Showing posts with label get over it. Show all posts
Showing posts with label get over it. Show all posts

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Survey Says . . .


This morning, in my over-tired, fighting with satin Halloween costumes, getting ready for an important trip, over-committed, bad cold threating to become a sinus-infection sort of way, I decided to make coffee. I drink coffee most mornings. I know, it's a bad habit, but as far as vices go it seems relatively mild. I often think I am addicted to the stuff, but then I get too busy and forget to make it.


I doubt people forget to smoke.


The morning did not go as smoothly as some, so I was brewing coffee as I ran out the door. This seemed like a judicious plan that would prevent me from the $5 coffee at the local drive-thru coffee shop. I imagined a nice cup of coffee when I returned home with only one child in tow.


When I returned home, the coffee maker had been turned off. (My husband is home sick, poor guy).


This leads me to the survey.


Turning off a woman's coffee maker, before she has a cup of coffee should be interpreted as:


a) an honest mistake, to be dismissed with a Christian heart.


b) a prudent reaction to a potential fire hazard.


c) domestic violence.


d) a crime against humanity.


There may be more than one correct answer, but I suspect there is at least one wrong one.


Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Parenting rules (get over it)

In the past 24 hours, one week after San Francisco, I have broken many of my "rules." Not to say these are hard-and-fast rules, but rather the way things have come to be expected in my household. We all try to maintain a certain standard, until our tough love melts into the squishy variety. And, sometimes, until the car breaks down.

Rule 1 - My children eat healthy, homemade meals, especially for dinner. They do. I cook from scratch, I cook ahead and freeze meals. I buy far more flour and raw vegetables than I do processed food.

Last night, my children had fast food for dinner in the car. Andrew commented on it.

“Gladys, doesn’t it feel like we are on a special trip? Like we are on a vacation or something?”

We were going into Cleveland after a long day of school and activities to pick up my husband from work. His car broke down. I drove down to Cleveland savoring my double cheeseburger. No, really, it tasted really, really good (comfort food). I didn’t even know I was missing it. When I got home, my kitchen was clean. I turned off the lights in their rooms and ran off to play tennis; that was devilishly nice.

Rule 2 - I allow time for my children to do their homework. They read every day.

Andrew did part of his homework in the car, on a clipboard. He didn’t read. I’m not even sure his teeth got brushed. Ooops.

Rule 3 – My children take personal responsibility for their own things. If they forget it at home, then they don’t have it at school. They need to learn these things.

I saw my son’s snack sitting on the counter this morning, right next to the homework he had done in the car. I did it. I took his snack and his homework to school. How can you expect a kid to remember these things when he didn’t have a proper dinner and his backpack was still in the car from the night before? (I am sure every kid gets a proper dinner and has his backpack neatly on a hook every night – wouldn’t that be a world?). I was torn between feeling like an idiot and feeling some sympathy for a sweet six year old: not so tough love.

Rule 4 – My children do not watch TV, unless someone is sick or there is some other compelling reason. Needing to get a few things done does not normally constitute a compelling reason.

My sister called me this morning. Conversations with my sister are always amusing. If you could put a theme on our conversation today, it would have to be “get over it, already.” We were laughing, shaking our heads. I told her how I’ve been so behind since my trip. She laughed at me.
“Did you consider that you might actually be tired because of your trip? Lay down for 40 minutes.”

“Oh, right, what about these kids in my house?”

“Oh, that’s right, you don’t plop them down in front of the TV like normal people do.”

That is what she said. But, I heard what she didn’t say too.

“Get over it. Get off your high horse. There is no help for the hopeless.”

Everyone needs a sister.

Mine is not for the faint of heart, but I’ll get over it.


Did I mention that my kids were watching Sesame Street when I wrote this post?