Tuesday, December 1, 2020

A Boy Day

And they look so innocent . . .
1. It had been a tough day.
2. We had three boys.
Those are my excuses . . .
The day had started out slowly.
Mark had sleep-walked and nearly mistook the closet for the bathroom.
Caught just in time.
Because I am superwoman.
Shortly thereafter (Oooh. Good word) Mark and Erik had staged an argument/battle over the TV remote.
I should explain, here, that the word 'remote' was largely optimistic at this point.
There was a device.
Attached to our VCR by a long cable.
Thus, 'remote'.
Moving on . . .
Our two oldest boys were fighting over it.
Mom won.
By banishing them to opposite sides of the family room.
Neither of which was close enough to the TV to allow access to said remote.
They were watching 'Black Hole'.
Again.
It was the only approximately 'family' movie that our newly fledged VCR rental outlet had.
Both of them could quote it by this time.
They began to discuss whether they should do what Mark wanted--watch it again--or flip over to the TV for the daily episode of Sesame Street. Erik's idea.
More arguing.
Won by Mom again, when she suggested, rather forcefully that the time had come for them to go outside and bother their father.
Whereupon (another good word) they found themselves in the great outdoors.
For a while, they sat and pouted.
Then their little brother, Duffy, who had the sense to follow their father when he first left the house, discovered The Mud Puddle.
A short time later, there was a timid tap at the front door.
I opened it.
To find a figure standing there.
Vaguely human in shape.
Roughly the size of my third son.
Several scrubbings later, I realized that it was, indeed, Duffy.
Whose brothers had doused him, quite literally, in his own discovery.
The culprits were discovered, sometime later, hiding in the basement of the house their dad was building.
Still giggling.
I dragged them into the house.
To apologize.
And to eat lunch.
Was it really only noon?
They immediately began to argue over who got the yellow cup.
And where each of them would sit.
I settled it again.
No one got the yellow cup and neither of them got to sit remotely close to where they wanted. In fact, they were lucky to be sitting at all!
As they finally started scooping up Mac and Cheese, I told them, “I think I'm going to take the three of you into the 'used kids' store and trade you in on girls!”
My second son looked at me, round-eyed. “Can you do that?”
I laughed. “No,” I reassured him.
“Oh.” He went back to scooping.
But sometimes . . .

12 comments:

  1. Ah, yes, every mother can relate. The only time when there wasn’t some arguing going on in my house of four children was when three of them were visiting other friends in their houses. Oh, how all I wanted was some silence. Now I long for their voices around me.

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    1. HAhahaha! So true!
      And I DO miss those voices. Especially now. They all live within minutes of me and I don’t get to see ANY of them! :(

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  2. Even non parents can relate. And feel a little guilt for the very similar days (and lots of them) that my siblings and I foisted on our parents.

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  3. I only had 2 boys but, yup, had many many many days like that.

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  4. Heeheehee! When he was out with all of us, Grandpa would see someone with a sweet girl or two and would point to the boys and say, "Would you like to trade your sweet girl for a couple of stinky boys?"

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