Running Before You Can Walk
Monday, November 3rd, 20081. Stirrings
2. Back to School
3. Sprint Finish
It was hell getting Son 2 aged 13m down in the cot last night - took more than half an hour - but he stayed in till nearly 6am, which I am counting as a second night sleeping through. If he makes it tonight I will start seeing if I can put him down in the cot, rather than leaving him lying on a double bed with pillows either side. He was hungry and he was thirsty. A clear, definite “Na na” Which he ate in less than five minutes once we were downstairs. He was brilliant for his books this morning, sitting still for The Very Hungry Caterpillar. Well most of it. As soon as the pages you can stick your fingers in had gone, he was off. His favourite is still the animals book. He can now fling his arm up for the elephant, make fish mouth noises and roar like a lion. There is a little confusion between the noises for a duck’s quack quack and a crocodile’s snap-snap but it’s easily done. He is also definitely yeh yeh ing, and nnnnnn ing. And Ma Ma has returned, but with considerably more “SORT ME OUT NOW” welly.
We were a bit worried about Son 1 aged 4 y 1m going back to Nursery, because with his two-week half term and his ear infection it’s been three weeks. He was ok. He made me park way up the entrance road, and we arrived just as the children were sitting down for the register. He plonked himself down on the floor and gazed up at the teacher as if I wasn’t there. Wonder Nanny picked him up and said the teacher had said he’d been very tired in the afternoon. Again, it’s the playground. Too noisy.
Other good things: my computer came back from the mender’s, which will make The Office a bit easier, because I can work in the evenings again, hooray hooray. We have a number for a chiropodist for The Man’s sore feet. Wonder Nanny has sent off the registration form for Ofsted. We’ve accepted a party invitation for Son 1. “That’s good news, isn’t it Mummy?” He’s getting the hang of this. And Son 2 stole the show. As he was exhausted, I held him under his armpits to let him practise walking - one of his favourite things, and I thought if he did his usual hold-on-to-my-fingers-walk he’d stumble and get fed up. When he felt the extra support he just sprinted. Up and down the kitchen like Forest Gump, with me having to do a running, bent-over waddle to keep up with him. He chortled and squealed and laughed and laughed. So did Son 1. I knew we were in for it when he finally walks… it never occurred to me that it will in fact be much worse when he can RUUUUUUUUUUNNNNN.

