Archive for real mum

May
22

And tonight’s activities are …

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I managed to muddle through the day, getting done some of those things I love to do, planning big and spending time trying to avoid being outmanipulated by three-year-old.

It was a challenge.

That took us up to school pickup time, so off we wandered, me pushing his bike up the hill, and trying to convince myself it is ‘exercise’. It would be much more enjoyable if he just rode in a straight line and didn’t spend much of twisting and turning and ‘experimenting’ with a variety of surfaces and non-surfaces on which he could traverse.

The bigger kids have some Home Projects to do for their Italian class. I hate home projects. They generally break me in one way or another. I read the information form; apparently, all the children have been discussing things they’d like to know about in Italian (or Italy). Things like art and architecture, cars and currency, animals, cooking, music, famous Italian women, the Roman empire … you get the gist.

Hmm, I thought to myself. This may not be as bad as it seems. Pretty straight forward actually.

The grade three kid (Godzilla) requires ‘parent help’. Monkey Boy is on his own. The project is to be displayed on a poster, with images, and written in both English and Italian. It has been explained clearly and we’ve been given a checklist.

Easy.

Until I notice there is a small bit at the bottom, where the teacher has written the topic of interest for my particular children.

Godzilla has chosen ‘Roman Mythology’. What the fuck?! I think.

Monkey Boy has chosen ‘Italian toys’. Repeat previous thought.

So … tonight, post-dinner, I had it planned that we could google some stuff, get a start on the projects, whilst I sat with my butchers paper and coloured textas and planned bigger.

I pulled the big laptop out, which is pretty much fucked and not working. So got the little netbook out, which has reset itself in another language. It still does everything in English, which is nice, but some of the keys on the keyboard don’t reflect the one I am actually using.

I could barely get my head around Roman Mythology, let alone the nine-year-old.

(Yes, I could barely get my head around him and his thought processes. I also think he struggled a bit with the topic of the day.)

At one point, I stopped to just take stock, and discovered my activities of choice for the evening were:

  1. working on Roman Mythology project for Italian with nine-year-old
  2. combing for nits

Decisions, decisions ….

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May
17

Of poo and sand and tipping points

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A few moments of quite at home to catch up on my To Do List, then I am left alone with Smallest Boy Child for many, many hours.

During this time, I am to ensure the house is ready for an Open For Inspection this evening, swimming bags organised for this afternoon and my sanity to remain intact in order that we may all survive it all with minal physical and psychological damage.

I was doing ok. I’d accepted that Time In My Office was a mere fantatsy, and I did what I could to tidy the house and clean bathrooms before Chippie discovered I’d put all his toys away, neatly, and entered the realm of the Toy Room, located the toys he was playing with yesterday, and a multitude of others he probably can’t remember we ever owned. The only place that can go is Toys Scattered Everywhere And Mummy Losing The Plot Completely.

So I took him for a walk to purchase coffee and milk instead. We wandered past a Kikki-K, which has the file organiser racks I wanted in order to safely house each of the projects I’m working on and keep them within easy reach on my desk. I was offered a ‘buy three get one free’ deal and found myself wandering the store, trying to locate post-it type notes that I could actually use and leaving, dumbfounded as to what the point of Kikki-K even is, aside from being “pretty, but useless”.

(And also explains why I created my own range of organisers …)

Arrive home, get the house in as tip-top shape as possible, leaving only the kids to put their clothes away and clear any and all surfaces in their rooms of any item that may or may not be (mis)construed as mess/clutter/personal/fun/enjoyable or that renders the impression that people actually live in this house that potential buyers, tire kickers and sticky beaks are wandering through later on.

Chippie, having been sent outside to eat his lunch of strawberry jam on toast, brings his plate, complete with uneaten crusts, inside. He yells, from the kitchen, that he would like more toast, please. He then wanders up the hall, towards the bedroom I’m tidying, and promptly tips the crumbs and crusts on his platein onto the Just Vacuumed Floor.

Yay.

Leaving plenty of time to do all that, I wander up to the school to collect said children, only to receive a phone call from the Vice Principal when we’re a block away, asking if I will be at school so we may discuss an incident Monkey Boy was involved in today.

“Sure,” I sigh. “Why the hell not?”

And sigh again.

The discussion not only cuts into the kids tidying time (although it does significantly reduce the amount of time we will be at home between school and swimming, thereby leaving almost no time for them to make any mess whatsoever) and leaves me feeling extraordinarily guitly, as I have been drumming into him for years about being compassionate and understanding of other kids, and not to take so much personally.

He’s like this naturally, so it’s not been hard. Except, clearly he’s been holding it all in and trying, as best an eleven-year-old boy can be, understanding. Today, he was pushed too far, trodden on once too often, and treated like shit to a point where he and a kid twice his size got into fisticuffs. The VP encouraged me to encourage him to “speak openly about how he was feeling”.

Excellent point, and I can’t help but feel I’ve totally fucked up.

I nearly cried.

Then I walked away and did. That was partly due to my calling for Chippie, who came racing over. What with my being all distracted, he’d had plenty of time to play. He’d chosen the sandpit. He was head-to-toe sand.

Even more Yay.

Home we go, where I stumble on a dog poo the size of a small chihuahua. What fucking arsehole lets their dog shit in the middle of a footpath across from a school?

I’m now fuming.

We arrive home, where I shout instructions from the front door as I strip Chippie of his sand-covered  clothes before he enters, and hose my shoes off.

Fuckers.

“Put your clothesaway! Tidy your rooms! Get everything off everything! DO NOT EAT anything! Do not make a mess! No, do not use the toilet! Do not wash your hands! Put that away! Do NOT touch that! Hurry UP!”

And I cannot wait to leave. Am feeling like Nazi Bitch Face From Hell right now and wonder how long before anyone snaps.

We are now running minutes late for swimming lessons, so I encourage the kids to run in whilst I find a park.

Normally, I can’t wait to get home, but as the inspection time is at a stupid hour, I am forced to delay it all. I tell the kids we’ll get hot chips and chicken for dinner and attempt to time it so that we can be home as early as we are allowed, without crashing the inspecton.

Monkey Boy has neglected to bring a change of clothes, so wanders to the car, wrapped in a beach towel. There goes my plan to send him in to purchase chips and chicken. Leave them all sitting in the car whilst I do so, and my order is taken by a man who had ordered the same thing, but he decided his need was greater than mine, and said “I was here first”.

Had it not been for my need to have quiet time, away from the kids, albeit standing in a brightly lit chicken takeaway place, he may have been tackled to the ground and had his meal forcefully removed.

I may also have sworn loudly at him. As it was, I was using all my energy to just breath, so he was in luck.

Make it home again, eat, have wine and feel slightly better.

Remember Monkey Boy has a test for a high school tomorrow, and he is being a right little arsehead.

My best of intentions aimed at having a calm, loving and empowering evening are shattered by his smart arsedness, my distress over the incident at school and the compounding stress of life as we know it right now … a screaming match ensues and I find myself on the kitchen floor in tears.

The only saving grace is that Monkey Boy is nowhere near as affected by my behaviour as I am, and he’s happily in bed. Reading.

Yay.

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May
14

No Guns in This House!

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Very early on in this Mothering Gig, I was the World’s Best Mother.

I followed a considerable amount of the ‘advice’ that was the loudest at the time … until my head broke and I ventured into ‘suicidal’, but that’s a different story.

For those early years, I was very Anti Gun without actually knowing why, just following along in whatever the latest fad was. What I quickly learnt was that it is near impossible to prevent children – mostly boy-type children (yes, I’m generalising, fuck off – I said “mostly”) – from turning all manner of thing into a gun of some sort.

Sticks, LEGO, textas, fingers etc etc etc. Name something and they’ll use it as a gun. If not a gun then a Light Sabre (saber? I can never remember the spelling of that one) or other implement of pain, torture, death or extreme annoying of others.

What I’ve come to realise is I, personally, don’t like the pretend gun play because I really, really hate having shit waved in my face and pointed at me at almost point blank range. I hate that my three-year-old talks about slaying and killing his brothers (although it is sometimes very cute, and other times I feel very much the same) and I hate the screaming and upset it often results in because, inevitably, someone gets hurt or someone “dies” and then they can’t play the game any more and gets upset, or because I end up with a bruise across my nose because someone can’t control his Light Sabre urges and accidentally thwacks me across the face on Christmas Day.

(I was also a witness to a shooting murder some years back, so whilst I appreciate it is ‘fun’ play for the kids, there’s a trigger there for me, ok?)

So, whatever … I have my reasons for not liking them and some of you will have other reasons and some of you will think “pfft, get over it” and some of you will be horrified that I have even ‘let’ my kids contemplate ‘gun’ play … whatever your take that’s all very ok.

The guns are becoming more and more frequent in our house and I do not like it. After letting go of my “Oh god you have a finger gun, I’m the worst mother in the world!!!” crisis and threatening to cut the kids fingers off if they used them as guns again, I was a little less anal and verging on blase when I said “no guns!” … but it’s really annoying me, so I’ve been a bit more firm. You know, like biting the fingers of the latest ‘gun’ shoved in my face and then being all innocent and saying “Well, it’s your fault! If you didn’t put them in my face, I wouldn’t have bitten them. So, ner.”

(To give you an idea of how bad it was when Monkey Boy was 3, he would run around the house, ‘shooting’ me and saying “pew, pew, pew” and I would verge on hysteria that ‘my little boy is playing guns, oh my lord, what have I done???!!!” and react in an equally hysterical manner and tell him off. He approached me one day, with a mandarin and I said “would you like me to peel it for you?” He looked at me, horrified, and said “you said ‘pew’!” It was bad. I’m way more relaxed now … o.O)

I’ve also been way more strict on them; in proportion to my pissed offedness and annoyance at their almost constant presence.

Sadly, I also have somewhat intelligent children. I have no idea where they get it from.

So, there we are, walking home from school, Monkey Boy with his arm outstretched, first two fingers pointed at Godzilla’s face and yelling some kind of “kill you” or some ramble and Godzilla retaliating with equal ‘in your facedness with gun-fingers’ and I said “NO GUNS! I’m frigging sick of it. Stop It. What is the rule?”

They glance at each other, clearly deciding who is going to be the one to set me straight.

“They’re not guns, Mum. Sheesh. They’re hair driers! Don’t you know anything? And stop jumping to conclusions.”

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May
13

Mother’s Day Wrapped Down

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Monkey Boy has been busting to make this day special for me. He’s awesome like that.

He was only telling me yesterday how he was going to pack my bag and send me out of the house so I can have a few days to myself, and to recuperate, and if I come home in that time, he will call the police and tell them I am an intruder and don’t live there.

He’s awesome like that.

Really, I just desperately needed a good sleep. The ‘not well’ icky cough and snotty head, and the weeks of stress have built up and, honestly, a day of sleeping and doing not much is just what I need.

This morning, Godzilla wandered into our room just after 7.00a.m. and climbed into bed beside Grumpy Pants, who immediately whispere “Let’s get up and let your mother have a sleep in.”

I have the best family.

Then, as I was drifting off into oblivion, seconds later, the door opens and Monkey Boy presents me with a MUG of cold coffee, and Chippie and Godzilla come and dump stuff on me. I can’t sit up because a) I’m in that baffled state of ‘nearly got to sleep but was disturbed’ and b) because I had a box sitting on my head, and a bag sitting on my belly.

Chippie is banging on the box, resting precariously on my face, and saying “Wrap it down, Mummy, wrap it down!”

(Clearly, he has heard us discussing ‘wrapping presents up’ so the obvious reversal of that is to ‘wrap presents down’.)

He gives up, proceeds to pull stuff out of the bag and say “Look, pants!” It’s actually a bag from Two Old Bags, who make bags out of jeans (and my pyjama pants on one occasion when they made a bag just for ME!, given to me be an adorale friend for my birthday last year :) ). Chippie commences the banging on box and “WRAP IT DOWN, MUMMY!” once the bag is emptied, and Monkey Boy and Godzilla fight over who gives me their school-made card first, then demand to know which one is “better”.

“But I love them both, equally!” I say, whilst thinking and wish you would both shut up and stop yelling, equally, because I’m about to shove you both off the bed. Equally!

Eventually, I’m able to position myself upright, and attempt to ‘wrap down’ my present, as Chippie looks at me seriously and says “It wrap in purple” then “I wrap it down for you” and he does.

An ipod dock and clock radio so I may listen to good songs and sing loudly and dance whilst I make dinner – hooray!

(And drown out the noise of children braining each other at the other end of the house, and the pre-schooler tugging on my pants and yelling at me for marshmallows – just saying.)

The Mother’s Day festivities at an end – and Mother’s Day in and of itself, it seems – I’m still exhausted and would really just like some peace and quiet, and some more sleep.

The chilly, rainy Melbourne weather is encouraging of this sort of activity. Ideally, I’d like to pull the sofa bed out, and snuggle up with some Lindor Gourmet Truffles and my new Chicago DVD (they were all out of Sound of Music) but children and husbands and the rest of it thwarted this brilliant plan.

Instead, I pulled the sofa bed out, grabbed a blanket and a few pillows, put Chippie into some kind of straight-jacket-like Mum-Hug and watched Toy Story 2.

I was treated to a few more moments of Almost Asleep, and jerked out of it several times by Chippie demanding I push Buzz Lightyears wings back in (he’s unable to do it himself, and appears to thoroughly enjoy pressing the button to pop them out again, and pressing my buttons by demanding I push them back in again seconds later, on repeat, until we are yelling at each other).

Buzz is shoved down the pack of the couch so I can no longer be pissed off by him and hopefully get some sleep, when, just as I’m at the Almost stage again, Monkey Boy, he of the Must Speak For Sake Of Making Noise Disorder, joins us and gives a running commentary of the movie I am trying not to watch as I  want to go do sleep!

Grumpy Pants asks if I want to go out, in the cold and rain, for coffee with his mother. So fatigued am I, I can’t even give him the finger. I feel bad, as it is her day, too, but I’m sooooo exhausted I just can’t do it.

The last few times, with the kids present, haven’t been terribly fun for anyone, either, and I’m torn between suggesting he take the kids, and spending just some time with her, alone and enjoy it for everyone.

Toy Story starts its second run through, I still don’t get sleep, and nor does Chippie, who so desperately needs it, given he’s as snotty and coughy as me and just a little flat.

So we are just content with lazing around and watching Toy Story for the third time …

Then I got to cook dinner. With the aid of Lady Gaga – which made it much more pleasant.

How was your day?

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May
11

Necessary Life Skills

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Day 3 of Not Being Able To Work In Effective Chunks and Week I’ve Lost Count of feeling crap. My head is now full of snot, the cough, whilst relenting slightly and not playing quite so much havoc on my chest and pelvic floor, is still there and my Levels Of Tolerance have all but vanished in a screaming tantrum.

I’m doing my best to hold it together, but fail miserably as Chippie, whom only 13 minutes earlier had insisted – insisted – he put clothes on instead of his bathers, as he usually does Thursday mornings before swimming, decided he could not possibly leave the house in clothes, and insisted, via screaming at me, that he wanted his bathers on.

However, he could not appreciate the need to remove his shoes in order to remove his pants in order to don his bather bottoms and insisites, via more yelling, that his shoes remain on.

As the experts suggest, I got down to his level. And I screamed at him, just like he was doing to me. Clearly, by being all calm and rational I just wasn’t speaking in a manner with which he could relate. I threw in the odd “fucking little shit” and “stop fucking around and make a decision” and he calmly replaced the shoe I had so horribly removed and went out to the car.

I pondered why I even bother with “calm and rational” at any time, and don’t just got for Screaming Swearing Fishwife first up, as it seems to get things happening.

Then I cried at swimming lessons.

In order to do something useful, I rang a local high school to find out some information, and was advised the information and forms I needed were to be completed and returned to the school tomorrow.

Ah, well, I thought, this will kill some time – phew! And we drove up, collected the forms, and I killed even more time by heading to Kmart to purchase some long pants for Chippie that would actually reach his ankles and, therefore, technically be considered long.

I was feeling much better, having achieved something I probably needed to do weeks ago, but with Melbourne weather being so fickle and inconsistent, it was hard to decide whether a few weeks ago was actually a good time for it. Still, it is now done and I can check that off my list.

My Feeling Much Better was shortlived, as the older two arrived home and proceeded to chip away at my resolve by niggling and picking on each other, until my Already Barely Existent Tolerance shattered and I told them if they didn’t frigigng stop I would either walk out the door and never come back, or, if they even contemplated touching each other again, I would bang their heads together so fucking hard they’d be rendered unconscious and if tha’ts what it took to get a moment of peace then I would fucking do it.

Then I asked them nicely to get ready for swimming.

And took several deep breaths.

They were now remotely tolerable and swimming lessons could ensue. Chippie went in for a play during lesson time and all was well. I had the added bonus of a friend there to talk to. So that was nice.

As the lessons finished and all the boys got dressed as quickly and efficiently as possible (Godzilla with the entire back of his shirt soaking wet, Monkey Boy without shoes etc) we were standing out the front, two families, five boys in total, as we mums discussed some catch up dates.

Chippie was running around with his similarly aged compartriot discussing bums and penises.

“Pull your pants down,” Godzilla tells Chippie.

“Leave your pants on!” I intervene. “And stop telling your brother to do shit like that. Seriously!?”

“That’s a necessary life skill,” says Monkey Boy.

“Isn’t it?” he asks, when we look at him, incredulous. “Knowing how to pull your pants down is necessary to get you through life.”

And, although by this point I really didn’t want to, I took them home … with a smile.

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May
08

Appropriate High School Behaviour

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This morning was another morning of gymnastics for the pre-schooler, which involves much of him running around and participating, but not in any particular order, making farting noises and saying “I just fart and fart and fart” whenever he has to bend over  or … well, just whenever he feels like it really.

Today heralded a massive achievement where he actually climbed the ladder. It is a ladder (obviously) against a wall that generally has something tied a couple of rungs above the children’s height that they have to climb up to to pat, play with or make a noise come out of. It is also surrounded by much safety-type stuff and one of those squishy gymnastics floors that cause you to bounce when you fall off stuff. This may not sound like much, but he has been anxious and refusing to climb the ladder.

His is, however, not adverse to climbing onto our stonetop benches in the kitchen, without fear. Often, he will perform a screaming tantrum up there as well. Usually in relation to being told “no” in relation to such thing as marshmallows. We determined the gymnastics setting was just far too wussy for him and not nearly enough of a challenge. Also, there are no marshmallows.

So that he did it – and without encouragement, rather, he insisted he do it himself – was pretty amazing.

Then he said “I do fart and fart and fart” as his bum lined up about  my face height.

Who said my kids aren’t talented, huh?

Arrive home where we eat and I am provided with zero opportunity to do anything that I need to do.

Big kids arrive home, Grumpy Pants arrives home and I remind them all – because I’m so excited and keen to go along (possible sarcasm) – that there is a local high school open day/night thing with tours of the school. Yay.

We decide to forgo the 45 minute principal’s address (which, just saying, is kind of offputting. A ten minute principal’s address, surely, is adequate? A 27 second one would be apprecaited) and just arrive ‘late’ for a tour.

The tour is conducted by a VCE student rep, sports captain, student in immaculate uniform. I want a real high school kid, so at least I know where the illicit smoking behind the toilets occurs and I can warn my overtly anti-smoking son away from those areas. I want to know that maths sucks, Japanese blows and art is only good for learning to grafitti and sculpt mashed potatoes. I want the real story about high school, because I feel what I’m being sold is nothing like the high school I went to, and I’m pretty sure they haven’t changed that much.

As we waited, the kids ran off and did some jumping off things and clibming over things they probably shouldn’t be jumping off or climbing over.

Chippie yelled out, just as the school principal came over and said “hello and welcome” and some other teacher wandered past, “Let’s play the Penis Game!”

“Yes,” I say, as the Super Student, Principal and Teacher look at me. “He did say ‘penis game’. I don’t actually know what the ‘penis game’ is, but you did hear right. Is the tour starting soon?”

And, thankfully, it does. There are bowls of lollies distributed around tables in each of the classrooms we are allowed to enter, and my children appear to embark upon an unspoken competition whereby they are each to devour as many lollies as is humanly possible – or as it is appearing, humanly impossible.

Grumpy Pants enters a discussion with a year 12 student in what we used to refer to as the “home economics” (or if you were cool, the ‘home ec’) room, and was left behind as he wouldn’t shut up.

Finally, we come to an end. The children have gone completely nuts thanks to excessive sugar intake, we are handed an envelope full of brochures and information and we’re sent home.

And I still have no idea what I’m doing …

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Apr
30

The 4 Hour 48 Cupcake Challenge

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Godzilla’s birthday today. Which means I’ve also been a Mum to two boys for nine years.

Scary.

After yesterday’s fabulous cakey type creations I was also expected to come up with some cupcakes for school. Easy done.

I contemplated my list, decided I had to pick one and only one thing on it for today, so I chose cupcakes.

I sat the frozen butter in a jug,which I placed into warm water to soften. And did something else on my list. By the time that Essential Item was completed, I had four hours in which to mix, bake and decorate 48 cupcakes.

That does sound like a huge task. Unless you are me.

Not because I am an awesome baker, but because I am … well, and awesome baker, but not as you would expect.

I located my basic butter cake recipe thing. I usually make chocolate cupcakes. Today was no different.

Except it was, becuase we had no cocoa, so you know, without cocoa they can’t be chocolate really, can they.

So I added green colouring. Because I could.

Some social media had plenty of suggestions coming my way; ‘use real chocolate’ said one, but there was none due to stress levels. Also, I added green colouring.

Because I could.

‘Make vanilla cupcakes’ was another.

I already did, because I followed the recipe at that point.

Then I added green food colouring.

Because I could.

‘Why did you use green food colouring?’ asked a confused punter.

Well, because I could. No other reason.

I’m not about impressing the parents or my fellow mums. No. This is 48 cupcakes for a bunch of 7-9 year old kids, whom participated in a Health & Wellness discussion with me last term. Most of that discussion contained the word poo.

Of course I was going to make green cupcakes.

Duh.

Because I could.

The mix was done, the first 24 in the oven, then out 15 minutes later, and the next 24 in. Or, 22 technically, because I’d been a little overzealous with the blobbing of mix into each cupcake thingy (oh, we were also out of patty pans, so, meh, we managed) and I ran out of mix.

46 unevenly sized cupcakes.

And plenty of time to spare.

Even with decorating.

Usually, I’d do a sprinkling of icing sugar. That’s decoration, right?

Except we faced a dilemma. We had far too much in the way of white chocolate buds. And I don’t like white chocolate. I had to dispense of them.

Melted them up and ‘drizzled’ it over the cupcakes. ‘Drizzled’ sounds creative and like I had a clue. It was more kind of ‘blobby’ and ‘lumpy’ and a little bit of ‘drizzly’.

Voila!

 

Impressed?

(I don’t actually care if you are or aren’t – the kids loved them. Also, I made sure I left school immediately just in case someone died.)

I had them – and two articles, and another item on my list – completed in three hours. Yup, I even had time for a shower before I needed to go to school.

Pfft.

Call that a challenge?!

(“Why did you make them green”, asked Grumpy Pants when he returned home … *sigh* … Because I could …)

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Apr
29

Birthday Parties – Trashed

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Yesterday, we attended a friend’s birthday party – Trash Pack themed.

There was a cake. It was magnificent (if I can get a photo of it, I’ll be sure to post it). It was a Trash Pack cake, professionally made and one of those creations that you wish you could replicate and that make you feel so utterly inadequate because the image you have in your head of the Trash Pack themed cakes you are going to make your own son the following day aren’t even close to this.

You also know the actual result isn’t going to come close to the images in your head.

Thankfully, after having hosted many, many children’s birthday parties, and made the cake/s eat each one, I no longer give a fuck, and have embraced that I can only do what I can do. Also, I love that my cakes look authentically made and no one could possibly doubt that I was solely responsible for them. And I shall continue to tell myself that until I believe it :D

Two parties were had today; the friends’ one, where Godzilla was allowed to invite a small number of friends over for a play for two hours over a period where I would not be expected to feed them anything that could be constituted a ‘meal’. Like ‘lunch’ for example. No, I chose a ‘morning tea-ish’ time, so crap food is all that could be expected of me.

He had four friends, so that made five of them, plus Monkey Boy and Chippie. Seven all up.

Seven boys over two hours from 10.00a.m. until 12.00 noon goes something like this:

  •  10.00am children are dropped off “no, no, all good, we’ll be fine, enjoy your next two hours – see you at 12 and not a moment later, ha ha ha”
  • 10.07am – oh my fucking jeebus, how much fucking noise can they make “how about you take the chips outside and go and run around for a bit?”
  • 10.43a.m. Two hours is too fucking long for a children’s birthday party. 43 minutes and counting …
  • 11.01a.m. “Um, let’s go and play some games. Outside. OUTSIDE!” Oh, fuck, what games can I play …
  • a game of Twister Scramble is set up
  • a game of Twister Scramble is had …
  • Yes, yes, but it’s just a game, all fun, no need to be so anally fucking retentive about it, it’s FUN! Oh, look it’s 11.04 … um, what would you like to do now?”
  • a game of hallway racing is set up … old towels are placed in the hall and they had to race each other from one end to the other on their bums on towels … this had the added bonus of polishing the floorboards.
  • Oh, for fuck’s … “It. Is. A. Game. It. Is. Supposed. To. Be. FUN!” This is why I don’t do games at birthday parties. Or have them at home. Fuck. Me.
  • “How about we do another heat?!”
  • “And another heat!”
  • “And another heat!”
  • “Let go and play outside again,” and I say aside, to Monkey Boy, who has been doing a marvellous job of setting the games up whilst I went completely fucking mental “Drag this out for as long as you can, we’ll do the cake in 10 mins.”
  • Ten minutes took us to 11.15a.m. The party finished at 12. The cake really needed doing at 11.45a.m. Wishful thinking. *sigh*
  • Shit.
  • Play several more games of Twister Scramble, Tiggy, Twister Scramble with 27 practice runs.
  • Time for cake. Hoo-fucking-ray.

I attempted to create Trash Pack trash cans for the cakes. They didn’t work like I wanted to. I had lots of fun making them though; adding things like ‘garbage’ to the bins as I went along. Sadly, the ‘handle’ on the top had the effect of making them look like really bad cupcakes.

But the kids loved them :)

Then they all left – Hurrah! – and I vowed never to do a party at home again (which is what I said last time I did one at home – exactly two years ago) … the reason I did, however, was The Party Part 2 … The Family were coming over at 1.00p.m.

During this time I had to complete Godzilla’s cake, think about getting changed, forgetting to get changed (it was about the 39th time I’d had that thought, each thought culminating in my continuing to wear the same outfit I had on yesterday, and only tossed on this morning whilst I iced cakes, so if I got any green icing on me it wouldn’t matter – I did get green icing on me, and it didn’t matter … I think), debating whether to have a coffee to keep me going, or a wine to keep me going, and making a salad.

I completed the cake (it’s a garbage bin lid, OK!) (except it hasn’t got the handle.) (Yet.) (That’s a whole other issue):

It even came with a “Vomiting Trashie” :D (I’m so proud of myself :D )

Whilst I made the salad, I organised for Grumpy Pants to make the handle for the bin lid. He had buggered off for most of the duration of the morning party, leaving me to it all by myself, and forgot to obtain the liquorice strap I needed for this all important component of the cake.

We then sent Monkey Boy up to the local ‘supermarket’ for some, and he returned empty handed. As they also had none.

My brilliant – yet equally ignorant - mind cause my mouth to blurt out “Just melt some chocolate and spread it out and make it curvy and voila!

Easy peasy, one would have thought. I delegated, of course, and spent much of the time telling Grumpy how to do a job he knew how to do all by himself. That’s always fun and makes the atmosphere nice for everyone else who’d just arrived.

“It. Won’t. Work,” he told me for the 900th time. “I need some acetate or something.”

“Oh,” I said, and ventured into my office (now stuffed full of more shit than necessary to make room for everyone) and came back with a box of overhead projector film which I purchased to make one slide some years ago.

He looked at me, and set about his business.

Unfortunately, I forgot to take a photo of the finished product.

Godzilla loved it.

It got eaten.

No one died.

I stopped to think for a moment and became overly concerned about my ability to get into the minds of and relate so well to 9 year old boys. Scary.

Godzilla also did remarkably well in the realm of Trash Pack merchandise …

(and there are some missing from the photo!) (Argh!)

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I helped at school today.

It was that LEGO Club thing that my eldest started and I agreed to. Encouraged him to follow his dreams and be all supportive and “You can do this, because you are so awesome and I love you”. That overriding joy at watching him overcome his fears and take this on (albeit with a friend virtually holding his hand, but still, he did it) was quickly diminished when the realisation that I had to be in attendance at each Club meeting, once a week in the school hall, descended upon me.

I thought I’d got out of it, because they said they needed a responsible adult. Huh. Yet they said “Thanks for helping” and there was no one behind me.

Today, they were organising their fundraiser, to raise more funds to buy more LEGO for the school. They thought of it themselves. I’m just there to facilitate. And listen to nine-eleven year old boy bullshit. And yell at them to “Finish your bloody posters cos I don’t wanna do this same shit again next week, ok?”

I also told them I rocked.

They laughed.

I told them they would know how much I rocked when I didn’t turn up to LEGO Club ever again, and then there would be no LEGO Club and so, ner.

So I told them an absolutely hilarious joke, because one of the kids drew a LEGO Minifigure and he hadn’t yet got to the arms, so I pointed it out that by saying “Look, he can’t hurt you, he’s ‘armless!” and they just rolled their eyes and asked me to please stop now. Kids these days just have no sense of humour. But at least they said please.

Then I went and helped in the classroom, where the kids are still working on their human body systems. They’re up to making life sized human bodies, with bits of crafty stuff stuck on that look like the particular system their group is working on. I was delegated the skeletal system. Monkey Boy had taken a balloon in for the diaphragm for his group’s body.

As part of the respiratory system.

The teacher asked “What are you going to stick that on with?” and gave me a sideways glance.

I asked if she’d said “stick that on, or stick that in”.

She contemplated asking me to leave, please, but asked that I tend to the skeletal system group, possibly to undo what misinformation Grumpy Pants had provided the kids with a few weeks back.

I stayed and learnt something valuable. Mostly, that my kids are quite normal and an entire classroom of children are capable of fucking around like you would not believe and not actually achieving anything. My group, at least, drew half a pelvis, rubbed out a badly drawn foot and stuck eight bits of packing polystyrene in the vague shape of a spine.

It was driving home, whilst my kids rode, unsupervised (*gasp*!) that I considered my evening and became fully aware of just how crazed it was to be. Two lots of guitar lessons and an information night at school pertaining to enrolment for high school.

(I still think it’s evil to be forcing this onto parents now, because for the next 86 years we’ll be hearing about how we should be “enjoying every moment” and not “wishing it away” and “hang on to this time” … which is entirely impossible when you’re having to trawl websites and visit schools and stress about One More Thing To Fuck Your Kids Up For Life. *sigh*)

I had also not gotten anything out of the freezer for dinner. Mostly so I could say “nothing that a few slices of bacon and a tin or two of tomato won’t fix”. I think that’s a matriciana but I’m not sure. It’s what I call it, anyway.

So, I have 42 minutes exactly to prepare, cook, serve and eat dinner before we head out on the first lap of guitar lessons. At this point, Grumpy informs me he has purchased some minced beef and some chicken breasts for dinner.

I tell him to shut up.

And then I consider it, think meh, I’ll just create something again and get to it.

I dice some vegies and the chicken, crush some garlic and say “I don’t know, I’m making it up again so not only do Inot know what it’s called, but I’m not entirely sure it even has a name. Some chicken thing. And pasta,” when the kids ask “What’s for dinner?”

Half the time I think they ask it because they haven’t actually said anything for 3.7 seconds and the silence is killing them, not that they actually want to know what is for dinner.

I even manage, quite by accident, to create a One Pot Meal. Of course, that depends on whether you consider the pot I boiled the water in for the pasta as using a pot or not. The pasta never actually made it into that pot, as I accidentally tipped it into the pan that had my chicken and vegies and tomato happening, so … you know …

Anyhoo, it worked. I still don’t know what it’s called, but I called it a One Pot Chicken Thing With Tomato. And Pasta. And Just Shut Up And Hurry Up And Eat We Need To Leave.

So there …

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First day back at school today. And it wasn’t without the stock standard “I feel sick” from Godzilla as we’re participating in the morning’s Get Ready For School fun activities.

“Just hurry up and get dressed,” was my reply. It is my usual reply. and usually comes accompanied by a FFS-eye roll and a quick glance to make sure he really is ok.

After one more attempt and the response being “Have you unstacked the dishwasher” he gave up. He knows I don’t buy into bullshit. Also, he was well and truly able to annoy both his brothers, older and younger, and to adequately piss me off enough to inform him he was pissing me off and to “hurry up!”

The older two boys rode to school and Chippie was delivered to childcare, where he cried as we crossed the carpark, and ran off, ignoring us, to play outside with his friend who arrived at the same time.

Meh.

Whatever.

What occurs next is entirely my own fault. You see, Grumpy Pants and I went for a walk to get some milk, as ours had run out before I had my coffee this morning. That, in itself, may very well have accounted for my low bullshit tolerance levels and general grumpiness. On our way home, we stopped and had a quiet coffee, and some really lovely time together.

“It’s nice not to have to wash any bedding today,” I say.

And I go about my day as he goes off to work, and it’s suddenly time to collect the children. I walk up, feeling a sense of achievement after having completed much of my To Do List and two of the 38 loads of washing still to be done.

Monkey Boy rides on ahead, and Godzilla happily chats to me about his day (“What did you do at school today?” “I can’t remember.” “Oh, right ….”) and races off after his brother.

Oh, happy days.

I arrive home many minutes later, as my legs are not bicycle wheels, and they are happily devouring any food-like substances in the Tupperware laden cupboards.

“Unstack the dishwasher,” I say to Godzilla. “We have basketball tonight.”

And I go and do something mildly less mindnumbing than arguing with an eight-year-old about household jobs.

I check the time, see I have ten minutes before we need to leave, and see Godzilla lying on the couch, under a blanket.

“Dishwasher,” I say, because it is all I need to say.

“I have a headache,” he whines at me.

And so on and so forth with the “I’m sick” and wishing he’d use his imagination and come up with something less boring than “I’m sick” or, preferably, tell me the real reason he doesn’t want to go to basketball.

It ends in tears, his at this point, when I confront him re going and ask why he wants to even play basketball if every training session and game he is coming up with excuses to not go, and if he does like going (which he has just told me he has) then why it makes him cry, and why he thinks I would force him to do something he doesn’t want to do (aside from the fact I really like basketball and have been most supportive of this particular fancy about playing a ball sport and he will frigging enjoy basketball because I like it, so there!) and if he doesn’t stop crying soon, I will not take him because I don’t want to be doing something twice a week that neither of us want to do, and even typed up a text message to the team manager informing her of his inability to play this season, showed him and said “Do I need to send this or are you going to smile and show me how much you want to go to basketball!!!!????”

(Then I had a little cry as he went and put his shoes on … I’m feeling it today!)

Off we go, collect Chippie and arrive at training, where Godzilla promptly runs on court and does a few layups. I’m just relaxing into the fact that he really isn’t unwell, when he comes out, crying and says “I have a headache.” He’s crying a lot.

Hrm.

Dubious, because he is rather talented in this area, I suggest he go and watch his team train, and I can keep an eye on him and this alleged ‘headache’ and ‘sickness’. Sure enough, he sits and looks sad, and next time I look, he’s running around. This goes on for the next 40 minutes.

He does look a little ragged and tired at the end of it, but, hey, don’t we all? He looks like how I feel, so, you know … we’re all just tired.

Off we go, heading home, and he’s happy but quiet. Suddenly, but subtly, a minute from home, he puts his hand over his mouth.

“What’s up?” I ask.

“I feel sick,” he mumbles.

“Like you ‘feel sick’ or ‘you’re going to vomit’? Let me just get around the corner and pull over.”

I do get around the corner, incident free. Of course, I cannot pull over, because it is evening and everyone is home from work and parked out the front of their houses.

“BLEEUUURGH!” says Godzilla, vomiting all over himself, the dashboard, the seat and the floor.

And my handbag!!!

Bleaargh!” he says again, with added chunkiness.

Rinse and repeat.

I have the car, at some random angle, off the road-ish, but on the road-ish,  the carseat covered in ick, and him standing on the side of the road.

Thankfully, the half-arsedness of my children net a ‘wipe up’ towel, three pairs of Godzilla sized board shorts and a discarded water bottle full of water. This from out trip to the beach yesterday where whomever had been asked to pack the swimming bag had grabbed a handful of stuff that the beach towels were on and dumped it in the bag.

Half-arsed children do have their uses.

I wiped him down, washed his hands, gave him my drink bottle and got him to change his shorts.

He was crying and crying.

“Why are you crying?” I ask. Not in a “shut up and stop sooking” kind of way, more just to see exactly what it is that he was upset about, and to rule out any significant pain strong enough to cause tears.

“Because I told you I was sick and you still made me go to school,” he sobbed.

Yes, I want to say, because how am I supposed to know you’re really sick when you keep fucking lying to me about feeling sick, and when you are able to annoy everyone and ride to school and home again and only ‘be sick’ when it’s time to unstack the dishwasher or do something that you don’t feel like doing at that moment? I didn’t fucking know! OK?

I hug him as best I can without getting ick on myself, and apologise and just have to slip in a lesson: “If you’re going to keep lying to me about being sick, then this is what will happen,” I say.

Although, I’m also highly aware that the more horrific of the consequences are aimed directly at me, as Grumpy Pants is not home, and normally I would say “can you just go do the car whilst I make sure he is ok and put him to bed?”

Noooooo. Karma, I suspect, is having a little fun.

You see, under normal circumstances in this situation, the child would throw up at school and a mother would only feel mortified at having the school contact her. Instead, child has thrown up in the car with only the vomit-adverse mother to take care of it!

Thankfully, I have had Monkey Boy at home cooking dinner, and Godzilla hops in the bath of his own accord and I set about tending to the vomit ridden car.

I don’t do too badly and I clean it out well.

I return inside, manage more of Godzilla’s tears and his request to eat dinner because he is hungry (I’m not surprised. The only think I’m surprised about is that he didn’t vomit up his own toes, given how forceful the five or six episodes were) and I relent and allow him some plain pasta for dinner, before sending him to bed.

At which point, I pick my phone up to alert Grumpy Pants to the home situation.

There is vomit on my phone.

And that’s when I lose it …

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