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Raising DC by DC Mom

Every day trials and tribulations in raising a toddler in Washington.

September 2008 - Posts

  • Ahhhhhh Nordstrom!

    The sweet solitude of a Sunday when your husband takes your child to swim class and you get to go off and do whatever you like. With these precious hours of freedom I always vow to take in a matinee movie at Landmark movie theater in Bethesda, but more than likely it’s a pedicure at Georgetown Nail Salon. Sometimes I’ll meander around and browse the shops on M street. I like to see what’s trending in Banana and J Crew but I’d rather spend money at someplace like Zara where you feel like you have the inside line to Europe.

    But on a day when I have a specific shopping mission I head to Montgomery Mall, to Nordstrom. And what a difference to go it alone! From the moment of takeoff I lean back in the car, roll down the window, blast the music, unfettered by the whims and pleas of a small fry in the back. And I don’t have to hear "It’s Raining It’s Pouring" in French for the 99th time. I can turn on NPR, or if I choose, crank up the classic rock, with no look of shame from my husband.

    I park in the garage and walk over, feeling strangely light. No stroller, no diaper bag, no 22 lbs hanging on my hip. I breeze through the doors and actually pause at the perfume counter, examining the latest from So and So and So and So.

    I ride the escalator (not the elevator) up, nodding to the pianist on the way, and enter the women’s department. Here, without the Bees, I have time! I can browse, I can muse, I can linger. Best of all, I can try on!

    Today I was on a mission to buy a blouse to go with my winter dress, an elegant wool hounds tooth jumper that CB gave me last year for Christmas. I had the foresight to bring the dress with me, and approached the first saleslady I saw.

    At Nordstrom they not only ask how they may help, but they actually help you. Kathy listened to my predicament and then followed me around the store, pausing only to complement me on my grandmother’s ring.

    She collected a few things to put in the dressing room and then let me continue on without her. I went through every department, chatting with each salesperson. In the designer area I started to get into deep water with the short stocky gay guy there (I know he was gay by the carefully coiffed hair-do and the biceps bulging out of his sheer shirt sleeves.) He pointed out a long sleeved t-shirt for only $695. “Hmmm maybe. Can you hold it for me?”, and obviously I continued on.

    As I came around the circle I found Kathy again and she led me to my dressing suite: a private stage, three mirrors and an armchair. I could have curled up and read a book. In fact I could have hosted book club there. The best thing was that Kathy parked herself at a discreet distance from the door so I could come out and parade around in each item. Being a good salesperson she made no mention of my back fat bulges or dangling underarm.

    Something about a soothing shopping experience on a higher service level makes you feel richer than you are. I modeled about 12 outfits and bought 6 items. Giddy with indulgence (and she with her commission no doubt) we chatted about fall weather in New England.

    See you soon" I sang to my new BFF, with the image of CB frowning over the receipt looming in the back of my mind. Humming on my way out, I swear I was a better mother that day.

     

  • Looking For Dora

    The Bees Loves Dora, and what kid these days doesn’t love that cartoon character and her cousin Diego? However, for The Bees it’s not enough to watch Dora on television or cuddle the doll in her lap. She wants to be friends with Dora in real life.

    We have a wonderful Peruvian woman named Maria who comes over every Monday to clean the house, and she brings a friend along to help. The Bees used to throw herself into Maria's arms, until she found out that Maria's friend was named Dora.  Then it was all over. Now, whenever the pair arrive, The Bees scuttles shyly over, holding one arm out and sort of hiding her face behind it until she gets to Dora. She leans into Dora’s legs until she is given a hug at which point she throws her arms up to be picked up and cuddled.

    On any given Monday Dora the cleaning lady might have to pick her up about 12 times. It is a little disruptive to the house cleaning and occasionally I’ll glance at my watch and calculate the hourly rate. This would be solved if Dora could babysit, and they could have hours of playtime together, but unfortunately Dora does not have a car so the transportation is too difficult.

    Today we were in a music class at Musikids in Bethesda. There were as many nannies as mothers accompanying the children in class. The Bees approached one nanny who looked Hispanic and showed her the miniscule boo-boo on her hand. After she had elicited the appropriate gesture of sympathy in Spanish The Bees decided this was her new Dora. She gazed up at her, smiled, cocked her head and peered up at her, hovering around, looking for an angle of entry.

    We took our seats in a circle, children on our laps.  That’s when The Bees decided that Meridiana’s lap looked much more inviting so she sklathed (to coin a term from Eloise) her way across the circle, bypassing the little girl Virginia whose rightful place was in that lap. The Bees put her head on Meridiana’s knee and allowed her back to be rubbed, her hair to be stroked. Everyone looked at me, as if to say “does this child not get enough love at home?”

    For the entire class The Bees insisted on sitting on Meridiana's lap,  and dancing for her or hopping for her. The poor little charge Virginia didn't know what had happened except that her safety cushion was usurped by a trespasser. There was a battle of bums as they both angled into the lap of choice, but all in all Virginia was a good sport about sharing her beloved nanny.

    I tried several times to lure the Bees back to me. During songs or activities she would swing by now and again to check in, but tottered back to Meridiana and curled up head first into her lap.

    It was bittersweet to watch this. While I am thrilled that she could connect with someone so immediately and deeply, I knew that this woman is not free to babysit or spend any time with my child. I scribbled out my name and number on a piece of paper and begged Meridiana to pass it on to her friends. This I know: without a Spanish speaking nanny of our own, or a frequent and regular sitter, The Bees will keep looking everywhere for a Dora in her life.

     

  • Back Fat and Other Souvenirs of Pregnancy

    My body has not recovered from pregnancy. That’s how I like to explain the atrocities that encompass my smallish frame these days. Back fat, saddlebags, under arm dangle, droopy boobs. Underneath it all there is a smallish skeleton, I assure you! But how would you know? I was shocked to learn that a lovely wool skirt I bought last fall when The Bees was 5 months old DOES NOT ZIP UP NOW. Though I would leap to blame this on someone else -- and indeed, did a fair amount of shouting at my husband as I pulled and tugged on the zipper only to be confounded with an immovable bulge -- I can only attribute this to my eating habits.

    The Bees is weaned and I am not. I am still eating the extra 1000 calories a day as if I am breastfeeding.

    My bras are digging into the front of my chest, and the straps show bulges under my sweaters. I can feel the extra tire around my hips spilling over my waistband if I bend over, a pleasant image, I know. It’s all a surprise to me – now that the baby is out of my body and no longer attached to me physically, how can I look like I’m still pregnant?!

    I know what must be done, and it does not involve going to the tailor and letting out the waist. So HOW, pray you, after enjoying the 2 years of sandwiches, chips, cookies, crisps, pasta, cheese and breads, how do you go back to RESTRAINT?! I even hate that word, “restraint”. I hate its cousins too: sacrifice, denial, less, minimal -- all which mean you can’t get as much as you want. I love excess, indulgence, whimsy, extreme, fanciful, plentiful and positively delicious!

    But the temptation is not just with my food, it’s The Bees’ food too. Who can turn her back on uneaten organic mac and cheese? Who can cast her yearning eyes away from warm, crisp sweet potato fries crunchy with sea salt? Not to mention my daily reward for full-time parenting: the pop of the top of a cold bottle of beer, the sweet malty flavor as it rolls down your tongue.

    All I know is, with the holiday season approaching and the heavily laden tables beckoning in the distance, I feel myself getting crankier by the minute.

  • What My Kid Wears

    We used to take our morning stroll down to Balducci's so that I could get my coffee and The Bees could have her first socializing of the day. Knowing people expected to see us was a way to get us up, dressed and out the door by 8:15am. I counted this excursion as playtime, even though it was officially an errand for me to fuel my caffeine addiction. For the Bees it was an opportunity to run around the store, getting underfoot of the staff, sampling merchandise, crumpling greeting cards, and creating general mayhem.

    More importantly it was also a daily fashion show (for her, not for me- I've given up). We have so many dresses in her closet that we cannot possibly wait for a special occasion to showcase them. This is not to say that we have bought them - they are mostly gifts. But in order for her to wear them more than once we have to put them into rotation just about every day. Thus the trips to Balducci’s offered an appreciative audience, a runway, and refreshments all at the same time.

    These days I make my coffee at home and we head straight to the playground. Saving money is a bonus, but the reality is that The Bees’ energy level and temperament have exceeded the Balducci’s environment. Her old friends at the store miss her and have asked us to stop by, but on the rare occasion that we try it, she inevitably erupts into a screaming spitting fury within minutes. Charming.

    So off to the playground go we.  People remark, "oh she's dressed up!” or "Where are you going today - off to a party?" Some of these are casual dresses - sun slips with flowers, or long-sleeved stripy stretchy numbers. Others are gifts of crisp French linen, or sheer gauzy cascades of chiffon, like a wedding cake. When she's inevitably on the ground, either collecting acorns, sifting through the mulch or even lying face down, pretending to sleep, I get these looks from mothers like "what are you thinking?”

    Of course she and the outfit will get dirty. But I say this: how many of you have opened the closet door and found, tucked in the wayyyy back, an outfit that someone gave you 6 months ago that was at first too big or too fancy to wear, and now your child has outgrown it. You can wrap it up and re-gift it or take it to the tailors and pay $20 to have the elastic taken out so she can wear it just three times.

    What does it matter, you might say. Why can't my kid just wear stretchy leggings and a t-shirt and be done with it? Because I think that by age 18 months a child has a sense of what she's wearing. The Bees likes her finery; she points at the flowers, she twirls around, dancing. And they suit her.

    The truth is (I like to end these blogs with the truth), I live vicariously through my child. I love the pastel fabric that billows around her ankles. I love the tiny straps, the ornamental buttons, the pockets that hold no more than a cheerio. Oh and the smocking. I swoon over the smocking! Just like the dresses I wore when I was a little girl, now virtually unaffordable.

    And guess what: a dress doesn't impede her in the slightest. Except when you're snapping her into the car seat and it gets stuck in the buckles. Or if she’s trying to climb the jungle gym and she steps on the edge. Or when her shoe gets hung up in the hem and it trips her down onto her face. 

     

  • More on Mean Mommy

    My husband says my blogs are mean-spirited. Are they mean-spirited? Or am I just spirited? Hmm...My best friend Frank says “You don’t have a mean bone in your body” (and then we both cackle with laughter).

    Truth is I write these stories as amusing anecdotes, not lacerating critiques.  There are a few exaggerations (like most of the kids in our music class are quite cute). And there are some timely omissions, such as describing Carson’s flying first class while we sit in coach. How dull to explain that we were on separate record locators and that he tried to upgrade us but failed. It’s boring to mention that he came back once to check on us and see if we needed anything. The picture was what I thought was funny – him in first class sipping a drink and reading in peace in his large leather chair, with me squished back in coach with screaming kicking crying toddler on my lap.

    I try to write true to my own life. And sometimes I just feel like saying what some of us are thinking. It may be that I am only amusing myself and my two best friends. But that’s good enough for me.

    CB has asked me to stop writing about him. This just after he asked me to write more about him.

    More on CB later!

     

  • Bathing: The Clean and The Very Dirty

    The other day I was giving The Bees a bath. These days she loves bubble baths with the bubbles rising so high that they hang over the top of the tub like a 1000 calorie muffin from Starbucks.

    We have a yellow potty that sits invitingly near the tub. The Bees is not yet potty trained but when nudie she will give some indication that she is about to go. When she’s in the tub she will point out and ask to get out of the tub. She scampers wet across the landing, cackling with laughter, turns and looks at me and then pees where she is.

    The hope is that she will learn to sit on the yellow potty at some point. Aside: A friend of mine mentioned that she actually used the potty herself to show her daughter what to do. Make of that what you will.

    At any rate the other day we were in a warm bubble bath. The Bees pointed and asked to get out. She ran naked across the landing, skidding on the wood floor, shrieking with laughter. She then ran into our bedroom, bumped into the dog, and slid around the corner of the bed. Then she scampered back, saw me, got a huge grin on her face and slammed the bedroom door shut. Oh lord, I thought, now I have to get out of this warm and cozy tub (did I mention we still bathe together?) because now that she’s trapped in the bedroom she’s going to start to cry.

    But she didn’t cry. In fact it was eerily silent in the bedroom. I was worried that she would start exploring the tops of the dressers, pulling jewelry boxes down on herself, or worse - the hammer that was sitting on the bedside table that I keep with the intention of hanging a few more pictures but also for a weapon of self defense for the nights when CB is traveling and especially if the dog is in the kennel.

    But there was not a sound from the bedroom. I looked under the door and saw a shadow standing still there, on the other side of the door. There’s only one thing that can be happening that would make her stand stock still for more than 3 seconds, I thought. Oh No. Not that.

    I opened the door slowly and smelled the stench. The Bees looked up at me with a big smile. I looked sharply around the room: nothing on the rug, nothing on the floor. Nothing even on The Bees. And then I saw the dog standing there, licking her chops.

    I avoided the dog for the rest of the night, and since then have not been inclined to snuggle with her in her dog bed. In reflection on this incident I do think there should be a limit on canine loyalty.

  • My Husband is My Personal Shopper

    I might have mentioned earlier that my husband CB is a bit of a dandy. But his fine taste in clothes extends beyond just his own.

    Recently he spent over an hour in a Lily Pulitzer store in Greenville SC, shopping for women's clothes. He spent most of the time examining women’s capri pants and discussing fit and style with the shop manager. You might raise an eyebrow, and knowing him, I often do as well. Especially when he turns his body to a three-quarter pose with his leg turned in and his foot splayed out to show off his own shoes.

    While he did manage to pick up a navy silk tie decorated with turtles, CB spent most of his time at Lily Pulitzer browsing the women’s dresses, skirts, pants. He loves doing this. He called me from the store to ask whether I'd like this one with pineapples on it, or just solid pink. Would I wear this dress with mod circles down the front? Or that one with the stripes. He took pictures with his cell phone and then called to discuss. Better than a girlfriend.

    Most women would adore their husband shopping for them and I am no different. CB has great taste, and will gladly take a seat outside the dressing room for a fashion parade. “Ooh, that’s sassy!” is the highest compliment. He frequents Everard’s haberdashery, he knows my sizes, and ever since we met he is likely to bring home a blouse or a pair of shoes for me with just a pocket square for himself. 

    There was only one gift in recent memory that CB purchased that I returned; it was for Mother's Day, a chocolate paisley Kate Spade toiletries bag. While it was nice, I already had two Vera Bradley toiletry bags so we went together to the Kate Spade store to look at other options. NB: I didn’t have to beg him to go. He loves it. We browsed for almost an hour and I was the one who called it quits – I hadn’t lost my heart to anything. Refusing to go home empty CB suggested we head straight to Everard’s. An hour later we left with an armload of clothes, many times the cost of the toiletry bag.

    Now if I could just remember this amazing generosity when I grouse about him flying first class, sitting in peaceful, leathered luxury, sipping a cocktail and reading while I’m back in coach with The Bees screaming, kicking and crying on my lap.

     

     

  • Mean Mommy: Music Class

    Since I’m not a likely candidate for sainthood then I might as well just soldier on in my sarcastic, merciless and unrelenting manner.

    The latest subject of my ridicule is toddler music classes. Am I the only one who feels like I’ve stepped into a scene out of “One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest”? You’re sitting on the floor in an uneven circle, there is all this high-pitched chirping, the clapping of hands at inappropriate times, and the jerking and bouncing of arrhythmic bodies. And I’m just talking about the mothers now. I haven’t even gotten to the children and the teacher.

    We take music classes at www.musikids.com which does as good a job as any at corralling kids between the ages of 3 months and 5 years. The classes are broken out into general age ranges, but as any parent knows, there can be a huge difference between a one year old and a two year old. I guess some time slots are more popular than others because there have been classes in the past where The Bees was one of just two or three students. Today there were TWENTY kids, each with a parent and some with a nanny as well. Needless to say, it was quite crowded in the circle, and after the introductions were finished, mayhem ensued. I don’t blame the teacher for confusing and forgetting names. Aiden became Alden became Anson and all three were there.

    But I do blame the teacher for launching into tunes that no one knows, with scarce relevance to any melody. Now I have heard some of these songs before about ‘gilly fingers’ and ‘mini-mo’ and so forth. I don‘t expect it all to make sense but heaven help us – could the teacher just hold a tune? As she gamely bounced her notes about, tipping her head back and reaching for a shrill high pitch that was not written into the score I looked wild-eyed around to see if I had any sympathy in the crowd. All the mothers were gazing dewy-eyed at their child, oblivious to the teacher, the nannies reaching out to the child only to be scorned.

    There was a lot of hopping up and down – maybe it’s just me but when I get to class I’m so glad to sit down, I’m not jubilant at being told to stand up and swing my 21.5 lb child around or run back and forth across the class room. I know I’ve written before about the horse song where you actually gallop up to an imaginary fence and then you leap over it. I’m not sure how this relates to music but I did realize how flaccid my flesh has become since I broke my foot. And I am resolute to return to power yoga as soon as possible.

    The real reason for writing today is to write in only the most malicious way about how unattractive some children are. Am I the only one who notices the pig-like girl, whose snout is pressed back into her head, a heavy carpet of matted hair plopped on top, not unlike the Miss Piggy character. Or the swarthy, burly girl, showing little resemblance to her pretty mother. Now I know that every mother loves her child and thinks hers is the most precious, and as I’ve said, I have a critical eye (I can see my rear-end in the mirror and it is not a pretty sight). But I really did not see much competition in there for The Bees. I called CB to let him know that our child was truly the most beautiful in the class. This says nothing about my looks, but CB was quite pleased as The Bees looks exactly like him.

  • Classes for Baby

    I know I’ve written before about baby classes. The choices get more complicated as your baby gets older: what to take, how to choose the schedule, how to squeeze in naps and lunch.

    It sounds ridiculous but if your baby is still in the baby nap schedule of twice a day then you are looking for classes between 11am and 3. However if you are trying to wean your child to just one nap then you are pushing that morning nap of 9:30 to later and later, in 15 minute increments, and consequently not able to make that 11am class. But you also don’t want to commit to the 4:00 class because she might be napping again. I was close to paralyzed at this dilemma so I went ahead and registered her for a variety of classes at different times so we would have options. My husband rolled his eyes at my imprudence.

    And now we’re in this limbo land where I cant keep her awake long enough to attend a 10:30 music class (Musikids) and she is still sleeping through her 11am dance class (Joy of Motion). The only one that works is her 9:30am Spanish class (Communikids). We have missed the first one because the teacher, Raoul, was in the emergency room with his son Paulo. (Who is fine, thank heavens). We missed the first dance class because it was at 11am and she was still sleeping. We will miss the first music class and the second swimming class (JCC) this week because we will be in Florida.

    My hope is that in the next five days I can get her on the new sleep schedule of noon to 2. Then we can attend everything and my husband will stop rolling his eyes!

     

  • Force Feeding Baby

    I am doing that thing a parent is not supposed to do. I have been trying to force feed my child. Not strap her down and shove it down her throat, but I carry the food around the house, into the car, into the playground and repeatedly offer it to her (push gently against the mouth) in the hopes that she will take a bite. She shakes her head no and turns the other way.

    In the last four days The Bees has stopped eating. Not completely – she will take a few sucks on a fruity shake, she will nuzzle a cookie. It’s nothing alarming, and given the accompanying fever and one point of a molar emerging in the back of her mouth, I am pretty sure it’s just teething. Now if we were talking about me, no one would worry. I could stand to lose a pound or 20. But The Bees is a slender thing. She is 20 pounds at most (don’t tell anyone but she’s been riding forward-facing for 3 weeks because I couldn’t stand it another minute). She is a reed, a wraith, a lithe little number. People remark on her belly because it looks distended compared with her skinny little frame. No chubs on this one, no rolls, no dimples. So I am naturally concerned when she skips a meal or two or five.

    There is no conclusion to this, no wisdom here except what I already know: this will pass. Don’t panic, don’t force, don’t push. Lord helps us if she develops eating anxiety later in life due to her mother’s frantic meal-time ministerings. That would serve me right. She’ll either end up in the tabloids as a walking skeleton or on the TV Show “The Biggest Loser” admitting that her mother is the cause of her constant carbo cravings.

    In the meantime as she pushes away another plate of mac and cheese, another half a bagel, I sigh and do what I said I would never do - eat up all the leftovers myself. Oink oink.

  • Weird Lyrics to Lullabies

    I mentioned earlier that I enjoy singing to The Bees throughout the day but particularly before bedtime. For lullabies I rely on an old book my mother used called “Lullabies and Night Songs”. The illustrations were done by Maurice Sendak, so you can imagine the whimsy in the beasts and the goblins, the chubby-faced children. There are some classic songs in there and then a few odd ones too. I have sung them so many times that I sometimes don’t think about the words, but you might be amused to hear them:

    “Snail, Snail Come out of your Bed

    Put out your Horns and then your Head

    And your Papa and Your Mama will serve you Boiled Mutton”. (mmm)

     

    And how about this one:

     

    “The Grizzly Bear is huge and wild

    It has devoured the Infant Child

    The Infant Child is not aware

    It has been eaten by the Bear”

     

    As I’ve discovered before, it is the small smiles that get me through even an arduous parenting day.

  • Jekyll and Hyde

    I have borne a monster into this world. Not a terrible one, but one that has two distinct behaviors, angelic and demonic, that turn on a dime.

    One minute The Bees will be laughing and jolly playing with her Dad and then she sees me and collapses at my feet whining and scowling, crying to be held and kicking her heels on the floor. One minute she’ll be smiling sweetly up at me, listening to a story and the next she’s pinching my face hard and pulling my hair.

    Today it was 95 degrees and I was determined to leave the house to go do something. We ended up in Bethesda as we often do, at the Barnes and Noble where she can run willy-nilly through the children’s section, pointing out her favorite characters, and fighting with other kids over the trains on the train set. She was fine there for 30 minutes or so, they don’t seem to mind that she traipses around pulling down all the stuffed animals onto the floor.

    Then it was 1pm and we moved on to Café Deluxe for lunch.  I don’t often take the Bees to a seated lunch (it’s more than twice what we’d pay for takeout) but it was too hot to sit outside, I had a hankering for a good salad and knew they are baby friendly. I got The Bees set up in her high chair with crayons and a cup of water with a straw. I ordered her mac and cheese and for myself, a Greek salad and an ice tea. There we sat, two ladies at lunch, she dutifully ate, scribbled on the paper tablecloth and pointed out various items of interest - the boy next to us, the fans overhead, the mirrors. I drew faces, hands, dogs, cats and sharks for her on the paper, and we had a grand time. After lunch I took her to the restroom with me and then popped her into the stroller. As we left several people had admiring glances and murmured, “Such a good baby”.

    We waltz out on the street and down the sidewalk, The Bees poking a little hand out to point at a dog. Since we had another 20 minutes on the meter I wanted to stop into this shop I like called “Lucy” that sells women’s “performance apparel”. That means things you might wear while running, biking, doing yoga. These are also clothes you might wear that make other people think that you do these sports. And that’s why I buy them.

    We arrive at Lucy and it’s as cold as a refrigerator, thank god, and the Bees is smiling and waving and cooing and oohing and I start pushing her between a few sale racks and then all of a sudden she has a fit and starts screaming to get out. I grab two tops off a rack, run into the changing room and throw them on. She is screeching, tugging at her straps, twisting her body to get out. By the time we emerge from the changing room I can’t hear anything but The Bees - I see the sales lady’s mouth moving but I can’t hear what she’s saying.

    We are at the counter and she is trying to wrap up the blouse and she is picking at this stack of tissue and it’s not coming up and she is picking and picking and finally I just say “we just need to leave I’ll just take it“ and I throw the shirt into the stroller and at this point I am holding the kicking screaming child in my arms trying to sign the receipt and The Bees is shrieking so loudly that other shoppers have fled the store.

    I mutter something about ‘tired baby’ and tackle The Bees and strap her into the stroller and run her out the door. (Thank god I was wearing performance apparel).

    The only way I can calm her down is by promising the immediate delivery of a “cook cook” so we rush across the street to the bakery and I butt in front of the lady in line and grab an oatmeal raisin cookie from the counter which I shove into The Bees’ mouth! And then, as the sugar dissolves on the front of her tongue, she immediately ceases all sound, her face relaxes and she leans back in the stroller. “Mmmm” she says. “Cook cook”.

    We drive home and I glance back at my once again angel, clutching the cookie in her tight fist, feet crossed at the ankle, staring out the window at the trees going by while she listens to a Frenchman sing “Allouette”.

  • Gift Horse: Kiss It on the Nose!

    In my new life as mother and wife I’m really learning to adhere to the old “gift horse” adage.

    This morning The Bees gave me a big gift. We were looking at the greeting cards at Balducci's as we do every morning. She is particularly drawn to those with cats. Cats in hats, cats in sunglasses. Cats driving motorcycles. She then picked out a card with three bombshell bikini-ed beauties and pointed to the brunette on the right and said “Mama”, looking at me. “Mama” she said again. I chuckled and, I must admit, joy filled my heart. I looked around to see if anyone else overheard this utterance of genius!

    It’s a cheap thing, coming from a 17-month old, and of course she could just as easily point to a cabbage patch doll and say “Mama”. She's not even old enough to know how well she could manipulate me.  But in that moment I thought, this having-a-kid thing isn’t so bad. It’s like on your birthday when everyone is nice to you. You know it’s only temporary, and maybe not even completely sincere, but you’ll take kindness where you can get it.

    Just the way that I ask CB to not be so skeptical about our scant romantic life. It’s gotten to the point where, if I make an amorous gesture, he’ll say something sarcastic like “well why would you want to do that?!” or “what for”? In later negotiations I say “please try to not ruin the mood by questioning my motives”. Like complements from your baby, just take it and run!

     

     

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