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Three good things happen every day
Posts Tagged ‘cafe’
Saturday, October 17th, 2009
1. Gasping
2. Blowing
3. Snorting
4. Bubbles
“Darling,” I said, putting my arms around The Man’s neck before he had his teeth in. “Men are Protectors. Women are Nurturers. Your job is to be Be Strong. Mine is to Cherish.” “What are you after?” he asked. “There’s a dead rat by the back door and I ain’t touching it,” I said. The large, clear-eyed, glossy-coated rat we saw sitting on its haunches in the back yard, gazing straight at us, coincided with the head lice outbreak. http://mumsnet.com/blogs/serenedays/2009/10/05/the-ugly-bug-ball/ I didn’t put it in The Blog; I forgot. So often happens with life’s little nasties when you have a Positive Attitude. And then I looked up rats on Mumsnet. The post that haunted me said that the problem isn’t the one you see, it’s the huge family out of sight. So we called the Rat Man and he came, last Saturday, in an unmarked van. He put one box down in the yard, behind a paving slab “where the boys can’t get it,” said The Man. Yes darling I’m really going to let them play in the yard when there’s a rat the size of Son 2 aged 2y 1m living there. Another box went in the alleyway next to the house. I went downstairs this morning. I put the kettle on. I put the first load of washing on. I went to take the rubbish out, glanced through the window and there it was. Smaller than before, the sheen on its fur gone. Looking like it had died crawling out of the drainpipe across the doorway. Which of course it probably had. 27 years of being asked why I’m vegetarian. Because I cannot cannot cannot stand critturs dying.
The Man is off on another Business Trip tomorrow, so we took Son 1 aged 5y and Son 2 out for breakfast. By the time we got to the Cafe, Son 1 was so hungry he couldn’t behave. The Man thought it was a disaster, but I think they’re improving. Son 1’s eyes lit up when he saw the straw in his drink. He “always gets the bubbly glass,” and a few splashes of pineapple juice were spattered around. The Man growled. Son 2 watched intently, took his straw in his little mouth and blew out his entire glassfull. The Man barked.
There’s another Festival in The Town so off we went. We met Friends with a 3 year old, and took the boys into the Marquee to paint shells. Son 1 was Perfect Child, mixing a base colour, dabbing, adding glitter, doing twiddly bits at the edges. Son 2. It didn’t start well. He dabbed a great blob of red paint on the end of a paintbrush. And then I decided to take his reins off. The paint got on his reins. And on his hair, up his nose, on me and all over the nappy bag. I tried babywiping the paint out of his fringe and it just got rubbed in and looked like I’d dyed it. Then the red paintbrush went in the green paint tub. Then the glitter, which they were supposed to take little pinches of and sprinkle, was upturned onto his shell. Then he globbed blue paint all over Son 1’s shell and the tanks came over. I had to buy £6 worth of raffle tickets to make it up to the woman.
We did ice cream, we did coffee. We bought sausage rolls for lunch and Son 2 fell asleep. The Festival was packed. We bought a bottle of sparking white wine with six plastic glasses - four for us and two for whoever turns up as soon as you’ve bought a bottle - and sat down in the sunshine on the pavement by the side of The Museum. A wedding party trooped past on the way to a boat trip from The Quay. The boys crayoned, posted gravel in breeze block holes, and played with Go Gos and Son 2’s farm. A friend walked by with his dog, and helped himself to a glass from the back of the Pram. The local policeman passed. “Vagrants!” he called. “Just drinking outside before it’s banned!” I called back. The sun and the shadows moved round… the wedding party returned. We pushed the boys back home and gave them ready meals for tea.
Tags: bubbles, business trip, cafe, Festival, Go gos, local policeman, Mumsnet, rat, rat man, shell-painting, vegetarian, wedding party Posted in saturdays | No Comments »
Saturday, October 10th, 2009
1. Second Sons
2. Settling Sons
3. Getting Sons
The Man took Son 1 aged 5 to school, which left Son 2 aged 2 and I having a serene start. He wanted to watch telly, so I parked him in front of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. He sat on my lap. “Mummy wot wi me.” I watched Truly Scrumptious billow chiffon around the annoying children on the beach. A Wednesday Mum texted. Swimming. We have been barred from the swimming pool for four years - since the birth of the first Second Son. You cannot go swimming with two under fives in The Town Pool. All our First Sons are now in school… so we can now take our little collection of Son 2s. Great news. The bad news is I still haven’t replaced my sagging swimsuit. (I tried Bravissimo, as recommended by Katherine, found a costume I liked but was then asked to register. And I couldn’t be bovved.) I went to get ready. When I came down Granny had done all the washing up and tidying. It were brill.
It rained and rained. We collected one Wednesday Mum and went off to the Town Pool. The other arrived later. In a knockout swimming costume. I clutched Son 2 lovingly to my bosom whenever I left the water. He can swim in his armbands now. I watched him find his balance in the water and, for the first time, experiment with his arms and legs to see the effect. He swam a good width. He jumped onto Mummy. He played with the Nearly Four Year Old’s toys. He splashed in the shallow end. He ordered me into the bubble bath. He is a joy, and I’m thinking of going each week. We were there 90 minutes, until he lost his trademark ramrod carriage and flopped against me. We had another soaking getting into the car. We dropped off the Wednesday Mum and NFYO near a cafe entrance. “Ow,” said Son 2, in his most disappointed voice. ”We are going to the cafe, darling, we just have to park.” All three boys were heavenly, sitting still and quietly eating their snacks, proving my theory that over-exercising creates Perfect Children. These are boys who can sear paint off with their slipstream.
After another drenching, we dropped off Wednesday Mum and NFYO, and picked up Granny. Son 2 was unconscious. Down to the Town Square to meet The Man. We lifted Son 2 into The Big Pram and he barely moved. We ordered lunch. Someone I know slightly was in the Telegraph so I went out to get it. Son 2 woke, unhappy. He didn’t eat, but he did settle in the end. After lunch we thought about shopping, but the rain still hammered down. The Parking Fairy had two spots outside the house, so in we went. Son 2, who’d spent all day saying “Get Son 1 from school” decided he wanted to stay at home and watch Chitty Chitty with Granny. I got wringing wet walking from the car to the school to get Son 1. And back again.
Tags: bravissimo, cafe, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, Granny, learning to swim, Parking Fairy, perfect children, raining, swimming, swimsuit, The Town Pool, Town Square Posted in Wednesdays | No Comments »
Wednesday, December 10th, 2008
1. Bottled Treasure
2. Forbidden Treasure
3. Little Treasures
I heard Son 2 aged 14m at about 0605, and left him. He didn’t sound too bad… but then started to get louder and I went in at about 0645. He wanted food and milk, so we went downstairs. I gave him a snack and then got my bottom smacked by a gorgeous, grinning, blue-eyed younger man. Aged 4y 2m. We had a reasonably sedate start to the day, although I had to be dressed for the BT engineer who was coming at 8am. And I had a huge, lethally-jagged broken whisky bottle to give the recycling men. Well over 20 years since it contained whisky. Son 1 broke it yesterday. “Why did you keep playing with it when everyone told you not to?” “Because of the money inside.”
The BT engineer didn’t turn up, so out we went. We saw a neighbour from next-door-but-two, and asked about the burglary. Credit card swipe entry on a yale lock at 5pm, went in, took a laptop, iPod and money, then walked into the next room, was surprised by someone there and then strolled out, carrying the gear. We went to the Museum. Son 2 was walking round, triumphant, independent, and wearing his Aren’t-I-Great face. Then a 2 year old pinched him. The saddest, mouth-turned down, can’t-breathe-too-upset expression ever, and he dissolved into lengthy howls. Son 1 and his 4 year old friend were in pirate costumes. Son 1 had kindly taken the friend a sword so they could both fight. Son 1’s sword was twice the length of the one he lent his friend. They sat side-by-side at the crayoning table. Pens, paper, glitter, glue, an odds-and-ends box and scissors had been provided for children to make Christmas Cards. Son 1 and his friend made Treasure Maps instead.
Our friends weren’t lunching, so the boys ate snacks and sandwiches, and then I got them a plate of chips while I had a coffee. They were great, they sat together, they ate their chips, they drank their drinks, they played with each other, they chatted (Son 1) and chirruped (Son 2.) Back at the house Son 2 insisted on playing outside in the front garden. He got a man to say “hello,” within minutes… and Son 1 was chatty to another one of our neighbours from way down the Terrace. She’s always stopped to talk to him, and he’s always hidden behind my legs/coat and done the Shy Boy routine. Again, good to see him with a bit more social confidence. We raced across the gravel, all three of us, me holding Son 2’s hands, Son 1 winning each time, Son 2 giggling, squealing and hooting till his legs couldn’t run any more.
Tags: broken glass, burglary, cafe, Early waking, engineer, learning to walk, Museum, pinching, pirate costumes, playing together, recycling men, Shy Boy, sword, Terrace, Treasure Map, whisky bottle Posted in Wednesdays | No Comments »
Sunday, April 27th, 2008
1. Greens
2. Manners
3. The joke
On grey, wet days, The Town is just an-out-of-season-holiday-town-in-the-rain. On days like today it’s like Crete. As it said on the chalk boards in the shop window, wind speed 1, sea slight, visibility good. I went running during Son 1 aged 3 and a half’s swimming lesson, and the water was turquoise, there were flowers and young leaves everywhere… a lovely spread of light green bramble on the cliffside broken by a single red hot poker… and then running round the headland through a tunnel of trees there was bright white wild garlic on either side of the path for hundreds of yards. Birdsong, sunshine, bluebells, hardly anyone around. It was fantastic.
Missed breakfast again so persuaded The Man to stop at the Beach Cafe for a snackette. He stayed with the boys; I went for coffee and cake. I got a chocolate Danish for him, a chocolate Brownie for Son 1 and ordered brioche for me. Son 1 let off a tuneless howl because I cut up the Brownie, but I re-bottled that genie by betting him he couldn’t count to 12. The Man did the 40+ version of the same thing over his Danish: “I’m not eating that. I don’t like them. You’ve never seen me eat one of those.” Whereupon the 3 and half year old sighed and said “I’ll have it,” unwrapped the pastry, started digging the chocolate drops out with his fingers and asked kindly: “Did you enjoy your run, Mummy?”
Son 2 aged 7m has told his first joke. As I was putting him to bed. I’d just given him his Gaviscon, and was letting him play with the syringe to get him in the mood for his Calpol… shall we just say that never goes down quite as easily. He was biting the syringe’s plunger end, and waving the whole thing around, and then accidently stuck it in my mouth. And roared and roared with laughter. From then on he was aiming deliberately, trying to get the business end in my mouth and giggling and giggling till he could hardly breathe and gave himself body-shaking hiccups. “I’m giving Mummy the Gaviscon, ha ha ha ha ha ha ha.”
Tags: cafe, first joke, running, spring Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
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