Operation: Toddler Bed

One recent morning I decided to remove the rails from the crib and transition Sam to a toddler bed. I figured he was ready. He’d already been climbing out fairly regularly thanks to Nate’s tutelage, and now he’d be able to climb back into the bed—something he couldn’t do previously. For some silly optimistic reason, I believed that in a toddler bed, Sam would get out, cause some ruckus upstairs, become disarmed by his drowsiness, and retreat to his bed to take a nice, long nap.

 

And personally, I need that time. I could feel the caffeine evaporate from my bloodstream—is that how caffeine works?—when I sit at the dining room table waiting for Sam to finish lunch. My eyes moved from side to side, glimpsing the dust particles in the sunlit air, the Greek yogurt stains on the back of Sam’s chair, and the sticky fingerprints on…well, on everything. I really resented those fingerprints. And the yogurt stains. And I knew that those dust bunnies are malicious.

 

In my head, I knew that if Sam went to sleep right now, at this very moment, I would have just enough energy and motivation left in my bloodstream to properly attack all those evil Mercenaries of Dirt—to the point that they would never dare to return! At least for another week or so.

 

So if Sam can just manage naptime on his own—climbing out of his new toddler bed to grab that drowsiness-causing train book and then climbing back in to meet his date with slumber—I can be super-productive! I started to mentally map out the most efficient route between the cleaning products and the windows that need to be Windexed. I calculated how much time is left on the dryer cycle before those clothes will need to be folded. And when was the last time I scrubbed the master bathroom toilet? Also, when was the last time I used the toilet? My to-do list was growing. Just like my two year-old nemesis who’d just wrangled the last gob of peanut butter into his mouth.

 

But Sam had other plans. He’s industrious, with a to-do list as long as mine.

 

“Sam!” I called out to him—loud enough for him to hear me but softly enough to not cause a heart attack. It’s hard to fall asleep when your heart is racing. “Time to go upstairs! With your lovies! And let’s grab your water! What else do you need to bring up?”

 

His cast of characters required for a nap is longer than my to-do list. If I typed out all their names, it would exceed my self-imposed word limit here. That’s partly because they have very descriptive names. Like “Tiny Little Bear’s Dad.” And “Traintrack Thomas.” As opposed to “Whistle Thomas.”

 

We went upstairs together and positioned “everyone” in their assigned seats, barely leaving enough space for his growing body. I went through the rest of our routine using a gentle voice and manner, doing my very best to induce a sleepy mentality.

 

“Ok, Sam, sleep a long time!” And then I returned to adulthood downstairs.

 

The difference between Nate at the age of two and Sam at the age of two, both resistant to imprisonment—I mean, naptime—is that Nate wanted to immediately rejoin me downstairs and resume mother-son bonding time. That’s kinda my worst nightmare. Sam, on the other hand, wants nothing to with me. He’s perfectly content upstairs without me.

 

And so, with a can of Pledge in my hand and a roll of paper towels under my arm, I started to round the first bend of a productivity track. I was just hitting my stride: spray and wipe, spray and wipe. Perfectly spiraled arm motions with my dust rag. Take that, Heavy Film of Dust! My satisfied, sadistic grin grew wider.

 

And then—THUD! I paused to listen.

 

Suddenly the unmistakable sound of the toilet seat dropping to its base.

 

Oh, come on.

 

Imagining a potential plumbing disaster, I mounted the steps, two at a time. I found him hovering over the toilet bowl in the Jack-and-Jill bathroom that connects the boys’ domiciles. He was tearing off toilet paper squares one at a time and depositing them into the toilet. Since he had yet to notice me, I observed him for a few moments. He seemed to have a method. It actually wouldn’t have surprised if he had whipped out a notebook from a lab coat pocket and jotted some notes, proving or perhaps disproving his hypothesis.

 

“Nope!” I said, jarring his focus. “Back in bed! It’s naptime. Go!”

 

I could practically see him roll his rebellious eyes at my authority, but he feigned obedience and trotted back through the doorway and stopped in front of his bed.

 

“Climb up, please,” I instructed. When I removed the rail from the crib earlier that day, I had also affixed the half-rail that was included in the crib package we had received as a shower gift when I was pregnant with Nate, over four years ago. It’s intended, I suppose, to aid with the transition, assuring both mother and baby that he’ll be safe that he won’t fall out of bed.

 

Sam, however, viewed the half-rail as a challenge, maybe even a training obstacle. Instead of sliding his exhausted person through the opening—clearly the easier route—he preferred to go over the railed segment. It takes longer, of course, which is probably his true motivation, but it also raised my frustration level.

 

Come on, Sam. A little faster, please!

 

When I returned downstairs, it took me a few minutes to find my place again amidst my mental to-do list, particularly after I checked my e-mail, Facebook, Twitter, the New York Times “breaking news” alerts, and my text messages on the off-chance that I have friends again. By the time I found my dust rag again, the sound of footsteps upstairs had resumed.

 

Let me just finish cleaning this bookshelf. What the—? More thuds above me.

By the time I got back upstairs, he had retraced his steps—why does he run everywhere?—and was back in his room.

 

And so was almost every single item not nailed down in Nate’s room. Nate’s room is a very revered space for Sam. Nate maintains an orderly space. He knows where every toy, stuffed animal, sock, and random puzzle piece belongs. When Nate’s at home, no one is allowed to even look at these prized possessions. Even when pigs are flying in the sky and Nate’s sharing with Sam, he is doing so with very strict supervision. So, with Nate at school, Sam had gathered up all of his brother’s 1,300 stuffed animals, his books, and several pillows. All of those items were now in Sam’s bed. There was officially no room left for Sam.

 

Was this his intent?

 

“Nope. Back in bed! These are Nate’s.” I gathered them up and turned to return them to their home. Sam realized the severity of his blunder—who wants to provoke the most powerful and vengeful tyrant in the house?—and helped me move everything back and yet again obediently returned to bed.

 

A few minutes after that, I heard him in our bedroom. Sam can’t open his bedroom door from the inside. It’s partly a dexterity problem and partly an “it’s just an old house” problem. So, to get to our bedroom, he had to go through the bathroom, through Nate’s room, and down the hallway, past the top of the steps that lead downstairs. Curious, I snuck up to spy. I found him at the vanity, combing his hair in front of the mirror and singing in a high-pitched voice.

His lyrics are always the same: “Happy morning to you…happy…happy…baaaby…”

 

He had also emptied an entire box of tissues throughout the upstairs—and had been rearranging framed pictures on my dresser, moving the ones of himself to the front and the ones of Nate to the back.

 

Finally I decided I needed to thwart his escape attempts sooner. I stood at the bottom of the steps doing squats and crunches and burpees, and as soon as I heard the thud of his feet hitting the floor, I sprinted up the steps and dragged him back to his bed. Then I returned to the first floor, resumed my body weight exercises, and braced myself for another uphill sprint. It was actually a pretty good workout.

 

 

Tune in next week to find out whether or not Sam napped this particular afternoon. Will Sam survive the toddler bed? Will the toddler bed survive Sam?

Potty Training Fail

So here’s what happened. Here’s why Tighe might never eat his cereal off that coffee table again and why I’m currently burning every scented candle we own, and yet I can still faintly smell poop. And of course, Sam is the culprit.

 

We arrived home from the store one morning this week—just Sam and me and too many bags of groceries.

 

But Sam’s pants were wet. And his socks were wet. Some combination of stomping in puddles in the parking lot and trying to dance in Wally’s water bowl when we got home.

 

So, fine, Sam. Yes, we can take your shoes and socks and pants off. And yes, your shirt, too, even though it’s not wet. Yes, let’s throw them in the dryer, so they’ll be dry after lunch.

 

A few minutes later, as I was shoving cereal boxes into the cabinet above the toaster—who am I, Jerry Seinfeld?—Sam ran by naked, waving his diaper in the air like he’d just won Capture the Flag.

 

“What? Why are you naked? I just changed your diaper!”

 

And I had, too. That diaper was fresh, about twenty minutes old.

 

“Ok, fine. How about you sit on your Elmo toilet?”

 

We haven’t formally changed our Facebook status to “potty training” yet, but when the opportunity presents itself—like when Sam irreverently removes his diaper in the family room—I take advantage of it.

 

A few minutes later, as I was preparing to marinate some chicken for dinner, he ran in victorious again! He pulled me into the other room to show me his little puddle of urine in the bottom of his potty chair.

 

“Yay, Sambo!” So proud of himself.

 

He swished his hand around in the shallow yellow pool, and then high-fived me. All in one motion.

 

I winced.

 

Disgusting. Yet… “Good job, Sam!” I forced out some praise and dragged him to the bathroom to clean him up.

 

Success. Gross, but success. What I didn’t manage to do, however, was to affix another diaper onto his limber little body. He’d already pooped that day, and he never poops more than once a day. Once-A-Day-Sam, that’s what we call him. Like a geyser.

 

Unless, of course, I happen to buy him a blueberry and spinach smoothie that morning. In that case, he’ll poop a total of four times in the next twelve hours.

 

A minute or two later, my fingers deep into chicken thighs in the kitchen, I heard grunting.

 

“Sam?” I called out. “Are you pooping?”

 

Silence.

 

“Are you sitting on your Elmo toilet?”

 

Grunting.

 

I sprinted into the other room to find him squatting on top of the coffee table! Red-faced! His little butt less than an inch from the surface!

 

“No! No, no, no, no, nooooo!”

 

Careful not to contaminate him with chicken-thigh-salmonella—why do I bother?—I scooped his armpits up with my forearms. Like a forklift, I lowered him to the potty chair.

 

But it was too late. Small turds dotted the coffee table. The coffee table. In our house! Feces on a table in civilized country! A new low.

 

Tighe eats his cereal every morning on that coffee table! So does Sam, actually, but he apparently doesn’t give a shit.

 

I’ll spare you the details of the clean-up process, but suffice it to say there was a lot of scrubbing. A lot of Lysol. A lot of Clorox. And a lot of tears. Mixed in with some incredulous giggling by me. This is my life now?

 

I think it’s safe to eat off that table now—though you won’t find me doing so. There should be no germs within a five-foot radius of Ground Zero, and the aroma of the apple-cinnamon-vanilla-island-mango candles is finally starting to overpower the stench of feces. That table will never be the same, though. I think I rubbed the finish right off that thing.

 

Who wants to come over for some nachos on Super Bowl Sunday? I’ll serve them right on the coffee table!

Night Man!

I don’t sleep well when Tighe’s out of town. I usually fall asleep without a problem, exhausted from arguing logic with illogical minds, which is basically my job description in a nutshell. But then I tend to wake at every little sound.

 

Because I have to. Tighe’s not there. It’s my job to protect the house against burglars, murderers, rapists, miscellaneous bogeymen, and all types of nefarious rodents. I’ll lay there awake in my bed in the wee hours as I try to determine the source of a sound—are the chipmunks clawing through the exterior walls into our bedroom? Did the furnace just kick on? Or is villain about to kick down the door?

 

And I know what you’re thinking, but no, Wally’s no help. If he managed to defend us at all, it’d be an accident—he’d be so excited to greet someone he’d knock them over and they’d crack their head open on a matchbox car. Ok, so maybe he would be helpful.

 

But I can’t count on it. Instead, I lie in bed plotting my next move. If it’s a cat burglar, he can take whatever he wants from the first floor. In fact, take all of the toys, every single one. I’m sick of picking them up seven or eight times a day. I’m sick of Nate and Sam squabbling over them.

 

Now, if it’s a murderer, I’ve got to get my robe on because we’re going to have to evacuate the house, and it’s cold outside. I start to envision myself scooping Nate up under one arm, Sam under the other, and sprinting with an awkward lopsided gait down the middle of Ward Parkway. I start to wonder whose bedroom I should go into first, and whether lighting a small fire or tossing a brick at the murderer’s head would cause more of a distraction while we escape into the night. Where do we keep our stash of bricks?

 

If it’s a ghost causing the ruckus, there’s not much I can do. I’ll just call some legendary comedic actors in the morning. I just really hope it’s not a vampire. They’re fast, and I’m pretty sure they can fly. I’m not confident I could defeat him. Or her.

 

And there’s always a chance—though that chance is probably diminishing by the day—that it’s a government agency sneaking into our house to plead with me to go on a super top-secret mission for America. Very Cold War, very chic, very badass. If that’s the case, I’ll have to call Maggie to see if she can babysit. Of course, she has school in the morning. I wonder if she can miss her first couple classes…

 

Anyway, these thoughts keep me up most of the night, in between an occasional interruption from Nate—he had a bad dream, he can’t find “little monkey,” he needs to pee, whatever—and I eventually drift into a dreamy sleep until Sam starts slamming doors at 6 AM.

 

One recent night when Tighe was in Las Vegas for “business,” Nate woke me up from a very heavy slumber at 1:30 AM to tell me he was scared, which I find hard to believe because he’s young—he doesn’t even know all the terrible things that can happen in the middle of the night! He doesn’t know about ISIS, Ebola, the projected cost of college tuition, or the Pittsburgh Steelers! Anyway, I led him back to bed and arranged all his guys on the pillow around him, and he was snoring again within seconds.

 

I trudged back to my bed to commence my worrying. The usual thoughts returned, plus some new ones. Did I blow out that candle on the mantle? Do we have a carbon monoxide leak? Are any tornadoes scheduled for tonight? Am I itchy? Do we have fleas?

 

I contemplated taking a sleeping pill but didn’t want to feel hungover in the morning. So I lay there, and the minutes and hours ticked by on the clock until it was 5:30 AM. Suddenly, I heard a thud.

 

Then crying. Nate.

 

I lept from my bed, heart racing, and grabbed my robe. I met him in the hall where he wailed about bad dream. I fumbled. I was exhausted from exchanging my precious sleep for irrational anxiety.

 

“How about you just come sleep in my bed?”

 

Oooh. I winced as soon as the words came out of my mouth. He’s never slept in our bed before! Am I setting a precedent? Is this a slippery slope? Will he suddenly want to do this every night? Are we going to lose sleep trying to undo this behavior?

 

Oh, well. I just wanted him to stop crying—I couldn’t risk him waking Sam, too!

 

So, we climbed into our bed, and again, within seconds, he was snoring, his mouth ajar, and his arms clutching his blanket and his monkeys.

 

I started to drift off again and figured if I could just get about thirty solid minutes of sleep, I’d be okay for the day. Maybe I’ll just have a little extra coffee in the afternoon. And if Sam takes a good nap, maybe I can lay down for a few minutes before Nate comes home from school.

 

Then, suddenly: SLAM!

 

Sam. He can climb out of his crib, but he can’t open his bedroom door from the inside of his room. A dexterity problem, I think. Or maybe it’s just an old house with finicky fixtures. First thing in the morning, he travels through the Jack-and-Jill bathroom into Nate’s room. And in the process, he always slams both bathroom doors. Always.

 

I jumped out of bed again, glancing at the clock, as I glided quickly out of the room. 6:15. Ugh. Too early to get up. But not early enough to force him back to bed.

 

By the time I met him in Nate’s room, he was standing at the foot of the bed. His face was illuminated by Nate’s two nightlights and I could see that he was alarmed that Nate wasn’t in his bed.

 

“Where Nate go?” That is literally the first time I’ve ever heard him whisper.

 

“He’s sleeping. Do you want to get in your bed?”

 

“Uh-huh.” He slid into his future twin bed, parallel to Nate’s bed on the far side of the room.

 

I climbed into Nate’s bed a few feet away for a few more minutes of rest. I opened one eye to gaze at Sam. His eyes were open, staring up at the ceiling, and I wondered what was going through his head: What did she do with Nate? Why is she in Nate’s bed? This is highly unusual. Am I worried? What’s worry?

 

I decided I needed to comfort him.

“Can I sleep with you, Sam?” I got up and moved to the other bed. As I pulled up the comforter and moved to lay down, he scooted out the other side and climbed into Nate’s bed.

 

Ok, this is officially weird. We’re playing Early Morning Musical Beds. I lifted my head from the Thomas the Tank Engine pillowcase, and realized I was now safe from all the miscellaneous bogeymen of the night. I had bigger problems to face.

 

I motioned for Sam to follow me and we crept down the steps, careful not to wake Nate, still asleep in my bed.

 

Once downstairs, Sam ran to turn on the TV, another gadget he doesn’t know how to use: “Dora! Dora! Dora! Swiper, no swiping!” He yelled like an East Berliner, thrilled to finally be reunited with his West German relatives after the thaw. And anxious to learn Spanish for some reason.

 

As he began to call out his breakfast order—most of which he’d never eat—I flashed back to my reality just a few hours before: protecting my children against sadistic maniacs…defeating villains with lightsabers, or nunchuks, or a plastic golf club—whatever we had laying around…going deep undercover in the Soviet bloc.

 

Dinner: Impossible!

I love to cook. It’s in my genes. And my jeans—helps fill those guys out. And now that I’m a SAHM, I have no excuse not to have a nice, home-cooked meal on the table every night. Plus, those thirty to forty minutes in the kitchen to prepare dinner are something I cherish.

I select a “kid’s show” for Nate and Sam and slip into the next room, where I can think about something besides Lightning McQueen, trains, trucks, and other modes of transportation. Instead, I can create something, something delicious to provide for my family. Something to prove that even though I just went medieval on their asses, I still love them. Though why I bother I don’t know, because only Tighe and I will actually eat it.

Preparing dinner is peaceful. With the TV on, I start pulling ingredients from the refrigerator. And every single time I try to shut the door—you know, to keep the contents cold and fresh and our electric bill relatively low—Sam’s little body appears beneath me.

“Wait, Mom.”

I roll my eyes and move back toward the stove as Sam opens the door wider, until it’s resting against the far cabinets. He stands in front, one foot up on the bottom threshold, and he lifts himself up and back down again and again, scanning the shelves. To make it extra annoying, he uses his right thumb to flick the interior light on and off, until our kitchen feels more like a nightclub.

Only the music sucks. Because there is no music, the soundtrack is just Sam standing there, listing the items inside that he can identify. When he’s finished, he inquires about every single condiment stored on the door.

“That, Mom?”

“That’s barbecue sauce, Sam. Close the door, please.”

“That, Mom?”

“That’s balsamic glaze. Please close the door.”

“That?” 

“Yogurt.” I’m starting to wonder why his attention isn’t held by whatever animated nonsense I put on the TV. I glance in to see Nate’s motionless body in a trance on the sofa, drool practically falling from his mouth—like I intended.

“That, Mom?”

“Still barbecue sauce. Oh, wait, that’s a different barbecue sauce. That one has chunks of apple in it. Your dad likes to use it on his eggs, but I imagine it’d be really good on a pork tenderloin.” I like to cook. “Now, get out of here! I think I hear Thomas coming on TV.”

“Oh! Thomas! Choo-choo, all aboard!” He runs away, a little lopsided. Because that’s how toddlers run. I hope. I’m not worried. Yet.

I go to close the refrigerator door as I trip over the stool he had placed in front to extend his view.

But a minute or two later, just as the stove is getting dangerously hot, he’s back. And he brought Nate with him. What the—?

“Mom, can I have a snack?”

“No! We’re eating dinner in a little bit.” 

“Are we having salmon? I don’t like salmon. And don’t put salad on my plate again. That’s nasty!”

Well, you’re welcome for the nutrition, Nate. And for birthing you. The C-section scar matches my two-piece bathing suit nicely. Ingrate.

“What’s this for, Mom?”

He’s standing on a stool and poring through that really wide utensil drawer, the one with tongs and spatulas and whisks and such.

“That is a sieve. I use it to rinse and drain things, like black beans or vegetables sometimes.” What the hell—might as well make this a learning experience.

“Do you want to help me, Nate?” 

“Can we break eggs?”

“Uh, no, not tonight. We’re having pasta. With sausage and peppers.” 

“And Sam and I can have chicken nuggets with ketchup.” Not a request, a declaration. “Mom, can I fix the dishwasher?”

“Um, it’s not broken.” I’m distracted at this point. Water is starting to boil and I need to start chopping peppers and the ingredients for a salad. I contemplate making garlic bread, something Nate and Sam will usually actually eat. Otherwise, it’ll probably be a parmesan-cheese-and-milk night for them. Again.

Sam has started pulling pots and pans from the cabinets beneath the stove. He’s removing their lids and spreading them across the floor, and I’m dodging and pivoting like a former D-1 athlete as I make my way to the fridge to grab the spinach.

Nate’s going through my junk drawer to dig out the flowered screwdriver-inside-a-hammer that my mom gave me my freshman year of college. He cuts in front of me and begins hammering the front of the dishwasher.

It’s now 5:51. We eat at six. Running a few minutes behind, but I can do it.

From another cabinet, Nate removes a colander and a large mixing bowl, which he carries over to the dishwasher. Sam sits on the floor and watches him before he walks to the narrow cabinet in the corner and starts removing cutting boards and cookie sheets. That’s thoughtful of him because usually when I stumble on those, I slide across the floor like a skateboarder—faster than I’d ordinarily be able to walk, and since I’m running late anyway…

“Where is Tighe?” I mutter to myself.

 I continue to weave in and out of obstacles on the floor while balancing steaming platters—how much food can four people eat?—and replying mindlessly to questions about kitchen appliances and trains.

Soon it’s a few minutes after six, Tighe’s still not home, and dinner is cooling on the table. Since Nate and Sam are occupied, which I count as doing anything besides hanging on my person, I start cleaning the mess in the kitchen. Well, the pots that I’ve used anyway.

The TV echoes from the other room. I guess Wally likes PBS Kids now. Nate is fiddling with the screwdriver and opening and closing the dishwasher. Sam has migrated to a spot at my feet. He’s rummaging through the cleaning supplies under the sink and repeating the lines from knock-knock jokes that he’s memorized.

“Knock-knock! Pizza good guy! Knock-knock! Pizza good guy!”

The actual joke is: ‘Knock-knock. Who’s there? Pizza. Pizza who? Pete’s a pretty good guy!’

The limited humor of the pun is lost on Sam. He just likes pizza. And repetition.  

Nate continues to talk about dishwashers. His exact dialogue is lost in my memory because at this point, I'm starting to worry about where Tighe is, thinking about reheating dinner, and trying to watch Sam. Kind of.

“Guys, do you know whose name is actually Pete? Ellie’s boyfriend!” 

“Ellie’s boyfriend is a dishwasher?!” Nate only hears what he wants to hear, in the context of his world.

“What? No.” I gasp as I glance down at Sam. “NOO! Sam! No!” 

Sam has white granules on his face and is thumbing a neon dishwasher pod. More white granules are piled up on the floor and I can see a hole through the pod’s plastic. Shit.

I thrust my finger into his mouth and start feeling around for some of the soapy poison. I can’t find any, but I start ranting—loudly and informatively—about household poisons and the statistics of how many children die from ingesting those pods every year.

“Mom. What are you doing to Sam?”

Sam, fearful now, has started to cry. I hug him and apologize, reminding him—because I’ve told him a million times—that he can’t eat anything under the sink.

“Is Sam dying?”

“No, he’s okay, he didn’t swallow any, but this is why we have to keep this cabinet closed.”

 “Good! Because he’s the best brother I ever had! I love him! I love him so much!”

“Love him much!” Sam repeats, and we all embrace.

Tighe comes home. Late, but Nate and Sam and I don’t care because we’re all alive. Plus, the dishwasher is fixed. Just like it was before. 

State of the Urinal

My fellow Peanut Butter Urinalites, the state of our union is strong! We’re emerging more powerful and better than before. Like President Lincoln once said, we did not adhere to the dogmas of the quiet past. What was true then can be true now. Our optimism, work ethic, and commitment to discipline and bribes have all brought about this spirit of prosperity.

 

Through bipartisan efforts this year, we passed a budget—something our critics said could never be done. And yes, there was some pushback. Those grocery store trips, for example, when Sam, from his seat in the cart, reached up high and tossed a package of powdered donuts into the cart. And Nate, at the same moment, reached down low and grabbed a package of chocolate donuts. My friends, those donuts add up!

 

The austerity measures we passed this fall have proven successful. In spite of the budget-busting Christmas season and our participation in an upcoming wedding, the state of our household finances remains stable. Several months have now passed without exceeding our grocery limit, and we continue to chip away at our deficit. This is how we recovered from the worst economic crisis in generations. Anyone claiming our finances are in decline is peddling fiction!

 

We tackled prescription drug abuse—not a single person in this household ingested a single prescribed antibiotic this year! And we acquired some Ninja Turtle Band-Aids for Christmas, so we’re ready for anything!

 

We even passed a criminal justice reform measure. As a result, Nate and Sam are spending less time in time-out and more time on “the outside,” working on puzzles, looking at picture books, and writing computer code—skills that will strengthen their readiness for the challenging and ever-changing job market.

 

Let’s talk about the future, for we are living in a time of extraordinary change. I have a list of proposals—things that matter to our working family—for the year ahead.

 

Gun control. First, Nate and Sam are young, too young , to be using firearms. I propose that all water guns be removed from their possession—especially now that they’re able to reach the faucet. Second, we need more thorough background checks before the purchase of any weapon-like product, such as an empty paper towel roll. Or a shoe.

 

Our unemployment rate holds at about 80%, as only Tighe holds a job with an income. Wally is labeled “enlisted” and Nate is a “student.” He totals 18 hours a week in school, five to six hours avoiding the nutritious dinners I cook, 84 hours sleeping, 156 hours asking for something—either fruit snacks, chocolate chip granola bars from Trader Joe’s, or time on his Kindle—and 245 hours debriefing me on his status. Either the plot of his dream last night, why Sponge Bob is not a terrible show, or the psychoanalysis of his subordinates: Raphael, Marshall from Paw Patrol, or Tommy from Rugrats, just to name a few. He has no time to look for a job!

 

Sam and I are too busy lobbying and stumping around the metro area to find jobs. He’s a rebellious cabinet member, too—exhausting. He likes to taunt death and paralysis by jumping from the tallest slide, refusing to hold my hand in parking lots and playing with Nate’s toys while he’s at school. I like to govern with an efficient agenda, maintain a hygienic home, and have down time after lunch. Sam, suddenly opposed to the principle of naps, prefers to rearrange the toys in Nate’s room and flush the toilet over and over again. My executive order for mandatory naps has been ignored! Our daily cabinet meetings last most of the afternoon and are often heated. No time to job-hunt.

 

Next, raising the minimum wage and equal pay for stay-at-home-moms. Tighe makes a salary. I would like someone to match that salary for me. [Pause for extended applause and bi-partisan standing ovation.]

 

Education. Nate and Sam should be able to access the education system they deserve! Pre-K for all, especially Nate! We need more marshmallow-and-pretzel construction of snowmen!

 

I propose that Sam also be enrolled in school—perhaps a boarding school, from which he’s allowed to send home a letter and an updated photo, maybe once a month or so. We need to recruit and incentivize the best teachers—perhaps with something more than a holiday gift card and a package of dark chocolates.

 

The world faces a migrant refugee crisis. Cold weather is plaguing our region! Call it winter, call it climate change, but the fact is that it’s causing millions to flee their homes. Squirrels, chipmunks, mice, and dead birds, have all been found near and inside of our house!

 

Our immigration system is a broken system! These refugees, whether they be Nate and Sam’s toddler friends from school or rogue dust bunnies from under the dining room chairs, must be properly vetted and screened.

 

In foreign affairs, we have to find a way to keep our house safe without isolating ourselves, without becoming the neighborhood’s police, and without nation-building. Our military, Wally, is busy protecting our borders and gathering intelligence from his post in front of the bay window. Joggers, other dogs, and those blasted good-for-nothing cats will be hit with drone strikes. Nate and Sam, our boots on the ground, continue to train as ninjas, fighting the Joker and Darth Vader, and occasionally, a nefarious tot on the playground—those tiny future Kim Jung-Un’s of the world.

 

But I must warn you, my fellow Urinalites: partisanship will tear us apart! It’s one of the few regrets of my motherhood — that the rancor and suspicion between the two brothers has gotten worse instead of better. They seem to unite only when they oppose my administration—running and hiding in the back of the car when it’s 8 degrees outside and I’m trying to buckle them into their car seats. Or a sobbing heap on the floor in the checkout aisle because I confiscated a contraband Reese’s which he had molded into a ball. I have no doubt a mother with the gifts of Lincoln or Roosevelt might have better bridged the divide. We have to work together. I believe in change because I believe in natural maturation and growth. And bribes. Lots of bribes.

 

God bless the Urinal. And God bless you!

Coming Down From a Vacation High

A friend recently told me that she likes my writing: it’s very descriptive, and it always makes her glad that she’s not me. Flattering.

 

But last week, had I been writing, I can guarantee that anyone would have wished they’d been me. I was in Punta Cana at an all-inclusive resort with butler service. Butler. Service. I ate steak and lobster and sushi and fresh mangoes and pineapples and drank strong coffee and pina coladas and champagne.

 

I’m not bragging. I just want you to get a sense of the high I was experiencing for five and a half days. But every high ends with a low: a deep, depressing crevasse when reality hits. Or bites. Or kicks. Or punches. Or at least, cries and screams and demands a new toy.

 

First, I woke up with a zit on my lip. On my lip. How does that even happen? It hurt and it was ugly. I looked more like a domestic violence victim or a herpes patient than gorgeous old me.

 

Next, Sam wanted gum for breakfast. Gum, really? I don’t know where this request came from. I’ve never given him gum for breakfast, and I can guarantee my parents—who had been staying with Nate and Sam while we were gone—didn’t either because, according to my mom, gum is “common.”

 

The request for gum eventually progressed to a full-blown tantrum: wailing and collapsing to the floor in a pathetic, teary heap, while Tighe and I fumbled around the kitchen, trying to recall where the bowls and cereal and frozen waffles are kept. Were we really only gone five days?

 

And yes, after about a half hour, I gave him a piece of Trident. I’m weak.

 

Tighe went to work since it was a Monday and because he could. Meanwhile, my two sidekicks and I had three errands to run: the grocery store, Trader Joe’s, and CVS because somehow my hairdryer broke while we were gone. I’m not blaming my mom because I know she’s not careless or vindictive, but it is suspicious.

 

Anyway, three errands is a lot for Nate and Sam, especially when one of them is not a playground or a sewer to search for Ninja Turtles, but I was confident we could do it. So were Nate and Sam. They were excited, thrilled that we were reunited—the three amigos, back together again!

 

The grocery store went well—aside from Sam’s creepy attempts to flirt with a female toddler in a competing shopping cart. We passed them in every aisle, even when I circled back to grab a loaf of bread. It was as if Sam had mapped out our inefficient route.

 

Next stop: CVS. As we pulled in the parking lot, Nate started to get anxious. “I’ve never been to this store before. Is it boring? Do they have toys here? Is this a grown-up store?”

 

First of all, I have no idea where he learned about grown-up stores. Personally, I’ve only ever been to one such establishment and that was in Boulder, Colorado on a morning when I accompanied a friend to get a tattoo. Second, he’s definitely been to CVS before. In fact, we were there about a month ago to stock up on cold and flu remedies.

 

As we walked up the sidewalk—I skipped over the fact that the weather was freezing and flurrying in KC while it was 85 degrees and sunny in Punta Cana; this in itself was a major mood killer—Nate tripped and skinned his knee through his sweatpants. Immediate tears and wailing: “Ow! Owie! Ow, ow, owieee!”

 

While I gathered up Nate and tried to console him, Sam continued to stroll through the automatic doors and into the store. Still teary—Nate from the pain and me from the cold—we trailed after him.

 

My eyes scanned the signs that dropped down from the ceiling as I denied the requests for candy coming from my pint-sized friends. After another circuitous route through the store, I found a selection of about half a dozen hair dryers.

 

“Mom! Mom! Where are you? Mom! Come back!”

 

I ignored Sam’s shouts because I was several yards away, and he could still see me. Regardless, he began to cry. Then Nate, squatting on the floor alongside me, began to cry because I hadn’t selected the red hair dryer.

 

A jumbled entanglement of limbs, my bag, and one boxed hair dryer, we moved in the direction of the register. The dirty look from the woman in front of me in line was like a challenge. It jolted me from my exasperated state—frustrated with Nate and Sam for their neediness, embarrassed by both sets of tears, and humbled by my inability to corral two small children through a store—and strengthened my resolve to smile and conquer my three simple errands.

 

The two older women behind me smiled at me kindly and gave me some “I remember those days” and “we’re all in this together” small talk while I paid and picked up some gum that I had knocked over. Graceful as always.

 

I replied with some witty remark to make them both chuckle. I was feeling on top of the world again, and was prepared to exit on a high note, but instead, I tripped over Nate at the same moment that Sam knocked over the packs of gum I had just struggled to pick up.

 

We hung our heads and rolled out.

 

As I buckled them into their car seats, I asked them whether they had it in them to grab a few things from Trader Joe’s.

 

“Mmm-hmm, lollipops!” Sam shouted.

 

“Yeah, Mom, let’s do Trader Joe’s,” Nate concurred.

 

But, as we pulled into the parking lot of Trader Joe’s about three minutes later, Nate bunked.

 

“Hey! What are we doing here?”

 

“I just said we need to stop at Trader Joe’s.”

 

“What? Why?”

 

“Nate, tell me now! Are you guys prepared to go through Trader Joe’s or should we just head home?”

 

I strongly believe that errands shouldn’t be forced on kids. I’d much rather sit at home without fresh fruits and vegetables than push their limits and be humiliated in public by a tantrum.

 

“Uh…head home,” he replied.

 

I swung the car around through the parking lot and back toward the exit.

 

“No! Lollipops!” Sam wailed.

 

“Where are we going?” Nate asked innocently.

 

“Home,” I said.

 

“Why? What about the free sample?”

 

I swung the car around the other way and pulled into a random parking spot. I was craving some of their fresh salmon for dinner.

 

“Trader Joe’s or home?” I asked one last time, becoming increasingly dizzy.

 

“Trader Joe’s!” Nate yelled emphatically.

 

“Lollipops!” repeated his sidekick.

 

We trudged through the store quickly while they sucked on their lollipops, forgetting only three or four items and without major incident. Until Nate saw the free samples: tuna burgers with wasabi sauce and green vegetable juice. Not exactly fare for small children.

 

Nate gladly turned up his nose and began to make his way toward the checkout counters, our usual route. Sam, on the other hand, from his spot in the shopping cart, began to pout his lower lip and large tears began to fall down his cheeks.

 

“Wait! Wait! Juice! Juice!” he wept.

 

He had already handed me his yellow lollipop in anticipation of the sample, and though I’m sure he would have loved the dark green vegetable juice, I was not in the mood to stand there and alternatingly mop it up off the floor and off his shirt while it dribbled down his chin.

 

“No, we’re going,” I said firmly. I started to doubt that we could emerge from the store without causing a scene, but I could not let my insecurity show on my face.

 

Sam threw back his head in helpless anger as I pushed the cart away from the sample counter, following Nate who had began to jog. I offered Sam his sticky lollipop, but he refused, on principle, so I pitched it in the trash. More tears. I picked him up and let him walk alongside the cart as a flimsy compromise.

 

We caught up to Nate. He had collided with a large metal pole, causing him to drop his lollipop, and it shattered on the floor beneath him. Immediate tears.

 

On cue, Sam dropped to the ground and began scavenging the red lollipop remnants, shoveling them into his mouth like a true sugar junkie.

 

Above him, Nate’s head was thrown back in anguish, and I could see his tonsils rattling in the back of his mouth. Just then, one of the super helpful TJ employees, grabbed our cart and pulled it into his lane, already starting to scan our merchandise. Trying to remember if I had gotten everything on our list, I raced after him and called out to Nate and Sam: “Go get another lollipop!”

 

The tears stopped, their faces lit up, and they scampered to the lollipop bin. I reached into my bag for my wallet and instead pulled out a slice of Colby jack cheese, a souvenir from the grocery store earlier, and it hit me: I was no longer on vacation.

 

My week of sophisticated conversations—American politics, euthanasia, the best cut of a steak, and the Dominican infatuation with Lebron James—had ended, and I was thrown back into the black hole of toddler messes and irrationality. I mourned the vacation for a while longer especially the next day when Nate got sent home from school because he “wasn’t himself” and the day after that when he stayed home so we could visit the pediatrician. By Friday morning, I had fallen back into step with my young cohorts, and we sat on the steps, chewing gum, and squabbling over Lego pieces. Like I had never left.

How to Behave in a Public Library

By: Sam. Age: 23 Months.

Step 1: Upon entering, return your books! No delinquent status for us! Push them through the slot one a time even though the whole stack would easily fit at once. Watch to make sure that each one makes it all the way down to the book pile at the bottom of the bin before depositing the next one. A line of annoyed, impatient people should form behind you. They can wait, this is your show.

 

Step 2: Growl or hum at a low yet noticeable volume wherever you go. This is how people will know when you’re coming. Like entrance music.

 

Step 3: Weave in and out of the ropes marking off the aisles at the front desk. If you happen to knock one over, so be it! Serves them right for putting them at toddler-head-height to begin with.

 

Step 4: Run everywhere. Giggle and squeal loudly when you see your mom chasing you! And don’t be alarmed by the redness of her face—she won’t hurt you in public!

 

Step 5: As you run by the self check-out stations, slow down to become mesmerized by the computer screens and neon lights of the scanners—it is okay to temporarily cease your humming at this point as long as you resume as soon as you proceed past them. Graze the palm of your hand along each glass panel, even if a stranger is standing there checking out books. He or she will be glad to see you.

 

Step 6: Sit quietly in your mom’s lap while you wait for story time to begin. As soon as Mr. Ron sits down in his chair and opens the first book, immediately dive into her bag to see if she brought a snack. If she did, demand to eat it. NOW! If she didn’t, grab as many sticks of gum as you can fit in your hand. Then, put them all in your mouth at once. Chew with your mouth open and grin at everyone who makes eye contact with you.

 

Step 7: If Mr. Ron picks a book that sounds educational—letters, counting, shapes—go stand at the window to watch the traffic below. Remember to press your sticky fingers on the glass, and breathe heavily onto it. When you see a truck, police car, or ambulance outside, notify everyone in the room. Bonus: If you see a trash truck, yell out “I stink!” repeatedly until your mom acknowledges you.

 

Step 8: Select one adult in the room and step on his or her fingers. Frequently. Choose someone who looks familiar because that means you’ve probably targeted him/her before.

 

Step 9: Only participate in the songs which require your mom to pick you up and spin you around. If they sing something childish, like “Shake Your Sillies Out,” return to your spot by the window. Look glum. Make the adults feel sorry for you because, you know, “you’re too young to be this jaded.”

 

Step 10: If your mom has the audacity to put you in time-out, do as your told, but make sure the world knows you’re angry about it. Slouch. And scowl at anyone who has the nerve to glance in your direction.

 

Step 11: When you’re told to pick out books, only pick lengthy chapter books. Or those complicated-situation-themed books that are about topics that don’t apply to your family. Like going through a divorce. Or the sudden death of a pet. Or growing up with two mommies. Perhaps migrating to a new country and not knowing the language. All are fun!

 

Step 12: When it’s time to go, your mom will always choose the self check-out. Press as many buttons on the touch screen as you can! Don’t worry about what they mean—you won’t have time for that because you’re probably on your way to time-out again. Don’t forget to scowl!

 

Alternate Brother Activity: If Nate—sadly—does not have school and gets to come with you to the library, be sure to include him in your story time antics! Wrestle with him on the floor. Or race him from the back of the room to the very front! Make Mr. Ron remember why Nate’s “on his naughty list.” 

Happy Birthday, Lotion Robot!

Ok, Lotion Robot is actually Tighe, and today, December 16th, is Tighe’s birthday. He’s 33. This is my tribute to him.

 

You see, Nate has very dry skin, like alarmingly so. Since he was a baby we’ve had to rub lotion on his little body every single night, all year-round.

 

And Nate hates it. I mean, I don’t blame him. Lotion is cold and jolting to his already blue, shivering body, fresh out of the tub. He screams and runs away, tries to hide in his closet or under his covers before one of us can get to him.

 

Until the birth of Lotion Robot, that is! Lotion Robot is Tighe’s own invention and his alter ego each night after bathtime. It has made lotion application much more amusing and enjoyable for both Nate and Sam. And me. And as far as I know, it’s not copyrighted or trademarked, so feel free to use it on your own dry-skinned children.

 

The procedure is as follows:

 

Each night, while Nate and Sam are running around in their towels, burning off their calories from dinner and nearing bedtime exhaustion, Tighe goes into our walk-in closet, presumably to change from his soaking wet clothes after Nate and Sam splash him from their seated positions in the tub.

 

They know what’s coming and they love it. They dart around screeching in mock fear, anticipating the arrival of Lotion Robot.

 

And when Tighe emerges from the closet—I know, I know, lots of potential jokes there—he is Lotion Robot!

 

Like any robot, he keeps his appendages rigid and moves them abruptly at the joints as he shuffles down the hall.

 

He talks all…robotically. Short. Staccato. Monotone.

 

“Lotion Robot…reporting…for…duty.

 

“Acquiring… lotion.

 

“First…target…is…Sam.

 

”Target…located.

 

“Target…locked.

 

“Lotion…applied.

 

“How…are…you…today….Sam?”

 

“Hi, Lotion Robot! Hi, Lotion Robot!” Sam doesn’t totally trust Lotion Robot. He’s pretty sure it’s just his dad pretending to be Lotion Robot, but still, he’s not going to turn his back on Lotion Robot, just to be safe.

 

“Next target is Nate.

 

“Lotion…acquired.

 

“Target…located.

 

Target…locked.

 

“Lotion…applied.”

 

And sometimes Nate has a series of questions about how he became a robot and whether he has robot friends and what he eats. Lotion Robot always replies in the same robotic voice that he was built and programmed by Tighe, that he doesn’t eat or sleep because he’s made of metal and that he doesn’t have any friends because he doesn’t have a soul.

 

After they’re sufficiently lotioned, they say good-bye to Lotion Robot and Lotion Robot returns to the closet. Tighe then returns to their bedrooms to help them put on their pajamas and get ready for bedtime stories.

 

Sam is always thrilled to have his dad back. “Hi, Dad. Hi, Dad.” He presses his fingers on Tighe’s familiar face, just to reassure himself that this is, in fact, his father. Meanwhile, Nate enthusiastically rehashes his encounter with Lotion Robot, as one would tell about meeting

 

It’s like Lois Lane and Jimmy Olsen telling Clark Kent about Superman. Except that Teri Hatcher has better boobs than Nate and Sam. And me, for that matter.

 

Lotion Robot is not Tighe’s only parenting weapon, nor is it his most creative, but it is an example of his commitment and his willingness to sacrifice a little bit of dignity night after night. So, please, take a second to wish Lotion Robot a happy birthday before he makes me delete this post.

Sam Moves to a Big Bed--Phase 1

Sam is 22 and a half months old. He’ll be two on January 31st. When Nate was 21 months old, we moved him from his crib to a big bed—mostly because we’d need the crib space for soon-to-be-born Sam. And if parenting is all about managing transitions, we were the smoothest managers this side of the Mississippi. Whatever that means.

 

It didn’t mess up Nate’s bedtime routine, his sleep schedule, or even his naps. And it didn’t mess up our mornings either. Even though he could easily climb out, Nate would stay in his bed until we went in and told him he could get out.

 

We moved a second twin bed into Nate’s room a few months ago, planning that, eventually, Nate and Sam would share a room.

 

Tighe was excited. He has fond memories of sharing a room with his brothers, though I’m not sure why. Most of his stories involve bloody noses, titty twisters, and a designated “spit corner.” Oh, and most importantly, exasperated parents yelling at them to go to sleep.

 

I never had to share a room. As the only girl in my family, I was pretty much master of my domain.

 

But my brothers shared a room. And since there were three of them, the pairing off rotated based on who was going through a bullying phase. The biggest bully seemed to earn his own room—king of the hill or something. I remember lots of door slamming, locked doors, bed jumping, and pillow fights.

 

Really? This is what we want for Nate and Sam?

 

Tighe thinks I’m stalling because I want Sam to be my baby forever.

 

Uh, no. I’m counting down until he packs up some boxes and moves to college, preferably on one of the coasts, a full plane ride away! I mean yes, I’ll miss him, but I’m under no illusions that he can remain a baby. I can’t wait to potty train him and send him to preschool next fall!

 

My reason for stalling is because he’s not ready yet. He’s just not. Nate was. But Nate also knew all his colors, the true definition of a circle, and could read full paragraphs, pausing only to occasionally look up the meaning of a multisyllabic word. Like ‘quiet.’ Or ‘silence.’ Or ‘whisper.’

 

And selfishly, of course, I’m not prepared for the potential disruption to our own sleep that such a transition would cause. Is Sam going to occasionally wake us up now, breaking into our bedroom? If Nate or Sam has a bad dream or gets sick, will he wake the other one? And what about Sam’s nap—my favorite time of day? Will he start refusing a nap because he has FOMO? Will he start the habit of creeping down the steps in the afternoon, disrupting my Erin time, just because he can?

 

Nope. I’m not ready for any of that.

 

And neither is Sam. And we found this out the other night.

 

We refer to the other twin bed as ‘Sam’s bed.’ He climbs in and out of it freely as they get their pj’s on and listen to bedtime stories. Then one of us retrieves Sam and deposits him in his crib in his bedroom, with all the “guys” he sleeps. The current roster of Sam’s guys includes his two lovies—both monogrammed, each a different shade of blue, his toy trash truck, an Elmo Christmas ornament, a plastic Thomas whistle, a small plastic elephant which he refers to as Dumbo, and a larger plastic elephant which he refers to as Dumbo’s mom.  


And the other night, Sam, with his head on his new pillow and tucked under the comforter, refused to get out of the bed. Tighe and I looked at each other, puzzled, each wondering: Does he want to sleep here? For the whole night? Is this it? Are we really doing this?

 

We pretended this was the routine, and each said good night to both boys, cautiously eyeing Sam to see if he would flinch—like a game of Chicken. If he so much as looked toward the exit or started to sit up or said the word “crib,” I was ready to snatch him up and take him to his room!

 

But he stayed put. I backed out of the room, my eyes still on Sam as Tighe bent down to whisper to Nate.

 

“Be a good big brother. Help Sam out in his first night in a big bed.”

 

“I will,” Nate said. “I’ll tell him there is no such thing as monsters.”

 

I don’t think Sam has any clue what a monster is, but okay, Nate.

 

Tighe and I walked down the steps as a pair, both still peering into the bedroom until we could no longer see in. We paused to listen for a moment. Sam was talking, but perfectly still, seemingly afraid to move for fear of falling out of the bed.

 

“I love you, Nate,” Sam mumbled.

 

“Sam, go to sleep! I gotta get up in the morning!”

 

“Oh. Lights.” Nate has a string of red lights across his ceiling.

 

“Sam, there is no such thing as monsters.”

 

“Oh.”

 

Finally, it got quiet and Tighe and I sat down to watch TV. After almost an hour, we heard a loud thud above us.

 

“He fell out of bed!” I knew it immediately.

 

Tighe rushed upstairs—after pausing Aziz Ansari’s new show on Netflix, “Master of None,” of course. Don’t want to miss comedy.

 

He was on the floor between the beds, still wrapped in the comforter, not crying, just stiff, like petrified wood, too scared or unsure to move.

 

Tighe picked him up, put him back in the bed, kissed him and told him to go to sleep.

 

“Okay, Dad. Love you.”

 

Almost another full hour after that, Tighe and I put Wally out one last time, locked up the house, and began to trudge upstairs for the night. I peered through the open bedroom door, where I could just barely see the top of Sam’s head, motionless, peeking above the comforter. But as I got closer, I saw his eyes were still open—he was awake! It was almost ten-thirty, he’s usually out cold by eight!

 

I knelt down to whisper to him: “Go to sleep, Sam. You’re doing such a great job. I love you so much.”

 

“Love you much, Mom,” he repeated.

 

I whispered urgently to Tighe who was still at the top of the steps, “He’s awake!”

 

Tighe went in and murmured in Sam’s ear, “Sam, do you want to go sleep in your—?”

 

And before Tighe could even say “crib,” Sam replied “YES!” Emphatically.

 

So, we said our good-nights to him again and he gratefully returned to his crib, where he immediately laid down and hugged his lovies to his chest and took stock of his “guys.”

 

We have no doubt that he was asleep within minutes. We’ll try it again in a few months. When he’s ready. When I’m ready.

Nate and Sam's Christmas Special

It’s almost Christmas! No matter how you measure it, Christmas is heeeere.

 

Nate and Sam are new to Christmas. Nate knows who Santa is and he knows he’s owed presents. For now, per the myth we’ve instilled in him: Santa is Jesus’ sidekick. They’re both omniscient and omnipresent. If one of them misses a child’s infraction or mortal sin, he will be informed about it by the other one. They collect as much intelligence as the most vigilant autocratic regime and together they, battle the evil transgressions of minors all year round.

 

I’m confident I can still get a lot of mileage out of that fantastical fable. It allows me to demand the best behavior without actually being strict. “I’m just speaking on behalf of Santa Claus and Jesus here! They definitely do NOT want you to color the electrical outlets with crayons. Their rule, not mine—sorry!”

 

Even the Macy’s parade on Thanksgiving morning had advertisements on every other float: Hass avocadoes, Delta Airlines, Ocean Spray, KFC, and Planter's Peanuts. Fortunately, Nate and Sam were so astounded by Rachel Platten’s mid-parade performance of a song that wasn’t “Fight Song”—formerly their favorite tune—to notice the blatant commercialism.

 

Jaw still on the floor, Nate turned to Tighe, “Dad, do people still like ‘Fight Song?’”

 

We’ve tried to develop his generosity in hopes of replacing the greed. What are you going to get Sam for Christmas, Nate? And your teachers? And [insert family member’s name here]?

 

Apparently, Sam only wants a McDonald’s smoothie. And his teachers only want chips and salsa. And according to a commercial he saw while watching football a few weeks ago, Tighe wants a Corona.

 

Nate pored through a Harry and David’s catalog recently while I orated on nonsense about how it’s better to give than receive. He began identifying the gift baskets in there that he wanted, that he’d like to order for friends and family and then conveniently visit as they’re being delivered. That might be okay, except that all the baskets he picked out were cookies and chocolates, no fruit nor nuts.

 

Sam remains clueless about the ramifications about bad behavior in December. He’s vaguely aware of Christmas—he knows we have a Christmas tree and each person possesses a stocking dangling from the mantle and that there are two Advent calendars in the dining room with tiny pieces of chocolate in them. Oh, he knows that part well. Too well.

 

But still, I thought it’d be safe to take him Christmas shopping while Nate was at school.

 

With Nate, such a trip would be suicide—either for my credit card or for me or for Nate. One of the three of us would not survive.

 

With Sam, though, it was kind of fun—at first. His little blue eyes got wide when he saw balls, wooden dinosaur puzzles, Lego’s (so did mine!), and the Thomas trains! But as I got a little more intentional about my browsing—“I wonder if they have…”—Sam refused to keep up.

 

I caught him trying desperately to pry open one of the train sets, “Please, Mom! Please!” Like a junkie. He was practically shaking.

 

Fortunately, the next aisle had something equally appealing and distracting, so I was able to progress him a little further towards the exit.

 

“Look Sam, horses! Oooh, Ninja Turtles! A dance machine, Sam! And a pirate ship!” He zigzagged along behind me.

 

Suddenly, I glanced back and he wasn’t with me. With a mild amount of alarm, I retreated, charging to the aisle I had last seen him. He wasn’t there.

 

After a few increasingly frantic moments, I found him. He had discovered the pretend play area—workbenches, toy kitchens, and a store. And in the store were mini-shopping carts. He had loaded his merchandise, some trains and trucks, into a cart and was pushing it towards me, a smile on his face.

 

“Are you ready to check out?”

 

“Yes. Like. Christmas shopping.”

 

“Of course you do. Look, Sam! Dump trucks!”

 

As he turned his head to look, I lifted up the small cart and set it down behind some toy mats, out of his sight.

 

He was actually laughing out loud as he circled the display of Tonka trucks and diggers. But when he selected one and shifted to place it in his cart, his brow furrowed. I could see his confusion as his eyes quickly darted around our immediate area.

 

He began pacing the aisles, his free hand turned upward, questioningly: “Where are you, Cart? Cart! Cart! Where are you?”

 

And he never found it. Because I’m smarter than he is.

 

“Ok, Sam, let’s go home.”

 

But as I reached down to grab his hand, I realized he was gone again. He had returned to the pretend play area to collect a second cart, this one empty aside from his most recent Tonka acquisitions.

 

He was aiming for the Minion piñatas when I scooped him up and shoved the cart into another aisle.

 

Angry for a moment, he recovered when I showed him the small musical instruments ahead of us. Next to the exit. I set him down and he spent a few solid minutes darting back and forth between the keyboard, the drum set, and the microphone, where he breathed heavily on it as he sang “Fight Song.”

 

He’s not as tone deaf as Nate, but he was still self-conscious about his performance, though I think it was mostly because he heard that Rachel Platten has a new single out. 

Brothers!

A friend loves at all times, and a brother is born for a time of adversity.
Proverbs 17:17

 

Almost two years ago, when that obstetrician pulled a slimy, little baby from my insides and declared it to be a boy, I was delirious—I hadn’t slept in almost twenty-three hours and C-sections are no joke.

 

But after a moment or two, I was thrilled. For Nate.

 

Sure, for a split second, I mourned my dream of a daughter—what would I do with a girl anyway? I don’t even know how to comb my own hair, let alone that of a spoiled toddler. And dolls, dance class, skirts? Terrifying.

 

And so, I celebrated that Nate would have a brother. Brothers are the best!

 

They tell it like it is. They call you on your B.S. They fight you and make you tougher. Not like sisters. They won’t go all menses on you every month. They won’t steal your boyfriends or husbands—ok, most won’t. They won’t steal your clothes or your make-up…never mind, I’m going to stop this line of thought—it sounds very judgmental and I’d like to create a #safe space. My point is brothers are cool, I like having brothers.

 

So, back to Nate and Sam being brothers.

 

After a few weeks of jealousy and adjusting to sharing attention with a small bundle that was about as exciting as a sack of flour, Nate and Sam became best friends. And of course, they also became worst enemies.

 

First thing in the morning, once Nate manages to break into our bedroom, he announces that he’s going to wake up Sam. When he comes home from school in the afternoon and Sam’s still an hour or so from rising from his nap, Nate complains—he misses him. At bedtime, they hug and kiss and tell one another they love each other.

 

And then they shove each other to the ground as they scramble to squeeze in one more race down the hallway before we drag them to their respective bedrooms.

 

And in case you were wondering, Nate always wins. Even when Sam actually eeks out a victory, Nate still declares himself the winner. Nate’s always right. We always watch the shows that Nate wants to watch, the books Nate wants to read, and visit the playgrounds that Nate approves. In fairness, some of this is due to Nate’s dominance, some is due to Sam’s reverence of Nate, and some is just because Sam’s not always able to verbally express himself.

 

Nate tells Sam which Ninja Turtle is Sam’s favorite and then smacks him on top of his head if he so much as glances at Raph, Nate’s favorite.

 

I walk a fine line between letting them wrestle it out and intervening. It’s a lot like American foreign policy. On one hand, non-intervention will help them develop skills in conflict resolution, treaties, détentes, concords, etc. Add a third child and we’re talking alliances as well.

 

On the other hand, saving one or the other—and sometimes both—from extreme blood loss and blunt force trauma to the head, saves me a trip to the ER. For this level of conflict, I’ll send in my ground troops.

 

If the conflict’s in my “hemisphere,” I’m also likely to intervene. Or if the feud messes with my resources, like they’re about to knock over my coffee, I’ll order an urgent drone strike.

 

Just this afternoon, as they were racing around the house on their small cars, I heard a bang. Then a whimper. Then the whimper graduated to a wail. From my chair in the dining room, I craned my neck to see them in the kitchen.

 

“Uh…uh, sorry Sam! Sorry!” Nate was addressing Sam yet looking at me, just the right amount of trepidation in his eyes.

 

But Sam can hold his own. I’ve seen him bring Nate to tears many, many times. And then he smirks and puts himself in time-out on the bottom step.

 

Nate’s stronger, but Sam uses weapons. Usually, it’s just a plastic golf club or a hockey stick or one of the many other pieces of sporting equipment he’s dragging around the first floor of our house. But I’ve also seen him use a drumstick or a Lego or a wooden puzzle piece. At the proper angle, those things will leave a convincing indentation in Nate’s youthful, malleable skin.

 

And when the world is at peace, Nate shares and teaches Sam how to do things: how to climb out of his crib, where the free samples are in the store, and how to con adults out of their food. Keeping this foreign policy analogy, it’s like a first-world country sending aid to a developing country. Sure, it’s a little condescending and imperialistic, but people get food and medical treatment, right?

 

They play down in the basement amiably for hours at a time. I don’t know what they’re doing down there, but the point is they’re quiet and out of my way. They could be planning a jewel heist or the overthrow of a communist dictator. And speaking of the 39th parallel, I’m pleased to announce that the Urinal just got banned in North Korea.

 

My favorite brother-related ritual is probably when we’re in public and Nate introduces Sam to someone: a new friend at the playground, a dog-walker strolling down our street, or a cashier at the grocery store. Actually, sometimes he even introduces Sam to me. It’s weird.

 

“Well, I’m Nate. And this is my little brother, Sam! He’s one.”

 

And he uses hand gestures, like he’s a model unveiling a new car on the Price is Right’s showcase showdown. The new friends aren’t usually quite that excited, though. It’s usually just a casual “nice to meet you.”

 

And just as Bob Barker made a hobby of ending the lineage of countless dogs and cats, I’ll end this post here. It sounds like it might be time for one of my drone strikes.

Goodbye to My Threenager; Hello, Terrible Two's

I have two sons, and they are almost exactly two years apart. Good family planning, you think. But not so fast. One is about to turn four! My, they grow up quickly. But the other is about to turn two. Terrible.

 

When Nate turned two, we started experiencing some tantrums, those “terrible two’s.” I heard really uplifting news from lots of supportive and credible people: “Just wait, three is worse than two.” Thanks.

 

But they were right.

 

Two year-old tantrums were challenging, sure, but they were manageable. Two-year olds tantrum because they’re frustrated. They want something, but they lack the communication skills to properly express it.

 

So, you just get down on your knees, eye-level, and say something really sympathetic and respectful, like “I’m trying to understand you, but I need you to stop crying and use your big boy words.”

 

And Sam’s on the verge of this now. His water hurts him. Or his sock hurts him. Or he can’t get a piece of watermelon onto his fork. Or he spilled a single drop of milk onto the corner of his plate. Or the golf ball he’s playing with keeps rolling to the corner of the dining room behind the heavy arm chairs. Apparently, our house is lopsided. Often he’s hungry, but he can’t yet identify hunger. So he cries. Everything I do is wrong, everyone who walks by or says something to him is the devil. And this kid gives really good death stares. Really good.

 

Last week, he got angry after trying for several minutes to put his banana back inside the peel. The peel had already been split into three widths all the way to the bottom, but time after time, he attempted to defy the laws of physics by wedging it back into the banana’s former home only to watch it slide back out and bounce onto his plate.

 

Seated next to him, I observed with furrowed brow for a few moments before trying to explain that his task was doomed to fail, that this was not something that is typically done, that once naked, a banana is naked forever—or at least until it’s eaten.

 

This only enraged him more, and he turned to scowl and shout at me: “No! No, Mom! No b’nana!”

 

I decided soon after that it was naptime.    

 

Three year-old tantrums, on the other hand, are more malicious, and they’re about power—though sometimes it turns out he just has to poop. He dumps out toys, breaks puzzles, turns off the TV while I’m watching the news, and removes the bookmark from the book I’m reading—all while maintaining eye contact.

 

It’s almost as though they’re schemed in advance. Sometimes I imagine Nate rolling out of bed in the morning, unfolding his copy of the blueprints to our house and, using crayons and action figures, mapping out his attack. And because he’s three and no longer two, he’s able to predict our counterattack and devise an effective Plan B.

 

“You think you’re the boss of me? Well, I’m gonna ruin your day!”

 

Last night for dinner, I was making grilled cheese sandwiches. Nate drifted into the kitchen and requested that his grilled cheese not be cooked, he just wanted cheese between two slices of bread. “Fine,” I said, “but do you promise you won’t be mad when Sam’s sandwich has gooey cheese oozing out the sides and your just have a flat slice of cold cheese?”

 

“I promise,” he said.

 

We sat down at the table and he looked with disgust at his plate. He picked up the top piece of bread and let it drop.

 

Then he looked at Sam’s plate.

 

And back at his plate.

 

Back at Sam’s plate again.

 

And back at his own.

 

“Hey! I want my sandwich to be like Sam’s—cooked!”

 

Seriously?

 

I refused to cook another one. I told him this isn’t a restaurant and other mom clichés. His mouth watered as he took one last gaze at Sam’s crispy, buttery sandwich and proceeded to howl. Tears—real tears!—balled down his flushed cheeks!

 

That was it—just like that, he ruined my dinner! First, I had to listen to him wail loudly in my ear about how he loves grilled cheese and how famished he was. Then, I had to feel guilty because he was so miserable. I could tell he was genuinely hungry and I began to worry whether he’d survive the night on an empty stomach.

 

Tighe and I, seated across from one another, continued to eat, occasionally glancing up at each other with irked and distressed expressions. Desperate for some peace, we were each trying to express our weakening resolve without words: “I don’t want to cave into him, but if you do, I won’t stand in your way.”

 

Finally Tighe, probably able to think more clearly than I since he his eardrums hadn’t exploded yet—I was temporarily deaf—said, “Nate, how about we compromise and toast it in the toaster oven?”

 

Suddenly, my hearing snapped back and faster than Sam can injure himself, I replied with enthusiasm, “Yes! Great idea, let’s do it!”

 

So we did. He was thrilled for a few minutes, probably relieved that he didn’t have to waste all that energy sobbing anymore. And he ate three or four bites. Awesome.

 

The important thing is that he got quiet. It was a good night.

 

And sometimes, Nate’s tantrums aren’t fervent. Instead they’re calm and passive-aggressive, like the stoic state of an estranged, moody teenager.

 

“Who’d you play with at school today?”

 

“Nobody.”

 

“Were all your friends there?”

 

“No.”

 

“Where were they?”

 

“They’re all sick.”

 

“All of them?”

 

“Yep.”

 

“What about your teachers?”

 

“They’re on vacation.”

 

“Oh, so what’d you do?”

 

“Nothin.”

 

“Sounds really boring. You just sat in a classroom all day by yourself?”

 

“Yep.”

 

Serene on the surface, but we can feel the waves of resentment flooding slowly toward us.

 

Are you fifteen now, Nate? Are you hormonal? Should I buy you some zit cream? Some tampons?

 

Which reminds me: eventually they won’t be two or three anymore. They’ll be teenagers! With access to cars and drugs and alcohol!

 

If parenting is a theme park, we’re strapped into this roller coaster of fits and tantrums for a long time: The Tower of Terror. I’d at least like some funnel cake.

Who Needs PE Anyway?

Ah, here it is, Nate’s report card. I guess I shouldn’t call it a report card. The school labels it a “Fall Observation Checklist.” And he’s three, so none of it matters. It’s not his permanent record or anything. Colleges won’t ask about it. Kindergartens probably won’t even ask. It’s just feedback for parents, just a small window into his life at school. And they’re observations, not judgments.

 

It doesn’t mean I’m a bad mom. Nature trumps nurture anyway.

 

Okay, the comments section…”Nate has an engaging personality.” Obviously. Tell that to the poor man at the playground on Friday who spent nearly ten minutes trying to extricate himself from conversation with Nate so that he could spend quality time with his own child.

 

“…He enjoys preschool…yada, yada, yada…Nate is a delightful boy…blah, blah, blah…no conference needed.”

 

Phew! Of course, they love him—he’s such a good student.

 

Okay, the checklist.

 

“Separation? Well.” Yes, that’s definitely true. He sprints into that classroom like he’s crossing a finish line. He’s excited to be there and believes everyone else is super psyched that he’s there, too.

 

“Refuses direction—no check.” Yes! He’s always very obedient.

 

“Is kind, seems happy at school, plays well with peers—check.” Obviously. He’s the kid they pair with kids who are having ‘sad days’. Kindness is so important in this world!

 

“Hits/shows aggression—no check.” Of course not! Ugh, I’d be mortified!

 

“Circle/Large Group? Listens well—check.” Really? What’s your secret, Magical Preschool Teachers? When I presented my lecture on Veteran’s Day this week, he cut me off at the word “flag”—sentence #2—to tell me how funny his friend Scott is.

 

[Names have been changed to protect the innocent, though I’m sure the NSA knows exactly which classmates and teachers I’m referencing.]

 

“Shares information—check.” That worries me. His information is usually false. Like when he told the pediatrician that he got sick while his dad was making smoothies and the germs crawled into his body. I don’t think so, Dr. Oz. Or lately he’s been citing direct commands from God as his justification for any misbehaviors. Sorry, Nate, but I highly doubt that God told you to punch Sam in the jaw. This isn’t the Old Testament.

 

“Shares—check.” Shares? Like, shares toys? Or shares feelings? I saw him share raisins with Sam once. Because he hates raisins. With a passion.

 

“Interrupts—no check.” I wish he’d stop interrupting our adult conversation at dinner. Or me while I read bedtime stories! He comments on every single page!

 

“Recognizes and respects authority—check.” Well, I’m going to have to go ahead and disagree with you there. Courteously, of course.

 

“Keeps hands to self—check.” Ooh, with a small note: “Except with Scott.” Yeah, I knew about that. The teachers say it’s playful, brotherly.

 

“Transition? Adjusts well. And keeps playing.” Both boxes are checked. Yeah, I can see that. He’ll transition into the next activity if it’s something he wants to do. Like if it’s recess. Or snack. Or if they’re going to sit in a circle and talk about how great he is. But if it’s art, he’s going to go ahead and keep playing. Still, he should be conforming to classroom procedures. It’s okay, just preschool, I’m not worried.

 

Hmm, what’s that part that’s been covered with white-out? Was it just a pen smudge or a teacher’s attempt to reign in her uncontrollable frustration when she sees Nate’s name? I wonder if I can scratch it away…nope. What did she write?!

 

“Participates in P.E.—no check.” Really? This surprises me.

 

Are we sure? Maybe it’s an oversight.

 

Maybe the teacher just forgot to check that box? She was probably in a hurry to get to the weekend, just missed a pen stroke. Human error, it happens.

 

And don’t get me wrong—I am under no illusion that Nate is an athlete!

 

I mean I’ve always considered myself athletic. I’ve run successful 5K’s and 10K’s, I used to do twelve pull-ups without a break, and I was probably the best player on my BSSC co-ed football team. Plus, I played a little D-1 lacrosse in college. And Tighe—Nate’s father as far as anyone knows—tackled Darren Sproles on more than one occasion when they were in high school, playing football I presume. Or so he claims.

 

But Nate…hmm, how can I put this without saying he sucks? He just doesn’t seem to be an athlete.

 

He doesn’t even like to watch Sports Center—unless there’s a red team. If he wants to play with LEGO’s and do puzzles all day, that is fine with us. There’s a lot of money in engineering-related fields. Good for you, Nate. And it’s no big deal, it just means that he’s skipping bean-bag toss. Or hoola-hooping. Relay races? Those are stupid anyway. He could still get a swimming scholarship someday.

 

Never mind, swim lessons were a disaster this summer—he refused to even get in the pool some days. And then he’d take an eight-minute pee break. Maybe golf? Who am I kidding? Nate might be good enough for curling and nothing else. Oh, well.

 

No conference needed? What about P.E.?! Why doesn’t he participate in P.E.?

 

I don’t want to nitpick—this is all meaningless of course, but I should probably find out about that, right? An intervention will clear this up. I’m his mom. If I don’t advocate for him, who will?

 

I’m going to e-mail his teachers. Or maybe I should call one of them, I have their cell phone numbers. Maybe a text is better? Mrs. Baird lives a few blocks away. Maybe we can stroll by later. Casually, no agenda. And then after I ask about her weekend plans and talk about leaf raking—“What a never-ending chore, am I right?”—I’ll bring up P.E.

 

Then again, I’m not a helicopter parent, it’s just a meaningless checklist. And it’s Nate’s life, not mine. If he thinks he can get into kindergarten in two years with that blemish on his record, that’s his prerogative.

 

Sam, child #2, is probably our scholarship athlete anyway. As soon as he wakes up from his nap, I’ll have him practice his push-ups again. And run those wind sprints.

Outbreak: Croup!

Nate woke up six days before Halloween with a cough. A nasty cough, unable to breathe. It scared him, and he scurried to our bedroom in the dark, crying and gasping for air, like Jim Webb gasping for more time in the first Democratic debate. Tighe carried him into the bathroom and turned on the shower to steam the congestion out of him, and it helped.

 

That night before bed, we got out a vaporizer and some over-the-counter mucus reducer. Cherry flavored. Red. But Nate refused. “It’ll make you feel better,” we pleaded, desperate for a full night’s rest.

 

“Nah, my body’s fighting the germs already,” he countered.

 

The next morning he was worse, so we went to the pediatrician. We were pretty certain it was croup at that point, but I wanted to make sure there was no fluid in his lungs. Or that it wasn’t strep. Or an ear infection. Or black lung. Better do a fully comprehensive MRI while we’re there, just in case. I don’t know, Ebola’s been in the news recently.

 

A little backstory: aside from the time he was two weeks old and I was convinced he had pink eye—he didn’t, I overreacted, and the pediatrician laughed at me—this was Nate’s first sick visit to the doctor. Not bad considering he’s three months shy of his fourth birthday! But it also means that he has no experience taking medicine. A medicine virgin.

 

Anyway, back to our contamination du jour. The nurse practitioner cheerfully confirmed that Nate had croup and prescribed three days worth of prednisone, praising his agreeableness and encouraging him to take his medicine. We all practically high-fived after her pep talk.

 

Great! I thought: he’ll be healthy for his Halloween parade at school on Thursday and for trick-or-treating on Saturday. So easy, I thought.

 

I was so naïve.

 

At lunchtime I decided to administer his first dose. I had asked the nurse if it was ok to mix his medicine into juice since he’s reluctant to take medicine. “Sure,” she said, “that’s a great idea.”

 

I’m so clever, I thought. I poured some Gatorade into a cup for Nate, and using a medicine dropper, stirred in one of his six prescribed doses.

 

“This is naaasty!” Nate’s no fool. Sometimes I wish he was.

 

I was honest. “Oh, that must be because I put your medicine in there.”

 

“Well, I don’t want it.”

 

“Just sip it. Small sips, you can do it. And it’ll make you feel soooo much better. “

 

“Nah.”

 

He’ll crack, I thought. He’ll get thirsty enough, desperate enough, and he’ll drink it.

 

I was wrong, of course. Otherwise this wouldn’t be a very interesting story.

 

I’ll skip over some of my other attempts: the physical battles that ended in draws, the chocolate bribes and fruit snack chasers I offered, the Curious George drinking game I invented. Nothing worked.

 

The Gatorade sat on the table all afternoon. Every time he coughed or sneezed or wheezed or looked slightly uncomfortable, I suggested he sip his Gatorade. And each time, he declined. I can wait this out, I thought. I am in control.

 

Around 3:30 I realized I had no control. And he knew it. I started to get angry. Not just that he was dominating me, but also that we had just wasted one-sixth of his prescription.

 

By the time Tighe came home for dinner, the closest thing to medicine Nate had ingested was a cough drop. And sadly, I was thrilled with that. Baby steps.

 

But I was also ashamed to admit that I couldn’t get Nate to take anything.

 

Dinner was already waiting on the table. Sam was whining about his hunger. Or maybe his sock was “hurting” his toe. Sometimes that happens.

 

But Tighe was ready to battle. “Nate!” he called, grabbing the medicine dropper and filling it to the prescribed line, “You’re taking your medicine.”

 

“I’ll hold him down,” I offered. I was beaten, but not totally defeated. The thought of keeping him home from school all week was terrifying.

 

We cornered the little guy, who’s surprisingly strong by the way. It’s like old man strength.

 

I knelt down on the kitchen floor and cradled Nate in my lap, pinning his arms to his side while Tighe squeezed his cheeks together and jammed the dropper in between his lips.

 

“Done!” Tighe shouted triumphantly.

 

Nope. Nate hadn’t swallowed yet. He spit out the red medicine-saliva cocktail all over both of his parents, somehow missing himself. What an ass.

 

I laughed. Tighe was innocent and determined. He still thought we had a chance.

 

“We’re doing it again!” he announced.

 

“Wait! Give me five minutes!” Nate pleaded.

 

So he can regain some strength? Bad idea, I thought.

 

But Tighe consented. He set the timer on his phone for five minutes.

 

Dinner was getting cold. Sam was getting hungrier.

 

For five minutes we sat on the floor in the kitchen while Tighe lectured us all on the benefits of modern medicine. He sounded like a lobbyist for the pharmaceutical industry.

 

When the timer beeped, I grabbed Nate and restrained him again. This time, he clenched his jaw, like a pitbull, squeezing his teeth together to the point that we couldn’t even get the dropper past them. He’s learning. Evolving. You win, Charles Darwin.

 

Tighe shifted his grip to Nate’s chin, trying to pry the bottom teeth apart.

 

Again, medicine everywhere. For those of you keeping score at home, the bottle is how half empty. Or half full. But I think half empty is the better description.

 

“Again!” Tighe shouted.

 

“Wait! Wait, wait, wait, Dad. I have an idea, I have an idea!

 

“Great. What’s your idea, Nate?” Tighe was still hopeful.

 

“Just give me five minutes.”

 

“But what’s your idea?”

 

“Five minutes.”

 

I glanced around, suddenly remembering that we had a second child. “Sam?”

 

Sam was standing on a chair at the table, using tongs to load food on and off everyone’s plates. It was Polish night: kielbasa, pierogi, and asparagus. I watched as he tried to cut the meat on Tighe’s plate with the dull side of a steak knife. And by “watched,” I mean that I took video on my phone. He was just so focused!

 

Meanwhile, Tighe and Nate were still in the kitchen, negotiating the five-minute delay and searching for this very elusive “idea.” And yes, you can hear these negotiations in the video of Sam experimenting with utensils.

 

“Ok, he’s stalling,” I whispered, setting my phone down. “Let’s just do this.”

 

We went through the routine three more times. Three. more. times. We were like actors with scripted marks and lines. We rehearsed until the kitchen floor was sticky, our clothes were stained pink, and the bottle sat empty on the counter.

 

And one of the attempts, perhaps the fourth or fifth, Nate actually asked to administer the medicine himself. And Tighe permitted it.

 

He gripped the dropper, quickly examining it’s plastic essence and grasping how it functioned, and promptly shot the medicine away from his mouth and across the kitchen floor.

 

“Are you serious?!” All four of us said that in unison, each to a different person.

 

Tighe to Nate, incredulous that he had just wasted yet another dose. Nate to Tighe, unbelieving that he had actually handed over the liquid gold. Me to myself, realizing that I was going to have to mop the kitchen floor after this escapade. And Sam to me, angry that I hadn’t put any chicken nuggets out on the table.

 

We were all physically exhausted. After the final attempt, all three of us were cast apart as though an explosion had flung us to opposite sides of the kitchen, where we rested limply, collapsed against the cabinets.

 

Tighe was exasperated.

 

Nate was drained. But smirking.

 

I was laughing. How did this happen? We just wasted an entire prescription, unless you count the one-sixth that still floated in the cup of Gatorade. 

 

From the dining room, Sam asked for ketchup.

 

“Ok, let’s just eat. Please?” I was hungry at this point, needed to refuel.

 

Dinner was silent, aside from Sam’s factual narrations and Nate’s sudden good mood. I think he was showing off his victory. Tighe and I brooded. Shut up, Nate.

Happy Halloween!

Halloween is my favorite holiday. Well, at least it’s in my top two. Probably Halloween and Thanksgiving. I think just because they’re both associated with food and football, my top two favorite F words. Well, at least they’re in my list of top three favorite F words. The third is probably ‘favorite.’

 

Anyway, last week, I was joyously leaping around the house practicing my Michael Jackson “Thriller” moves, stringing orange lights across the mantle, humming Witch’s Brew to myself, and making sure my post-candy-binge sweatpants fit. Halloween was coming, and I was ready!

 

But I have to admit I was a little concerned about Nate’s readiness. As we were reviewing trick-or-treat procedures during lunch one day, I was enthusiastic while he was rather dour.

 

“And then you’ll get Reese’s and you’ll share them with your mom. And then you’ll get Twizzlers and you’ll share them with your mom. And then you’ll get Almond Joys and you’ll share them with your mom. And then you’ll get Whoppers and you’ll throw them away. Nobody needs those. And then—“

 

“But Mom.”

 

Why is he interrupting me in the middle of my candy lecture?

 

“Why would we leave the house when we already have candy here?”

 

Well. What a stinky little grinch.

 

“Because, Nate, it’s fun!” Plus, it’s free.

 

He’s like the pesky kid who wonders whether Christmas is about more than just getting presents from Santa.

 

As the week went on, I met a little more resistance in the form of fickle costume planning. Obviously, he’ll be a Ninja Turtle. Pretty much all of Nate’s decisions since as far back as he can recall have involved his appreciation for red and the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles. He spends half of his waking hours pretending—at least I think he’s pretending—to be Raphael.

 

And he already has a red ninja headband and plastic sais, just like Raph has! And a turtle shell constructed from cardboard and duct tape that Tighe made for him! Could life get any easier? Throw on some green sweats and some green face paint, and the outfit is complete!

 

But suddenly, his old sweats and decaying cardboard shell aren’t good enough for him. Suddenly, he has a longing for those cheaply made, overpriced, store-bought costumes. You know, the same ones that most of the boys in his class will be wearing. In not so many words, Nate basically expressed his desire not to look poor while he trick-or-treats.

 

Whatever, we can handle that. If Tighe and I collaborate and put the right spin on our cheapskate costume plans, Nate will eat it up and love every second of it. It’s called propaganda and it’s effective.

 

Then, a few days later, I overheard him telling someone he’s going to be Wolverine for Halloween. Wolverine?! Really? Do you even know who that is? But he does because Tighe lets them watch the Marvel Comic movies on Saturday mornings.

 

Well, guess what, Nate? You’re going to be Raphael. If we switch our preparations to Wolverine, then surely, on Halloween morning, you’ll complain—tearfully, of course—that you wanted to be Raph this whole time. Duh.

 

So, I decided not to acknowledge his abrupt fixation on Wolverine. Instead, like any good mom, I focused on the candy and the fact that maybe—but probably not—he can bring fake weapons to school.

 

A few days later, since I officially list “consumer” as my occupation, I hit up Target to buy some green face paint and an orange Ninja Turtle mask for Sam’s complementing Michelangelo costume. It’s made from the exact same material as Nate’s, but the eye-holes are slightly different—too close together—and the ends have been cut at right angles (former math teacher speak here) instead of the more acute angles at which Nate’s have been cut.

 

Sam was thrilled, and we tried it on his mini face to make sure it fit. Naturally, it covered up his little eyeballs and his nostrils and pressed the tops of his ears down so that he resembled Dumbo. Perfect!

 

But Nate didn’t think so. And he threw a major tantrum to let us know. Obviously, I recorded video of it to save for the rehearsal dinner before his wedding.

 

Checking the video (ref speak), his complaints mostly surrounded that right angle chop that I mentioned above. He wanted the “square Mikey headband, not the stupid red one” and “why does Sam get to have it??” Well, I’ve never heard him use the words “red” and “stupid” together in the same sentence before, so we decided to tread delicately here. Just some light propaganda and all should be well.

 

“But Raph is so rude but cool!” we pleaded. “Michelangelo is just a lame party dude!”

 

We think it worked. Crisis averted; resume pre-Halloween euphoria!

 

And then. Exactly six days before Halloween, came Nate’s final—I hope final—attempt to thwart my Halloween spirit. He woke up at 5 AM unable to breathe. He also ruined my sleep.

 

While Tighe—apparently attempting to be a superhero for Halloween—scooped him up and raced him into our bathroom for a hot steam shower, I selfishly lay in bed and did the mental math.

 

“Hmm…four days until his costume parade at school…six days until Halloween…might not be enough time…I wonder if Sam’s big enough to collect the amount of candy needed to satisfy my sweet tooth…”

 

Because I’m not sure how reliable Sam is in such an important matter. His candy bucket is the same size as Nate’s, but he’s not as strong, not as coordinated, and not as fast. He lacks stamina.

 

What if we only make it to, like, seven houses because Sam’s too slow or sleepy to go any further?

 

What if he’s so delighted with his first piece of candy that he plops down in the grass and eats it? For the rest of the night?

 

Or what if he spills his bucket and all the other kids rush over to snatch up his acquisitions? Oh, geeze! Then my Halloween would really be ruined! I can’t sneak my favorite candies from an empty bucket! Thanks for nothing, Sam.

 

The next few days were spent coddling Nate. It turned out that he had croup and was prescribed some steroids to speed up his recovery. Pretty minor in the realm of health issues, but for a kid who’s never sick, this was a real blow. His self-pity was suffocating. But we allowed it.

 

“Nate, I hope you’re well enough to go trick-or-treating! That’d be a real bummer if you can’t collect all that candy…” Then, quietly, under my breath, I added, “For me.”

 

“Well, you and Dad and Sam can go trick-or-treating can bring back candy for me.”

 

I pondered this for a moment. If I thought I was still small enough to get away with trick-or-treating on my own, I wouldn’t have needed to have kids. Plus, although we free-range parenting advocates are making significant headway, I still don’t know that we’re at the point that we can leave three year-olds home alone. Especially at night, in an “urban” environment.

 

Note: I put “urban” in quotes because most of my East Coast friends and family believe that we live in a covered wagon on the prairie. Meanwhile, when they discover I’m from Baltimore, people here in KC ask if I know Adnan Syed from Serial.

 

Anyway, if you’d like to know what the middle of the country is like, come see for yourself! In other words, please come hang out with me.  Come save me! I’ll be the thirty-two year-old dressed as Raphael, going door to door asking for candy

Sam's Revenge

“Good night, Sam. I love you. Sleep a long time!”

 

Bye, Mom. [Bedroom door shuts]

 

Ugh, Elmo, she is the worst. I mean, I know – she’s my best friend. But seriously, nap time? Already? She just wanted some alone time. Probably wanted to watch Fox News without anyone judging her. Thank God she lets me read the New York Times on her phone.

 

Yeah well, I just wanted to finish my lunch. And yes, it’s been sitting on the table for over an hour now and I haven’t touched it, but that’s my trump card, my last move.

 

I’m all, “No, Mom, no nap! More lunch, more lunch!” And she’s all, “Ok, Sam, you can have two more bites, then you go upstairs.” She falls for it every time. Like, really Mom? How could I still possibly be hungry? I’ve been alternatingly working on train puzzles and my Curious George playground book for the last twenty minutes. And I had a monstrous snack earlier, enough Cheez-its to feed Nate’s entire preschool class. Plus some cheese samples at the grocery store.

 

But sure, make me an entire PB & J sandwich. And some yogurt. And some chocolate cookies. Better throw some of those cinnamon letter cookies on my plate, too, I’d like to practice my alphabet.

 

And, Elmo, she never shares her coffee! Oh, sure, she pretends to. She gives me an empty mug. Or a travel mug with water in it, but come on! “Oh, careful, Sam! I don’t want to scald you,” she always says. Yeah. Like I’ve never had a cup of joe before! Like I don’t know how to sip slowly. Dammit, woman! I don’t want burn my tongue either, think I want that? Hell, no. I wouldn’t be able to taste peanut butter for a week! Or my applesauce. Mmm, applesauce.

 

And if we have to go to that one playground with the stream again, I really will melt down! Seriously, Elmo, it’s just because she liked talking to that one nanny that one day and she wants to “coincidentally” run into her again. Stop stalking already! You don’t even know her name, Mom! What do you need more friends for?! You have me!

 

I’ll show her, though. I’ll get that steering wheel so sticky! Elmo, it’s classic. Every time, she unbuckles me from the car seat, I scramble up to the driver’s seat so fast that she can’t grab me and pretend I’m driving.  Hazard lights on, left blinker on, high beams and windshield wipers on, steal a couple pieces of gum from the center console, the works.

 

Sometimes, if I really want to show her who’s in charge, I disable the interior dome light and the automatic tailgate. It drives her nuts—pun intended—and she has no clue how to switch it back. She usually has to send Nate in to fix it. Moms are so dumb, Elmo.

 

It’s a good thing I have blue eyes, I can get away with anything. And both those idiots think I take after them, so they’re both secretly proud of the little mischievous things I do around the house. But they’ll never admit it.

 

Like, the other day, when I stole the remote and turned off Nate’s stupid Dora show. Really, Nate? Stop talking to the TV, you know Dora can’t hear you, it’s just a show. Anyway, Mom and Dad thought it was funny. They don’t even really care that I got cream cheese on the buttons. They call it “gutsy” and “fearless.”

 

Meanwhile, they secretly think that Nate takes after the other one. They each think he looks like them, but gets his moods wings and spiteful attitude from the other one. Ha! Wait until I turn three. Then they’ll learn the real definition of spiteful.

 

The only time she’s really been mad at me recently was the other morning when she told me not to touch the mysterious gold liquid in the middle of the kitchen floor while she ran to grab some paper towels and some Lysol. Anyway, as soon as she moved away—I couldn’t resist—I stomped in it! I mean, how could I not? I just wanted to feel it on my bare feet and see how it splattered on the cabinets and across the tiles.

 

Anyway, she screamed at me then.

 

Oh, and yesterday when she was wiping poop off my bare butt, and I reached over and grabbed a handful of wipes and tried to help. She’s all, “No! Sam! No!” and tried to swipe them from me with her free hand. But I was too quick for her and I managed to wipe some of the poop on my chin and in between my fingers before she wrestled them away.

 

She thought it was pretty repulsive, kept telling me, “Oh, No, Sam! That’ll make you sick! So many germs, so gross.”

 

No one buys that, Mom. No one gets sick from human feces. Come on. Plus, what did you breastfeed me for, Mom? I’ve got the immune system of an armored truck.

 

Let’s see, what else can I do?

 

Maybe I’ll just watch videos of myself on her phone. She thinks that narcissism is cute because it reminds her of herself, but it also makes her nuts because then she can’t text anyone and gets super lonely.

 

It’s like, Hey, Mom, get a job! Then you won’t be so lonely! Besides, Mom, I’m your friend. What’s wrong with hanging out with me? I’m awesome. Again, touch on the narcissism nerve.

 

Maybe I’ll just talk about pumpkins non-stop. Or drink from Wally’s bowl again. Or pretend I don’t know my colors. Yes, Mom, I know Thomas is blue—I only tell you he’s red because it really worries you. She’s always on the verge of tears: “Nate knew his colors at this point! And his letters!” Yeah well, Nate talks to the TV. Still think he’s smart?

 

Alright, Elmo, I think I’m—[Light toddler snoring. Erin wins again.]

Instructions for Care. For a Week. A Whole F-ing Week.

So. We’re planning a trip. Just me. And Tighe. Nate and Sam will stay here. Which means that some poor suckers – in this case, my parents – have to stay with them. And this gem of a blog post is a manual for those poor suckers. Love ‘em so much, and we’re so grateful.

 

Wake-up!

Getting Sam from his crib can be one of the most ego-boosting experiences of one’s day. He’ll be happy to see you, he’ll gather his water and his lovies, tell you “good morning” and that he slept “good.” Grammar is not his thing.

Nate’s wake-up, on the other hand, can be one of the most humbling experiences. Ever. He always starts off in a great mood, but it can flip in an instant. Be on guard! I recommend not making eye contact, not asking him what he wants for breakfast, and not suggesting – no matter how gently – that he get dressed, use the bathroom, or brush his teeth.

 

Feeding

I schedule three meals a day. Sam usually has a snack in the morning while Nate’s at school because he gets so excited upon waking up and being reunited with his golf club, lacrosse stick, basketball, etc. that he forgets to eat breakfast. And Nate usually has a snack when he gets home from school because he’s “just so hungry for some reason.” If you check his lunchbox, you’ll notice that most of his lunch remains.

 

Groceries

I’ll stock up before you get here, but inevitably you’ll probably need to travel to at least three different stores throughout the week in order to supply them with everything they eat. There’s a grocery store three minutes from our house – that’ll have most of your staples. Then there’s Trader Joe’s – produce is cheaper and usually better quality there. Plus they have the “chocolate chip granola bars from Trader Joe’s” that Nate likes. It’s also one of their favorite places “in the whole world.” And finally there’s a grocery store about eight minutes away, in Brookside, that has the Blue Diamond Habanero BBQ almonds that Tighe eats. True, he’ll be away with me that week, but you better pick some up anyway, so our credit card doesn’t spontaneously combust due to a lack of regularly scheduled purchases.

 

Cleaning

Good luck. Just good luck. I consider it a success if I have a zero sum day: the house is no dirtier than it was yesterday, but no cleaner either. Other successes: everyone survived until bedtime! Yes, parenting has lowered my expectations for a good day. And don’t worry about the bloodstain in front of the coffee table – that’s been there, Sam’s blood. Nor need you worry about the poop stain next to his crib – that’s been there, too, Sam’s poop.

 

Wally

Wally requires two meals a day, two cookies – one in the morning, one in the afternoon – and a brisk, four to six mile walk. He should also be bathed and brushed and given a teeth-cleaning bone each evening. No, no, we’ve never done this. Ever. But it’d be nice if you could get it done.


Driving the Car

It’s a big car. Really wide, really long, all of it. It only fits into the garage by backing it in. It’s 69 inches wide. I mean, I’ve never measured, but that’s what Ben told me. Yeah, Ben. He lives down the street. You’ll send Nate and Sam to his house when you need a break. I’ll tell him to be ready by hour #3.

 

TV

I usually limit TV to one hour per day for Nate and Sam, but this amount is inversely related to the amount of sanity left in my being and goodness left in my soul. Yes, I know that TV is “bad” for them. But I also know that doing voices of “bad guys” for nine straight hours is bad for me. And I’ve come to learn that I can be a lot more productive – making dinner or peeing in the toilet alone, for example – when they’re both sitting in a trance in front of the telly. Thus, the TV has to be on sometimes. 

 

Discipline

Yes, Nate probably did just call you a “dummy.” Or a “dumb-butt,” whatever that is. I would handle it by doing what we do: ignore it. It’s really, really effective. Which is why he continues to do it. Loudly. And often, in public. Your other option is to put Nate in time-out.

Sam, on the other hand, will put himself in time-out, usually for some sort of infraction against Wally. He seems to think time-out’s a rite of passage, and he’ll sit there for a few minutes, swinging his legs back and forth, smirking with pride and probably gifting you a sly wink. When he gets up, he’ll apologize to Wally and then do it all over again. See? Wally could use some special attention.

Also, when they wrestle/fight/brawl/clash/bicker/riot/tussle/squabble/cage match – really, assign any verb you like, they all fit at various moments – don’t worry about it. They think they’re training for something. And neither is really strong enough to inflict much damage.

 

Bedtime

After baths and PJs, we read three books, no more, no less. Nate will try and negotiate this. Hold firm! I usually pretend that the “three books rule” is some mystical edict that I can’t disobey. And yes, re-reading one of the three books is also a violation of that edict.

 

The Neighbors….

…have never called the cops on us. Let’s keep this streak alive!

Top Headlines from The Shallot

The Shallot, A Milder Version of The Onion

 

Start of school promising for Nate

Teachers pledge letter writing, name recognition, and alphabet recitation; Mom, Sam, and Wally rejoice.

In contrast, a grumpy Nate tells reporters that a 9 AM start time is too early!

 

Related Story

Erin ambitiously plans Sam’s Only-Child Days: colors, shapes, letters, Sesame Street, early naps, and toddler story time

“We were going to the Story Times for the preschool kids because Nate was usually with us, but that just didn’t seem fair to Sam. Those big kids are a fast crowd, I don’t want them influencing poor, baby Sam.” When asked for comment, Sam scowled and swung a stick as he said, “hi-yaaaa!” He promises to never sit still, just like he doesn’t do at the preschool story times.

 

Nate switches from bagels with cream cheese to frozen waffles for daily breakfast

Eats record-breaking three waffles on inaugural morning!

When asked for comment, Nate said, mouth full, “Is there sugar in syrup?” At press time, Nate was lamenting that there were no chocolate chips in those waffles and considering a change back to bagels.

 

Sketchy car parked across street leaves trunk open

Keeps Erin occupied for hours; “I can see everything from the dining room window!”

The mysterious house across the street continues to puzzle Erin. “I just don’t know what happens at that house. There are all kinds of cars all the time.” Rumors have circulated about it being a hot house for drugs or a rehearsal studio for a band, but calls to the house from this reporter were not immediately returned.

 

Medical breakthrough proves successful for Sam’s ailments

For months now, Sam, still trying to master running and balancing, has suffered many injuries, including scrapes and bruises from falling and bumping into stationary objects. In addition, Nate’s temper and being run over by Wally have caused even more minor damages. Fortunately, medical researchers have discovered that if Erin kisses the general area of the afflicted body part, Sam is suddenly “all better!”

 

Casey, famed Trader Joe’s employee, declared missing

As regular customers at Trader Joe’s, Erin and her sidekicks, Nate and Sam, realized that they haven’t encountered Casey, their favorite employee, in several weeks. “We just haven’t seen her in a while,” Erin said in an interview. “I don’t know, did she get fired? Did she quit? Did she switch shifts with someone?” They report that Casey always went out of her way to say ‘hi,’ and on at least two occasions, prepared a special free sample for Nate and Sam when they rebuffed the regular sample. She even watched patiently, smiling, while Nate danced for her and Sam ran in place next to him.

Erin continued, “Is she in some guy’s trunk somewhere? Do I need to file a police report? Or is that her parents’ job? Her roommate’s? I mean, we really don’t know her that well. I think her name was Casey. Maybe it was Carrie?”

 

New recipe for fingerling potatoes discovered

Drowning in the sea that is dinner preparation, Chef Erin has finally found yet another way to do potatoes. “It’s pretty basic,” Erin said at a press conference held Tuesday morning. “Fingerling potatoes are already so creamy and tasty, just adding some sea salt and red wine vinegar makes it a real delicious treat.”

 

Weekly grocery budget set at $75

Nate/Sam/Tighe faction fear new austerity measures

It will be tight, perhaps impossible. Critics claim that Erin made such cutbacks several months ago that didn’t stick. “Obviously, this won’t include diapers because they’re ridiculously expensive and I order them online, so it’s basically imaginary money.” “But otherwise, no more expensive cereals! No more milk! Or cheese! Or conditioner! We might have to go vegan now. Or we’ll just have fruit snacks, they’re pretty cheap.” 

 

Erin completes monkey bars at playground

Declares she “still got it”

At press time, she was sitting on a bench, winded and trying to sneak Pepperidge Farm Goldfish from Sam.

 

Nate and Sam find sewer at playground

Explore for Signs of TMNT Life

Squatting down and poking sticks through the sewer grate on Tuesday, Nate and Sam were optimistic that giant Mutant Ninja Turtles inhabited this particular sewage system. “Raaaph! Mikey!” Nate yelled down. “Raaaph! Mikey!” Sam repeated. Looking on, Erin was doubtful. “You know, those were fictional characters, right? And it takes place in New York. City! That’s like 2,000 miles from here,” she said to no one in particular. “Ok, this is embarrassing.”

 

Erin and Sam grow bored of each other

Despite regular coffee dates and conversations where each manages to get a word in edgewise, they miss Nate, who started back to school last week. Yesterday, on a long walk to visit a new playground, Erin proceeded to lecture Sam on the history of the automobile industry.

“We got the beginning down, including Henry Ford. Then I covered some of the larger foreign manufacturers, but we never even got to outsourcing and shipping American jobs overseas. That’s a pretty big deal for residents in places like Ohio and Michigan, but Sam kept interjecting with observation about the scenery. It’s like he wasn’t even paying attention.” When asked for comment, Sam said, “’Nother squirrel!”

 

Sam named Official Toilet Flusher in house

After flushing the toilet for both Nate and Erin for the sixth consecutive day, Sam is named the Official Toilet Flusher in Residence. Erin praised his commitment: “It’s like he has a sixth sense for knowing when anyone is sitting on the toilet. We’re really growing dependent on his skills. I don’t know what we’ll do when he takes a nap. I might have to flush all by myself. Or hold it until he wakes up.”

 

Letter to the Editor

Early bedtimes are un-American!

To the editor: As a young civilian, I find myself in bed between 7 and 7:30 almost every night. This is unacceptable! I have no vote, no say in this matter and these fascist dictators I’m living with have taken it too far! Is this what our forefathers intended? No! They intended liberty, individualism, sovereignty, autonomy, self-determination! We must emancipate ourselves from this tyranny! Signed, A concerned & patriotic toddler

Death of a Chipmunk

CHIPMUNK OBITUARY – Chippy the Chipmunk passed away peacefully at home on September 1, 2015. He was born in rural Ohio on March 3, 2009, moving to Columbus for school, where he attended Critter School of Hibernation Prep, where he majored in Nut Stashing. Chippy worked as a mill worker in Toledo, Ohio before retiring to Kansas City in 2013 with his wife, Adeline, who passed earlier this year. An avid acorn collector, he is survived by Nate, Sam, Erin, and Wally, brothers Alvin, Simon, Theodore and cousins Chip and Dale.

 

 

Yes, the chipmunk is dead – may he rest in peace. And of course, I don’t know for sure whether this was the same chipmunk that haunted our house not once, but twice. Maybe that was the chipmunk that always hung out in our driveway and the deceased is the one that perches itself next to the window out front. Or maybe that was the one that haunted our house and the dead one is the one from the driveway. Or maybe none of those is true. Maybe the rodent corpse is actually a transplant from out of town. Perhaps some Mafioso pack of chipmunks dumped him here, hoping we don’t alert the authorities and search the dental records.

 

Who knows? The point is we found a dead chipmunk in our backyard, and I seized on that opportunity to teach Nate and Sam about death.

 

So, it started late one afternoon when I went to let Wally in or out – who can remember? Trauma can sometimes play tricks on the memory. I took a few extra steps into the yard to really enjoy the suffocating heat and humidity. Or more likely, to escape the screaming demands from inside the house – Nate and Sam were both in a mood: hungry for dinner, sleepy enough for their beds, and snarky enough for some wrestling. As I gasped for a quiet, stifling breath, I glanced down at the ground and shrieked, reacting quickly enough to high-step over the carcass of a chipmunk.

 

Wally turned, staring at me expectantly, as if to say, “Oh yeah, I forgot to warn you about that.”

 

The three of us stood there a moment: me, Wally, and the lifeless chipmunk, debating what our next step should be. Should I toss it into the bushes in the back of the yard? Should I bury him in a shoebox? Tie some rocks to his feet and toss him in the river? Where exactly is the river in KC anyway? Maybe I should cremate him in the propane grill…but that seemed a little too redneck, even for me. So I fetched Nate and Sam from one of their physical contests inside the house to help me brainstorm and to introduce them to death.

 

I started off rather somber and sentimental. “He’d dead. He will never breathe again. He will never run or eat ag—“

 

Nate cut me off. He had squatted down and was examining him closely, “Mom, why are those bees doin’ that?”

 

Bees were in fact swarming around his face and crawling in and out of his nostrils, his eyelids and his mouth. It was gross.

 

“Uh, I don’t know. Bees are just perverts, I guess. They don’t respect the dead.”

 

I continued, despite my unsympathetic audience, “He’ll never play with his chipmunk friends again. He might even have a family that he’ll never get to return to. They might be in their little chipmunk burrow right now, waiting for him to come home and wondering why he’s late.” Dark, I know.

 

Nate didn’t get it. “Hey Chipmunk! Why was your dad in our house?”

 

“He can’t answer you, he’s dead!”

 

“Who’s dead?”

 

“The chipmunk!”

 

“What chipmunk?”

 

“The dead one! Right there!” I pointed at the furry, stiffening corpse at our feet.

 

“Why?”

 

Sam, meanwhile, had knelt down and was using a stick to poke at the remains and cackling when it didn’t respond.

 

“I have no idea. Maybe he was just old. Or sick. Or maybe—“

 

“Did you poison him, Mom?”

 

Whoa. That’s a heavy accusation for a three year-old to throw at his mom. And I’m not sure how he knows about poison. Slightly more wary of him than I was a moment ago, I rerouted the conversation.

 

“Anyway, when you die, you can’t do anything anymore.”

 

“Why?”

 

“Because you’re dead.”

 

“Why?”

 

Because. Because that’s what happens to everyone, animals, people. We die. We cease to exist. We’re just not meant to live on this Earth forever. The planet can’t sustain us all, and I don’t believe that the human psyche could sustain an eternity on the Earth. In fact, I think—“

 

Interrupted again. And just as I was about to venture into the topic of life after death.

 

“Mom. Did you know everyone on Sesame Street is a monster? Except the grouches. Mom, are you a grouch?”

 

Sigh. “No, I’m not a grouch. [pause] Well, ok, sometimes I’m a grouch. Like when I’m really hungry and have low blood sugar. Or in the evening when my energy starts to fade. In fact, I don’t recall being this moody when I was younger. Maybe it’s another symptom of having kids. You know, when I was in college—“

 

“Ouch! What the—?”

 

I had suddenly been poked in the back of the thigh with a stick. Sam chuckled nearby.

 

“Anyway, let’s go inside and see what the Bible says about—hey! Stop! Stop wrestling! I’m talking to you guys!”

 

Dammit, can I ever just finish a thought? I have so many things to say. So many lessons to teach! Knowledge to impart! Nate and Sam are thirsting for my wisdom!

 

So, just as the chipmunk died, so died my attempt to teach about mortality. We hurled the lifeless little body into some deep undergrowth, had a snack, and put on the evening news. At which point—obviously—I got out a world map and proceeded to explain geopolitics, the GOP debates, and forest fires.

 

Nate Earns a Dollar: Part 3

Finally! The day came when Nate’s coveted Raphael action figure arrived! He ran around to the front of the house and picked up the package from the front steps. I made him count his money and hand it over to me before he could open the box. After a few moments of initial disappointment – he had envisioned something life-sized, I think – he requested pizza for lunch because Raph was probably hungry after such a long journey.

 

Sam stared at him with a combination of incredulity and disgust as he pressed pizza against this new toy’s mouth. I have to admit it was a bit odd: Nate and Raph were like newlyweds, sipping champagne and nibbling strawberries, only the romance was very one-sided.

 

But the honeymoon continued and for a few days, Nate carried “head-dropping Raph” everywhere we went, sharing him with everyone, like a proud, naïve father with his newborn. No one cares! Still, he glowed with admiration and affection – and that’s not an exaggeration.

 

Until one fateful, stormy morning.

 

We were running late, as usual, though I can’t even recall where we were headed. Sam’s mood was reflective of the weather outside. He reacted with epic tears and screams to all my suggestions and offerings. He didn’t want a bagel. He didn’t want to wear the clothes I had picked out. He didn’t want to watch whatever show Nate had picked out. It was the angriest I had seen him since….well, honestly since the day before at the playground when he stared down a ten-year old who had the audacity to try and slide down the slide that Sam was climbing up. “What a crabby baby,” the boy said as he scooted over to a nearby, more amiable slide. 

 

Anyway, back to Sam…I think he was just constipated, but the point is he was doing his best to make everyone else pay the price for his GI discomfort.

 

Fresh off a cup of coffee, I was undeterred. “La, la, la, I could take on the world right now, Sam! Your little tantrum is nothing to me!”

 

So he set his sights on Nate. Poor, unsuspecting, euphoric, doe-eyed Nate. Too busy gazing into the eyes of a toy ninja turtle to have his guard up against the wrath of Sam. 

 

And with one swat of his chubby, sweaty little arm, Nate’s joy was gone. With ninja-like quickness, Sam had, intentionally or unintentionally – a future courtroom debate, I guess – knocked Raph from Nate’s grasp. The toy hit the ceramic tile floor in the kitchen, and one of his sais slid under the refrigerator! It was gone from view! Just like the movie!

 

A sudden, uneasy silence blanketed the kitchen while we all processed what had happened. Wally, wise beyond the capacity of his canine brain, slinked quietly out of the room. Nate stared at the floor where the sai had just slipped away. I froze, my eyes darting back and forth between Nate and Sam, fearful of the next move – Nate’s revenge or a reprise of Sam’s fury. But even Sam was motionless! His eyes were wide: “Did I go too far?”

 

I braced myself for Nate’s tears.

 

They came.

 

I took a deep breath, scooped up Sam and shuttled him to safety in the other room. Fortunately, it seemed that Nate was still in shock. All he could grasp is that the sai was gone – revenge hadn’t even crossed his mind. Apparently, all he could think was: “Whaaaaaaaaaa!”

 

My next thought was to reclaim the sai and stop the tsunami of tears. But, ew, I’m not reaching under there! If there’s one place in everyone’s home that’s scary and foreboding and not a place you ever want to have to go, it’s under the fridge!

 

“Nate! Get it together, man! We have to problem-solve! Raph needs us!”

 

Instinctively, he snapped to, and enacted the skill set he has been practicing since paralyzing, apocalyptic tantrums became a thing for him: First, stop crying. Not easy to do when you’re three – it took several attempts. Just when I thought we were in the clear, he’d see Raph’s one empty hand, be reminded of our catastrophic plight, and start wailing all over again.

 

Sam, feeling as much guilt as a toddler possibly can, started to tiptoe back into the kitchen, only to jump backward, startled and terrified each time the tears would start again. He resolved to peering around the corner from the dining room, fingers curled around the edge of the doorway, one eye watching Nate with trepidation.

 

Finally, after some deep breathing and mother-son, morale-strengthening eye contact, the crying stopped, and we could focus on the problem solving. I’ll skip all the details because it wasn’t glamorous, but we used two lacrosse sticks, a John Deere flashlight, and a hockey stick to recover the two-inch plastic sai from the abyss that is underneath the fridge. We also found some forgotten about artwork that used to decorate the refrigerator door, a pair of dead flies – suicide pact perhaps? – and some weird, gross lint/grime hybrid that is much what I’d imagine the Ebola virus to look like.

 

After the ordeal ended, we all hugged and rejoiced on the kitchen floor. And for some reason, Nate, nearly blind with tears of joy, thanked Sam. Yes, thanked him. Not exactly the vengeful response I was expecting.

 

I sat between them, covered in snot and sub-refrigerator filth, grateful for an end to the tears, but also slightly baffled. It took me a while to grasp the moral here, but now I’m sure it’s one I’ll never forget: Be grateful for your cranky, constipated toddler. He’s scary, but he’ll show you what lies beneath the fridge.

 

It’s a metaphor. Or something.