The Parenting Post Blog

Circle of Life

By Daring Young Mom on Friday, August 29, 9:00 am EDT

For the first time ever, my kids got together this summer with all their cousins at one time. We spent a week at my parents’ house in Montana, eating their free food, playing on their personal playground, and coloring with their crayons.

So much of the trip was reminiscent of my childhood – trips to my grandparents’ house when I would stay up all night in their basement with my siblings, wreaking havoc and congratulating ourselves on what moronic parents we had that they had no idea that we were still awake. Apparently we thought that our ear-piercing squeals and the sound of the pool balls slamming into each other as we threw them around the table were SUPER SNEAKY.

My kids are equally delusional. I enjoy ignoring them as they giggle with their cousins, reveling in the joy of my idiocy. Little do they know I keep a baby monitor on in their room so I can hear every word of their whisper-yelled conversations. I know when they’re pretending to give each other shots, when they decide to swap pajamas. I know. And eventually I have to shut down their fun and sit on them until they pass out.

It’s strange to find myself in the role of enforcer. It’s my job to squelch the fun if the fun must be squelched. If a nap’s to be administered right in the middle of the raucous good times, I must be the one to administer it. If I don’t administer it, I must suffer the consequences in the form of a nuclear toddler meltdown over the size and shape of his mashed potatoes.

This trip, as opposed to the vacations of my youth, I was the one to hyperventilate when my son wrote all over Grammy’s new ottoman rather than being the one to wonder why my parents were freaking out over the insignificant messes I made.

When road-tripping as the adult, you have to do the actual driving while other people like your children sit in their cushy seats, eating bonbons, and watching movies. Sometimes you need to feed them food, wipe their faces, take them to the potty every 10 minutes, and change their movie in between your turns at the wheel, and they lament the hardship that is their sad, sad life of travel.

But even their whining is somehow cute because they’re me. In some strange way, years later, they’re me. I see myself in their excitement, their sadness, their fun, and of course their cuteness. I definitely see myself in their cuteness.

_____

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Member Comments
mombrud's picture
mombrud
Thank you for this reminder!
8/29/2008 at 2:25 pm
Thank you for this reminder! I need to look for myself and my siblings in my children more often. I DO hate being the enforcer, but I guess that I am doing it right when I hear "you're so mean", "it's not fair", and an occasional "I hate you" for shock value. Some days I have to remind myself that I really know how to have fun and I am not a kill joy in all situations.


Isn't it weird?
8/30/2008 at 11:02 am
It's a little scary and a little wonderful, the circular nature of life.


I'm glad you had fun. This
8/30/2008 at 12:07 pm
I'm glad you had fun. This was a good post, K. And oh how I know that when the nap is not enforced, the fun does not ensue.


Your post reminded me of...
8/30/2008 at 11:29 pm
When I was pregnant I had a hormonal shut down directed at my husband because he was going to be able to be the 'Daddy' and have all the fun when I was going to have to be the 'Mommy' and be responsible. I started crying and saying that I did not want to be the 'Mommy.' It was a sad day! But, the hormones soon passed and we moved on in my pregnancy to other emotional crises! http://nihao93.blogspot.com


fun post ;)
8/31/2008 at 7:03 pm
but i gotta admit i'll be a little freaked out if my son grows up to be me ;) lol.


ah, the joys and terrors of
9/2/2008 at 5:10 pm
ah, the joys and terrors of family vacation now that we are grown up. next time i'll have to try to see the kids as me. what a great example and a way to feel more indulgent of their giggling naughtiness.:)


I'm still laughing out loud
9/3/2008 at 10:29 am
I'm still laughing out loud as the statement "And eventually I have to shut down their fun and sit on them until they pass out. ". Yes indeed, they are us, just as we sound like OUR mothers!


Remark
12/10/2008 at 12:46 pm
Nice post. But don`t you think that children, even if they are small, may have some privacy and have their own secrets from parents? Till what age are you going to control your children with a a baby monitor? Just want to hear your opinion.


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