crowded room
I can pick you out
because those eyes came from me
and see the things I did years ago
towering adults
stuffed animals on low shelves
the smallest, most chokeable object on the kitchen floor
Only it's decades later
and now I'm the mother
But I feel like a child most days
Maybe that's why sometimes it's easy
for me to crawl around the floor and chase you
I feel my heart flutter
when you smile 
when you squeal
And when you throw your strong but
tiny arms around me
I know I could never be happier
So hold on just a little longer
Don't let go
Don't grow too fast
I don't want to lose you
in a crowded room.

— Written for my son when he was just a baby. I told him I loved him shortly after he was born. I wanted him (and me) to know I meant it. Of all who I’ve loved and continue to love, there is no one who has captured my heart like him. And there is no one who has taught me unconditional love like him. There might have been times I didn’t like him, but I’ve always loved him. Retrieved from the archives in response to The Daily prompt: Love to Love You

Ian baby

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Filed under Sunday Night Sonnet