This is me, three days after coming home from vacation and trying to catch up on housework and deal with my children. For real.
kids
Wanda Says…True Confessions: My parental failure as the Tooth Fairy
My Tooth Fairy track record was spotless…until today.
Last Friday night our family attended the annual Halloween Carnival at Bryn’s school. At some point during the carnival, Bryn was eating a candy bar and accidentally ate a loose tooth. She told me later she felt something hard while she was chewing but thought it was a peanut in the candy bar so she just swallowed it. She showed me the gap in her teeth when we got home, and she expressed her concern that the Tooth Fairy wouldn’t come because she didn’t have a tooth to leave under her pillow. I assured her it wouldn’t matter and the Tooth Fairly would come. Keep in mind, Bryn is ten years old now, so that should tell you how good I am at playing the Tooth Fairy.
But I forgot. I totally forgot. Last night, I went into Bryn’s room to say goodnight and to collect my nightly snuggles. This is what I found on her bedside table…
It was so cute and totally something Bryn would do. And of course I felt horrible that I had forgotten. So I said, “Oh, that’s really sweet Bryn. I’m sure the Tooth Fairy will come tonight.” And then Bryn says, “Well, that note has been sitting there for three days and she hasn’t come, so I doubt it.”
Do you hear that? It’s the sound of my heart breaking. It’s the sound of my failure as a mother. My daughter left a note for the Tooth Fairy in plain sight on her bedside table, and not only did I forget that she lost a tooth, but I totally failed to recognize it or pay attention. I am an asshole. It doesn’t take a lot to remember to give your kid a dollar for a lost tooth. It’s not hard. And I blew it. Later, I went to bed vowing to rectify this situation.
I woke up this morning and dressed. I walked down the hall to wake Bryn up for school and saw that damn note sitting on her bedside table. I forgot again! What the fuck is wrong with me?! So I crept back to my room, gathered enough change to equal a dollar, and snuck into her room. I put the change on her table and then collected the note and put it in my pocket.
I woke her up and started to get her clothes together for her. I casually mentioned that the Tooth Fairy finally came. Bryn looks at the money, then looks at me with the most perceptive, adult expression I’ve ever seen her wear. She then says, “I find it interesting that the Tooth Fairy finally came after I showed you the note last night. You didn’t have anything to do with this, did you?” And she smiles. It was a knowing smile. It was a ‘you’re-busted-and-you-can’t-deceive-me-any-longer’ smile.
I did the only thing I could at that point. I confessed. She’s ten, and I was lucky I got away with the charade as long as I did. I looked at her and said, “You’re right. I am the Tooth Fairy. I am so sorry I forgot about your tooth, but you can’t tell your brother!”
She took it well, which was a relief. When she was in third grade I had to tell her that Leprechauns weren’t real and she lost her shit. She was so pissed at me. But her class was building Leprechaun traps for St. Patrick’s Day and she kept going on and on about how she was so sure the trap she designed would work. So her response this morning was a welcome relief. She smiled, hugged me and acted like it was no big deal. She got her money, which at this point is probably more important to her than believing in the Tooth Fairy.
Despite her forgiveness and understanding, I still feel like a bad mom. There are only so many things we can do for our kids to instill a sense of magic and wonder in the world. And I suppose the fact that she is old enough to know the truth signifies the end of some of that magic. And that makes me sad. 😦
Wanda Says…Gourd-geous Halloween Pumpkins!
I love Halloween. It’s one of my favorite holidays. On a good year, I will go crazy and decorate the house with all kinds of cool stuff. However, the past few years I’ve been less enthusiastic about putting the effort into it. It just seems like so much work, and that stupid bastard we call Depression has done its best to ensure that I have no energy or desire for the project.
Halloween pumpkins are a different story, though. I never slack on the pumpkins, and my family and I take our pumpkin decorating seriously. It’s become an annual tradition that we enjoy so much for the creativity, as well as the time spent being together as a family.
We set up the back yard as our work area. Sometimes we do themes, or coordinate our pumpkins. Here are a few examples of our work.
This first picture is Halloween 2012.
Halloween 2013…as you can see, we chose a Peanuts theme.
We put so much effort into our pumpkins, but typically within two days our pumpkins look like this….
Last year it took exactly 48 hours for our pumpkins to disintegrate and turn into pumpkin mold soup on my front porch. It’s disgusting.
I remember our pumpkins lasting forever when we were kids. We would carve them two weeks before Halloween and they would just be starting to form the dots of mold a few days before the holiday. But living in a cooler climate was responsible for that extended preservation. When the temps drop to 40 degrees at night, the pumpkins are basically refrigerated. That is not the case here in southern California.
So this year we decided to do something a little different. This year, we painted our pumpkins instead of carving them. We went to Michael’s and bought props, acrylic paint, googly eyes, fake mustaches and eye brows. We didn’t follow a theme, but I think they turned out pretty good.
Here is our 2014 completed collection…
Individually, I would like to introduce you to Bryn’s creation, Ms. Pumpkin 2014.
Bryce’s creation (with Daddy’s help), Mr. Mario Cart.
My husbands creation, The Clown. I told my husband his clown looked worried, like he may have just accidentally shit himself.
And lastly, there was my pumpkin. I don’t have a name for it, but I think it looks pretty badass.
Happy Halloween! 🙂
PS…Bryn wants to know which pumpkin you like the best. I kept insisting that this was not a contest, just a fun family activity. But she would still like you to vote, so if you don’t mind please cast your vote in the comments section. Thanks!
Wanda Says…On my daughter’s opinion of French kissing.
Last night my ten year old daughter came into my room to say good-night to me, and she initiated a conversation about some new and enlightening things she learned at school that day.
Although I ask her every day how school went and what fun things happened, she often waits until right before bed to share the juicier, more dramatic details, which pretty much guarantees I won’t be sleeping through the night, because I’ll be having nightmares about how she’s growing up too fast.
The conversation went like this:
Bryn: Oh my gosh, Mom! I forgot to tell you what I learned at school today!
Me: What was that?
Bryn: Well, during recess, my friends and I were talking, and you’re never going to believe this! My friend said that there’s this thing called French kissing, and that means that two people kiss with their tongues! Like lizards, Mom! They wrap their tongues together like lizards! And guess what?! It’s true!! People really do that!
Me: (starting to sweat)
Bryn: And guess what else! In France, there are beaches where people don’t wear their clothes! They go to the beach naked, Mom!!! Can you believe that? (she dissolves into hysterical giggles and laughter) Have you ever heard of these things?
Me: (sigh) Bryn, I promised you I would always be honest with you, so yes, I have heard of these things and they are all true. Except nude beaches aren’t limited to France. Many countries have beaches where clothing is optional. I also have to tell you that I’m not sure I’m ready for you to know about this stuff yet. I’m not ready for you to know about French kissing and nude beaches.
Bryn: I know, Mom. (she kisses me on the cheek to console me)
Me: What did you think when your friend told you about this stuff?
Bryn: I think French kissing sounds disgusting! (she makes a sour face, a gagging noise and then pretends like she is throwing up)
Me: (Laughing) That’s the right attitude, sister! (she laughs with me and leaves the room)
I realize this is just the beginning. She will continue to grow up and discover new and exciting, and sometimes gross things about life, and people and relationships. Soon, in her health education classes, she will learn about sex and reproduction and how her body works. She will also learn about boys, and it won’t matter that I want to freeze time and keep her my little girl forever.
I also realize that this means raising children is going to turn me into an alcoholic, and I need to join a wine club so I can stock the house and get a discount on that shit, because I’m going to need a lot of it.
Wanda Says…On my daughter’s opinion of chest hair.
I took the kids to their swim lesson this afternoon, and on the way there I explained to them that they have a new swim instructor. The conversation went like this:
Bryn: Who’s the new teacher?
Me: His name is Stephen.
Bryn: A boy?! Will he be wearing a shirt in the pool?
Me: I don’t know. Why do you ask?
Bryn: Ugh, Mom! (eye roll) Chest hair! Blech!!!!!!!!!!
Me: (laughing my ass off)
Bryn: I don’t want to touch his chest hair! That is so gross!
Me: (still laughing) 🙂
Wanda Says…Happy Birthday, Bryn!
My best girl turns ten today! My sweet, loving, hilarious, sassy little angel is ten!
Where did the last ten years go? How did she grow so fast? She’s almost as tall as I am! I still remember how small and perfect she felt in my arms when she was born. I remember staring at her beautiful face and thinking, “I never want to forget this. I never want to forget how little, and perfect, and amazing you are, right at this moment.” I said that to myself every day when I held and snuggled her, for years.
Well, now my baby girl is not so little. Thankfully, she still likes to be held and snuggled by her mommy, despite the fact that she is only a few inches shorter than me. Bryn has grown into a wonderful girl, and I can see glimpses of the young woman she is becoming, and it makes me so proud.
Bryn loves animals and is obsessed with cats. We would have a herd of them if Bryn had her way. She is compassionate and sensitive, and will become emotional if she sees others who are suffering or unhappy. She will go out of her way to mediate disagreements among her friends or classmates. She has a wickedly smart sense of humor and she makes us laugh every day. She is so smart, and more than one teacher has told us that Bryn is the kind of student every teacher wishes to have in class. She is fiercely protective of her little brother, and when he was born, she told all of her friends that they weren’t allowed to touch her baby. She loves tennis and is learning to play the flute. She hates dolls and most girly things, but she plays video games like a boss, and has hand eye-coordination so good that playing sports seems almost effortless to her. These are just a few insights into her personality and temperament, but what it all boils down to is that my girl is amazing.
As a mom, I often write down funny conversations or things that happen with my kids.You know, as ammunition for when they get older. The threat of embarrassment can be a powerful tool to wield over teenagers when the time comes, and I won’t be afraid to use it. So, in honor of Bryn’s birthday, I thought I would share some of her funny stories.
*One day we were watching an episode of the Ellen Show, and a studio guest was doing a dance that involved some elaborate pelvic thrusting. Bryn was watching and casually said, “That’s called the nuggets dance.”
*A conversation with Bryn about cats:
Bryn: Mommy, I can speak Cat now, and Oliver (our cat) told me that he loves me and trusts me.
Me: Really? What does he have to say about the time last year when you locked him in the bathroom cabinet because you thought it would be funny?
Bryn: Well I was a lot younger then, and I didn’t speak Cat!!!!!
*A couple of years ago, Bryn was standing next to me as I changed her brother’s diaper. The conversation went like this:
Bryn: I’m sure glad I don’t have a big snout like that.
Me: It’s not a snout. It’s called a penis.
Bryn: Well, I bet having a penis is a lot of fun.
Me: Why do you think it’s fun?
Bryn: Because boys can do fun things with their penis, like write their name when they pee. Girls can’t do that.
*A conversation between me and Bryn on New Year’s Eve as we were lying together on the couch:
Me: What’s that smell? Did you fart?
Bryn: Yes, I farted.
Me: Well stop it. That really stinks. Or go in the other room.
Bryn: But I want to be with you.
Me: (3 minutes later) Is that you again?
Bryn: YES! I farted, again! I can’t stop! It’s the stinkiest New Year’s Eve ever!!!
*Another conversation between me and Bryn sometime last February:
Bryn: Mom, do you want to know how lions and cheetahs mate?
Me: (starting to sweat because I’m not prepared to have this conversation with her yet, even if it’s about animals.) Ummm, I know how they mate, but I’m curious to hear your version of it.
Bryn: Well, the female lies down on the ground and the male bites the back of her neck and leaves a mark. Then they don’t see each other for awhile, and then they have cubs. I saw it on Animal Planet.
Me: (feeling relieved and trying not to laugh at the same time) Well, okay. Technically, that’s sort of accurate.
* A conversation between me and Bryn on March 21, 2014:
Bryn: Your pimples look really small right now.
Me: I don’t have any pimples! (I’m a little annoyed and offended over this comment).
Bryn: Yes you do. The black spots in your eyes look small.
Me: Those are called pupils, not pimples! There’s a big difference!
*November 17, 2013: While shopping in Target today, a woman approached Bryn and I and invited Bryn to participate in a talent scouting event being held at a nearby hotel. One of the girls from a Disney show was going to be there promoting the event, while they look for new young talent. Bryn was polite to the woman but didn’t act very interested. When I asked her if she wanted to go she says, “I want to be the person who makes the movies mom, not the person who acts in them.”
Annnnd, that’s my girl! 🙂
Wanda Says…I love coffee.
I love my coffee in the morning. I’m addicted to it. The first thing I think of when I wake up each morning is that it’s time to have my coffee. It’s like a reward for getting out of bed.
This is the second morning in a row my kids have slept in and let me enjoy my coffee in peace. It’s heaven. The house is quiet. There’s just me and the dog, listening to the birds singing outside, while I stalk Facebook and contemplate my next blog post. This is a sign that God loves me and wants me to be happy.
Wait…..shit. They’re up. Never mind. 🙂
Wanda Says…Kids are awesome, until they aren’t.
I had a doctor appointment today, and I had to take my two kids with me. Taking kids to adult doctor appointments and expecting them to behave is like taking a new puppy to a carpet store and asking it not to pee on the rug. Impossible.
I gave them ‘the lecture’ before we got there. There would be no arguing. No fighting. No climbing all over the furniture. No interrupting while I was talking to the doctor. They were to sit quietly and play together nicely with the ipad while I had my appointment. (It’s okay if you’re laughing at me, I deserve it).
This is what really went down…
Bryce almost knocked the serene landscape picture off the wall, onto the doctor’s head. (Thank God she had good reflexes).
Bryce almost broke the doctor’s stool by spinning on it. (To his credit, those stools are irresistible to kids)!
Bryn and Bryce repeatedly grappled for space in the only other chair in the office, which they had to share. There was continuous shoving and furious whispering going on.
Bryn kept interrupting by trying to surreptitiously show the doctor pictures of our cat on the ipad, while whispering in a creepy voice, “Lucy wants to say hello.”
While the doctor was examining my skin (I was there for a rash on my arms), Bryce kept interjecting comments like “That really doesn’t look good.” Or, “That’s not normal.”
Bryce interrupted the doctor’s examination to walk in front her and loudly stage whisper, “Mommy, I have to go potty.” After being told to wait a few minutes for us to finish, he dramatically switches to manual control by grabbing himself, moaning loudly and crossing his legs.
I should mention this appointment took less than 20 minutes. At one point the doctor asked me if I was stressed about anything. We both looked at my kids and started laughing. She was a good sport about it, but I think we both would have enjoyed bar service after the experience. 🙂
Your turn…what crazy, silly, and annoying things do your kids do at doctor appointments?
If you ask me what I do all day, I will punch you in the throat.
I became a stay home mom almost four years ago after the birth of my second child. Prior to that I was a working mom, and at one time in my life I was a single working mom. So having experienced the parenting challenges inherent in those situations, you can imagine how thrilled I was to have the opportunity to be able to stay home with my kids. I thought it would be fun and I imagined all sorts of scenarios involving playdates, an immaculately clean house and home-cooked, healthy meals I would make for my family every night. I mean, how difficult could that be? I would be home…with my own kids…ALL…DAY…LONG.
Cue the hysterical laughter.
The reality for many of us, or at least for me, is that being a stay home parent is a lot like being stuck in Groundhog Day hell. You tend to repeat the same activities over, and over, and over. My life often feels like an endless loop of housework, laundry, toddler drama, managing school drama, homework, cooking and hygiene. And the hygiene management isn’t even for me. It’s amazing how difficult it is to get a school age child to care about showering or brushing their teeth, or teaching a potty training toddler how to wipe without creating a disaster area that requires a hazmat team to clean up.
Sometimes, when I’m doing housework, I imagine that old Dunkin’ Donuts commercial where the old man goes through his morning routine, saying in a dreary voice, “It’s time to make the donuts.” Here’s my rant about housework, so bear with me…If I spend an hour cleaning my hardwood floors, in another hour they look like shit again. I do the dishes so that we continue to have more clean dishes to dirty. Laundry is an endless cycle of wash, dry, fold and repeat. Nobody likes a dirty bathroom, and with young, potty-training children in the house, I could clean the toilets daily and they may still look and smell like gas station toilets, which is just gross. And the toys…oh, dear God, the toys. I can pick them up, but the second I put one away, three more magically appear out of thin air. Is it me, or do crayons and Legos have the ability to multiply on their own?
Now let’s talk about caring for young children and running household errands. For the sake of providing a brief, yet complete picture, let’s just say that taking care of young kids is a lot like what I imagine it would be like working for a bi-polar, incontinent dictator(s), except without the threat of death or having your fingers cut off. “I want milk! No, I want orange juice. Give me some orange juice! No, I want milk! I have to have milk! Now I have to poop! Mommy, wipe my butt!” So demanding! And grocery shopping with toddlers is like willingly entering the seventh circle of hell.
In my first year as a stay home mom, I was a raving lunatic about the house. It was my job to take care of the house, and how could I do that if everyone keeps wrecking it?! One day I said to my husband, “Imagine you went to work and finished a big project. And then someone comes into your office and destroys your project and tells you to start over. I bet you’d be pretty pissed about that, huh? That’s what every day is like for me.” My husband suggested we hire a housekeeper to help me out. I got upset (over-reacted), and said absolutely not because if I’m home there’s no reason to pay someone money for something I can do myself. (Again, cue the hysterical laughter.)
I did actually have several emotional breakdowns. A couple of times I just started crying in the middle of folding laundry. I began to resent the dust on the floors and the animals for constantly shedding their hair. I was short-tempered and impatient every time someone got out a toy or dripped something on the floor that I just cleaned. I wanted to scream over spilled milk. I felt isolated, spending up to ten hours a day alone with my kids and the only person I had to talk to was more interested in playing with his toe jam than in having a conversation with his Mommy. In short, I was a hot mess.
I was depressed. I thought what the hell? Is this my life? When did I become this person? I used to have a career! I used to feel respected and like I was a valuable member of a team. Now I feel like I’m just here to cook, clean, chase kids and make everyone else’s life easier. I worried that my value would be diminished in my husband’s eyes because I no longer had interesting and intelligent news to contribute over our dinner conversation. It’s hard to feel valuable when the extent of your daily news is how many times our son went pee-pee on the potty, how many loads of laundry I did, or how I struggled to help our daughter with her fourth grade math homework. (And fourth graders do hard math these days, so don’t judge me.)
There are some women who seem to be able to do it all. They can keep a nice house, go to the gym every day, cook homemade meals with organic, unprocessed ingredients, grow their own vegetables in a garden, volunteer at their kid’s schools, and also volunteer at church every week. They make it look effortless. I’m convinced that these women take drugs, or they’re just really good liars, but that’s pure speculation on my part. Regardless, I’m not one of these women, and I’ve learned to be perfectly fucking okay with that.
I have now allowed myself to try and let go of most of my self-imposed expectations, and I accept having a not-so-perfect house. I understand and accept that my sanity and my family’s overall happiness is more important than clean floors and picked up toys. I understand that playing games with my son and reading books with my daughter is more important than trying to live up to an impossible standard of perfection. I’m learning that sometimes doing less really does equate to more.
What changed? First of all, my Wanda reminded me that depression is an asshole, and we don’t choose to be friends with assholes. Second, I reminded myself that attitude is everything. The outcome of any given situation is largely dependent on the attitude you adopt while dealing with it. And up until that point my attitude sucked. I also realized that I have to take advantage of this gift of time I’ve been given with my kids and my family and stop stressing about unimportant things. Now, when my son walks up to me at 10am on a Wednesday and says, “Mommy, can we just snuggle?” instead of thinking about the dishes in the sink or the laundry in the dryer, I just embrace that time with him. In those moments, I feel like I have the best job ever.
Sure, I look around my house and see stuff that needs to get done. Some days I tackle those things and some days I don’t. Some days I get a small amount of time to myself, but most days I don’t. Some days, I want to walk outside and beg a stranger to have an adult conversation with me, but I never follow-through on that impulse because that’s just weird and I don’t want to be the neighborhood weirdo.
I’ve learned to embrace yoga pants and pony tails. I’ve accepted that I will not wear make-up every day, and some days I just feel fortunate to get a shower alone and my teeth brushed before noon. I still battle with the stay-home-mommy-blues, but I take what good things I can get, where I can get them. I’m trying to find a balance between making myself happy and doing what I need to do for my family. This is difficult, but I keep trying.
And the most incredible validation comes when my husband walks over to me, usually after spending a weekend taking care of the kids, kisses me and says, “I don’t know how you do this every day, but I’m so thankful that you do, and I appreciate you so much.” That makes me feel respected and like an important member of our family’s team. And I thank God every day that I have a supportive and understanding partner, because if he walked in after work, looked around the house and asked me what the hell I did all day, I swear to God, I would punch him in the throat.
Wanda Says…WTH!
That moment when you think you’re alone in the bathroom. Showering, washing your hair with your eyes closed. And then you open them and see a dark figure pressed against the fogged glass. A scream builds in your throat and you start to jump away…only to realize it’s your kid, and you can’t scream because you will scare the shit out of him, and he’s only 3, and you care more about his feelings than the fact that he almost gave you a heart attack. So you choke back your scream and refrain from losing your shit.
Good mommy.

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