Tag: the boys

Taking my own advice

Yesterday I left a comment that to remove oneself from a writing funk that they should write every day. Write for the sake of stretching their mind and not for the sake of quality.

I’m out of practice in making a record here. I’m not finding my old way of keeping my journal here is working very well. I think in part because I’m in a transitional point and I’ve been unsure of what exactly I want to record here.

I’ve actually noticed this transition happening elsewhere too. Perhaps as the children age it becomes less comfortable to be blogging all the details of their lives. I for one have found myself hesitating to write with the freedom I did when the boys were much younger. But there are somethings I want to share and moments I want to record.

Highlights:

Boy the Younger is now a reader. He’s taken to reading with character voices. His Cat in the Hat is fabulous.

Boy the Older is enjoying the Laura Ingalls series. This is good and at the same time terribly amusing to me because *I* did not enjoy the series. I am glad to have offered him the chance to make up his own mind.

Boy the Younger wants to grow flowers. I think this is directly related to the fact he is not fond of vegetables.

Boy the Older wants to grow varieties of vegetables that he doesn’t really eat. This amuses me greatly.

Insert Cookie Photo

It was cookie day yesterday. We made many gingerbread people. And many sugar cookie mittens, trees, and stars.

We’re now in a bit of a sugar induced fog. But don’t get us wrong we’re not complaining!

Cookie Day signals the beginning of our celebration. Today is Cinnamon Roll Day. You are jealous aren’t you? Wish we could share!!

Happy Baking to you all!

Rehash

We traveled this weekend and had nice visits with several family members. But what I am going to rehash is meant more to remind me that parenting is not an exact science.

This weekend for the most part the boys had a good time. They played and generally were just a tad over excited but who wouldn’t be with the first round of Christmas visits. The boys were having a good time right up until the moment my dear husband took the bionicles apart. I’m going to take a side tangent here and say that I LOVE lego products. Except these. I hate these. They are incredibly fragile and parts are often breaking and cracking. My youngest just accepts that his penchant for taking them apart results in broken bionicles. My oldest never takes them apart.

Read that last sentence again: My oldest never takes them apart.

Now read what set off an upset bigger than what we’ve seen in months: my dear husband took the bionicles apart.

BOOM.

In seconds my oldest morphed from the sweet child playing with his remote helicopter to a raging, screaming and tremendously upset child. My husband was just a little shell shocked. And the target of all the venting. I sent him upstairs. Was it right? I don’t know.
Because to be honest I didn’t know what was RIGHT at all.

In the following few minutes I fumbled my way through talking down this angry child. Because he can’t hear much of anything when he’s that mad.

I understand both sides of the argument:

Daddy says time to go. Starts packing up and casually asks for help. Child doesn’t want to help. Dad gets frustrated and packs up stuff himself.

Child sees Daddy has taken apart toy that NEVER comes apart. Knows toy breaks easily. Freaks out and gets mad.

Neither one is really wrong and unfortunately neither one is ALL right. And I’m in the middle. Stuck trying to run that line down the middle of my husband and son. I don’t fully disagree with my son but I don’t approve of his actions. I don’t fully disagree with my husband but I want just a little more patience and understanding from him.

The boy yelled. I yelled. I yelled at the boy and I yelled at the Dad.

Another side tangent. Sometimes trying to keep my husband informed of the day to day things is exhausting. I *knew* the oldest never took the bionicles apart. I *saw* my husband putting them in the boxes. I missed the fact he wasn’t squishing them in but actually taking them apart. Sigh. I guess I never communicated how fragile these were because the look on my husband’s face when the boy exploded said he didn’t know.

It was not a proud parenting moment and it was made more so by the fact we weren’t in our own home which means we did all this in front of other people. Nothing makes you take a look at how you did more than having an audience. And in the moment I knew we weren’t doing very well. We fumbled.

But we didn’t crash and burn. That is what I am trying to remember as my brain rehashes the whole scene. We may not have had a shining, blue ribbon moment but we were there. And we were trying.

And trying is sometimes the best I’ve got. Do my best today with the intentions of trying to do better tomorrow.

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