My husband went grocery shopping
the other day and came home with my favorite cookies.
You’re waiting for
me to say, “April Fool,” aren’t you?
Well, I’m not. It’s
a true story. He does grocery shop sometimes, and he did come home with my favorite cookies. And – get this! –
those cookies were sporting a “Buy One, Get One Free” sticker! It was my lucky day all over the place!
“Uh, honey,”
I asked, after looking through the bags, “where’s the other package of cookies?”
“I didn’t get
it,” he replied, a little defensively, if you ask me.
“How could you not
get it? It was, after all, well, FREE,” I said.
“Just because something’s
free does not mean I have to take it,” he snapped.
All I could do was stare
at this man to whom I’ve pledged the rest of my life and wonder what the heck he was talking about.
“I knew if we had them,
I’d eat them,” he finally admitted. “Oh-kay,” I replied, pretending it made sense. I loved him too
much to point out that we were going to eat them whether we paid for them or not, and it made more fiscal sense to not if we had the option. I put that one in the “You Learn Something New Every Day)” column, which
is filling up fast lately.
I admit this has surprised
me somewhat, as I tend to assume that if you’ve been with your husband for, say, ten years, you know everything about
him. If you’ve been with your children for, say, six and eight years, you know them better than they know themselves.
And if you’ve been
with yourself for, oh, many years, you pretty much know what to expect.
These assumptions started
to unravel a couple years ago when my children started simultaneously losing their teeth. And for you six and eight-year-olds
reading this, IT IS NOT – REPEAT NOT – A COMPETITION. Whoever loses more teeth first IS NOT THE WINNER. And losing
teeth at an early age DOES NOT MAKE YOU QUEEN OF THE UNIVERSE.
Anyhoo, I realized when my
kids started losing teeth that – surprise! – I can’t do teeth! Who knew? Can’t even look at them if
they’re not securely anchored on all four sides to a healthy gum. Throw in a little blood and “hanging on by a
thread” visual and I’m on the next bus.
I don’t understand
it. I can rub their backs while they vomit. I can hold a wound together until stitches are applied, put a bone in place until
it is set. But teeth? “See that person over there, sweetie? Go ask if she’ll help you. She looks nice.”
And I will admit to basically
throwing in the towel on ever hoping to know children. It doesn’t matter how we try to guide them, shape them, or show
them the way; they are their own people, who may or may not let us know how to contact them in twenty years. For example,
in the last week alone I have learned the following:
● The simple fact of snow and sub-zero
temperatures in no way disturbs a 6-year-old girl’s need to wear a swimsuit.
● There is no correct response to the following
statement: “I am not going to wear my glasses because Fire Queens don’t wear glasses.”
● Children who did not sleep well as infants
do not sleep well as anything else.
● The intensity of a kindergartner’s
tantrum is not always in direct proportion to the energy she feels for the subject at hand. Sometimes it is simply a function
of how enamored she is by the sound of her own voice that day.
● When a 6-year-old girl says, “I
wish I was a Brat,” she’s talking about the doll. Oops.
I haven’t learned all
this about MY children, of course, because my children are as well-behaved and predictable as a mother could possibly want.
There are no tantrums, nightmares, stubbornness, meltdowns, timeouts, bad moods, or sibling arguments in this house.
Okay, this time I’ll
say it. “April Fool!”