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Three good things happen every day
Posts Tagged ‘sleep problems’
Wednesday, October 21st, 2009
1. Orienteering
2. Endurance
3. Deliverance
A rubbish night’s sleep. Son 1 aged 5y arrived at about 0230 and then couldn’t/wouldn’t go back to sleep. The Man, on his first night back from his Business Trip, gave up on us and de-camped to the Double Bed. In the end, secret co-sleeping advocate that I am, I put Son 1 back in his own bed, put the fan on, lay down with him till he went to sleep and trudged off back to the Big Bed. I still couldn’t sleep. I was Tetchy and Touchy in the morning. But managed a sudden and sustained Cheer Up when I got into a pair of size 14 trousers.
We went swimming at the Hotel Pool with the Wednesday Friends. The older brothers were still in school. I forgot Son 1’s rash vest, and was uber anxious about his bright red spotty chest. Molluscum and eczema. Great combo. He couldn’t have cared less. Jumped in, splashed round, dived for sea horses and swam and swam. He did one width, and then when I wa-hayed and clapped… swam back across the other one. And turned round and swam back again to get me to do it again. A little lesson in how much he’ll do for approval. So I put him on my back and swam across with him giggling all the way. Son 2 was great, his fists full of toys he wouldn’t let go of.. and still managing to kick his legs like mad to keep afloat. At one point when he was getting tired he just hung in the water, watching the others. I used to take Son 1 to swimming classes every week, and he started swimming in armbands at around 2. And Son 2 has never had a swimming lesson, and has started swimming in armbands at… er… 2.
We met Granny and Grandad and The Man for lunch. The boys were so tired they only just hung in there, but we made allowances and got away with it. Back home they watched telly, I slumped on the sofa. Having Son 1 back on Wednesday was a Good Thing, and it made me realise how much I miss him. Son 2 was remarkable. Didn’t sleep in the car after swimming, didn’t sleep in the car after lunch. Didn’t sleep or lie down in the afternoon. And this was after an hour of intense exercise in the pool. By tea he was collapsed against me, picking out the brocolli from the pasta shells. But by pre-bath reading, he had six books and was still trying to get me to do a seventh. He passed out pretty quickly at bedtime, but has just, as I write this at gone 10pm, wailed and wailed and wailed for me. We left him. We are neither of us capable of walking up a flight of stairs to go and see him.
Tags: co-sleeping, Granny and Grandad, hotel pool, insomnia, learning to swim, sleep problems, swimming, Wednesday friends Posted in Wednesdays | No Comments »
Tuesday, October 13th, 2009
1. Avoir Fatigue
2. M’Aider
3. The Couleurs King
I have been awake since 3am. Ellen MacArthur did five months on five minutes’ sleep every four hours. Or something. I could so see her off. I woke up, couldn’t get back to sleep, went downstairs, made a cup of tea, went back upstairs, got my Book Club book and went back down to the Double Bed for a peaceful middle-of-the-night readfest. A little figure came padding down from the Big Bed. Wordlessly and glassy-eyed, Son 1 aged 5 plonked himself in the Double Bed. Mrs Smiley’s voice echoed in my head: “How’s his sleeping?” I switched off the light. “My head is still hurting.” I gave him a slug of Kalpol. He didn’t sleep; I didn’t sleep. He eyebrowed vigorously and clamped himself to me. After a very very long time, Son 2 aged 2y 1m wailed.
After an hour at The Office, my voice had gone again. “I’ll go home and work there,” I told a colleague. I didn’t make it. I found if I kept my head down, said nothing and drank lots of hot drinks, I could manage. I did a mad run round the shops at lunchtime. I have… erm.. burnt Son 1’s tummy by putting neat tea tree oil on his molluscum. It’s made his eczema flare up. I asked Teenaged Niece what she put on her eczema. “HE 45″ she said. I wasn’t going to take her word for it. I was going to ask the pharmacist. Only all pharmacists in the Big Town take their lunch between 1pm and 2pm. “When can you guys make it? OK. That’s when we’ll shut up shop.” So. HE 45 it was. And some allergy-for-children medicine.
Back late, and Son 2, the Cooler King, was shut up in his cot in a darkened room, having a raging tantrum. ”He’s been horrible,” said The Man. ”He wouldn’t eat his tea, he wouldn’t have a bath, and I only just got his teeth done.” I got Son 2 out, and he sat on my knee, quietly panting, his head against me. I took him into the other bedroom. Son 1 had a French lesson today, and was singing something about quelle couleurs. The Man and I were baffled by the verse: Hoar, jaune, bleu, vert. We eventually worked out that the problem was our dodgy accents. Our rouge features the same sound as kangaroo. Son 1’s has a throaty soft French “r” and a “g” that rolls into the “j” of “jaune.” I gave him the anti-allergy medicine. And then read the ingredients. Sugar and alcohol. Nice. I really want to give that to my five-year-old.
Tags: allergy medicine, eczema, ellen macarthur, French, insomnia, molluscum, night-time waking, sleep problems, sore throat, tea tree oil, Teenaged Niece Posted in Tuesdays | No Comments »
Sunday, October 11th, 2009
1. Who Disturbs My Slumber?
2. The Little Mermaid
3. Chicken Run
Tired, tired, tired. Son 1 aged 5 was trying to get into the Big Bed before midnight last night, so I took him back to his bed, got back in with him, got him back to sleep, woke up in the wee hours and headed off to the Double Bed to try and sleep. “Mummmeee!” called Son 1. I put him back in his bed, explained I had to sleep alone or I’d be grumpy, and went off again. Not a creature was stirring and everything was still dark when Son 2 aged 2y 1m hollered for me. The Man went in. Son 2 had hysterics in disappointment. “NO! MUMMMEEEE!” The Man brought him in to me. He snugged. Son 1 padded in after. The line-up was Son 2, me, Son 1, The Man. Son 2 span round like a drill bit. Son 1’s arms snaked out, insistent fingers seeking my eyebrows. The Man gave up and went back to The Big Bed. In the end, I asked Son 1 to go back to his own bed. And begged Son 2 to go to sleep. We were wakened well after 9am by the phone. Nanna ringing to find out today’s plans. The Man and Son 1 were upstairs in the Big Bed watching Sponge Bob. Son 1 wanted to make a spoon pirate. “After swimming,” I said. He ignored me, and made one while he was eating his pancake.
We went to the Town Pool. Nanna sat at the side and watched. Teenaged Niece is 18 and a champion swimmer, with a Sharon Davies figure, natural blonde hair, huge baby-blue eyes, Californian-style braces on gleaming white teeth and an unstoppable laugh. She was dazzling. Into the pool, laughing and splashing, came Best Friend and Best Friend’s Little Brother. Wednesday Mum followed behind. She took one look at Teenaged Niece and said “What did you bring her for?” “Because now I know no-one will be looking at my skanky swimsuit,” I said. Son 1 and Best Friend were overjoyed to see each other, inseparable, and high with happiness. Son 1 hasn’t seen Best Friend since his birthday. The fact that they’re in different schools is a secret source of regret. But they live 200 yards from the Outstanding Village School with the 16-place reception class. And we don’t. I spent all the time with Son 2… Teenaged Niece played with the older boys, diving in, popping up and swimming under, sleek as a seal. Son 2 is also a natural swimmer, doing two widths - each time because he wanted to go somewhere else. Plenty of jumping, playing in the bubble baths and splashing in the warm water coming out of the jets.
Back home Nanna, Teenaged Niece and the boys went upstairs to watch telly. I made cups of tea and started on lunch. After a coffee and a little read of the paper. I went upstairs and announced I was going to sit down for five minutes. Son 2 dropped his frog bottle on the carpet and, because he’d loosened the top, it burst open, spilling what seemed like several gallons of pineapple juice. Oh I wish I’d taken it better. I made dinner, roast chicken, roast potatoes, sweetcorn, spinach, carrots and leeks. The Man came in and made onion gravy. Son 1 came down with Teenaged Niece and made another spoon pirate. By the time the meal was ready, Son 2 could hardly stand. He managed a bit of food, but just wanted to flop on me. Son 1 did better. After TN and Nanna had gone we rubbed our latest anti-lice goo - which we think is neat petrol - into the boys’ hair and combed through. When they were asleep The Man and I put the petrol on our heads and checked each other. Love is…
Tags: Best Friend, co-sleeping, Early waking, learning to swim, Nanna, sleep problems, Sunday dinner, swimming, Teenaged Niece, Town Pool, Wednesday Mother Posted in Sundays | No Comments »
Tuesday, October 6th, 2009
1. Howlround
2. Clash
3. Bump
Stille Nacht, Heilige Nacht. Alles schlaft. Until Son 2 aged 2 started SHOUTING FOR MUMMY. I sprang out of bed to get to him before he woke Son 1 aged 5, sleeping next to him, scooped him up and put him in the Double Bed between The Man and me. Granny is in the Big Bed upstairs, and The Man and I are next to the boys. I checked the time on a clock downstairs. 4am. The little beggar. He tossed and turned and wriggled and writhed. At 0445 I gave up and got up. On the Bright Side. I copied dates from 2009 into the 2010 calendar. I cleared out the mess in my bag. I paid a bill which had been outstanding forever. I ordered school photos. I made the lunches.
Son 2 wasn’t impressed with being left at home, Son 1 was Perfect Child. A long drive in this morning because of the rain. I dropped him off and had another Hard Day At The Office. I have muddled up Son 1’s Parents’ Evening. I thought it was today, which I could have left early for. It isn’t. It’s next Tuesday, and already my whole day is jam-packed. The Man will have to go without me. Bright side: I bought a new dress from TK Maxx. There is an Important Office Do on Thursday night. I took it round to the Godmother for a second opinion. She approved, and provided pashmina and handbag.
When I got home, Son 2 chortled, giggled and clung. Both boys were excited… there were two plastic bags resting on top of the water in the Fish Tank. Granny has bought four more fish. Son 1 has carefully considered, and named them Fluffy, Floppy, Zizzy and Sulky. Friends for Flossy and Coupon. An instant shoal. They seem to be getting on ok. In Son 1’s bag there was an apologetic note from his class teacher. We can’t have the time we asked for his Parents’ Evening appointment. She’s happy to do another day and time if it would be more convenient. Oh all right then. As you’re unable to fit us in, we’ll re-schedule. No, no, don’t mention it, we don’t mind at all.
Tags: Big Bed, disturbed sleep, early rising, fish tank, Floppy, Fluffy, Granny, Office Do, Parents' Evening, sleep problems, Sulky, The Office, TK Maxx, Zizzy Posted in Tuesdays | No Comments »
Sunday, October 4th, 2009
1. Hand Prints
2. Footsteps
3. Hand Outs
We did a bit better today, although writing this in the evening, me on the sofa, and The Man on His Chair, we are pale, fatter, worn out shadows of our BC selves. Son 2 aged 2 woke in the night wailing for Mummy. I have decided he can’t have Mummy, Daddy is his reward for antisocial behaviour, so off trogged The Man to sort him out. And then Son 1 aged 5 arrived in The Big Bed. It was 8am before anyone tipped me out of bed, which is a Good Thing. “Can we get Granny now?” asked Son 1, the moment his eyes snapped open. He swiftly moved on to the plaster-of-paris handprint kits I gave both Son 1 and Son 2 for their birthdays. After breakfast, I said, sternly. You make a mould, and then pour plaster in, and then lo, a spooky Pompeii-style memento of the size your child used to be. Well I like them. And so does Son 1. And they were cheap in TK Maxx. We messed up the first kit by spreading the gel too thin. And decided to make two out of Son 2’s. Son 1 sat, Perfect Child, his hand absolutely still, flat in the gel. Son 2 cried at having to keep his hand still. So we tried his foot. He cried. The gel crept up his fat little thigh. We tried his hand again. He crumbled the rapidly-setting gel material in his hand. He crumbled his mould, and then poured water from the jug in. It was a craft material. We let him get on with it. Later, ready to collect Granny from the Airport, the kitchen was spotless, and Son 2 was wearing the latest outfit she’d sent him. While we were still tidying frantically elsewhere, he climbed up to and opened the plaster-of-paris packet from the handprint kit, sending stiff white powder down his Sunday best and all over the kitchen. I texted this to his Godmother, who has finally been released from hospital. “I love Son 2,” she texted back. “You can buy him on eBay,” I replied.
We had a coffee at the Airport while we were waiting for Granny’s plane. And then saw her, trailing forlornly outside, pulling her case on wheels. Oops. The Man and I are veterans of the Airport in the days when the sound of planes landing shook the paint off the tinpot terminal walls and rattled the fillings in your teeth. It’s all got a bit bigger since then. Son 1 and Son 2 were skipping with delight to see her. We played Spot The Yellow Car all the way home, with Granny proving almost as good as Son 1. A cup of tea, then lunch, and then we walked into The Town. Son 1 was still pingponging off the walls, and I decided we needed to Burn His Energy Off. He did very well, walking the 3/4 mile down to The Square and then some on the way back. Climbing up onto every railing, going up and down every step, round and round every column, under every cycle rail and up onto every flat surface offering King Of The Castle potential. It’s a form of Free Running. Only much, much, much slower.
I made Fish and Chips for tea, Sea Bass I bought from the fishmonger’s yesterday, home-made chips and peas. I was five minutes from landing when friends called round. They’d bought a jacket on ebay for their 3 year old. It was too big, but beautiful. Did we want it for Son 1 for the winter? Ooh yes please. And an unwanted bimini someone was throwing out, which they’d thought we’d like for The Boat. “Bim bimini, Bim bimini,” sang The Man. He’s got a great line in malapropism. “Sit!” he said to Son 2. “You sound like you’re training a dog,” I said. “I know. I feel like Mary Whitehouse sometimes.” “Do you mean Barbara Wodehouse?”" “Same thing.” Son 1, Son 2 and 3 year old played in the garden. We drank and chatted. Our friends left. Tea was late. Bedtime was late. Oh well, only 2 weeks till half term. We can all have a bit of a rest then.
Tags: airport, barbara wodehouse, bimini, eBay, Free Running, Granny, handprints, mary whitehouse, plaster of paris, sea bass, sleep problems, Yellow Car Posted in Sundays | No Comments »
Sunday, August 2nd, 2009
1. Warriors
2. Rangers
3. Hunters
Son 2 aged 22m has taken to early morning screaming again. I have been comatose this week, so The Man has sorted him. This morning was my turn. Slightly tipsy last night, I crashed in the double bed. Son 1aged 4y 10m joined me at 4am. Much eyebrowing. No sleep. And then Son 2 started hollering. “Mummeee!” “Mummeee!” I went in, told him to stop making that noise, put his fan on, kissed him, said night night and left. He was apoplectic. He yelled, he shrieked, he roared, he shouted. We drowsed. “MUMMEEE!!! MUMMMMEEEE!!!!!” It stopped, eventually. A while later it began again, equally angry. Again, I left him. When I got him up from his cot at 8am he wouldn’t look at me.
A sponsored walk today, with some Office colleagues, in a town 30 miles away. The sort of event that In Five Years’ Time I could take the children to. This time, I left them at home with The Man. I set out late and found my way to the start by Sat Nav. A colleague and I powered around, really pushing the pace. It was pretty punishing; uphill around three and half sides of a square, and then a very short, steep downwards slope towards the finish. But, brilliant countryside, amazing views, beautiful colours, and another vast, grey, rolling sky. The rain stayed off and sunbeams made it through several times. We had a great time. And then at the end, in the garden of one of the organising fundraisers, homemade muffins and coffee. I also got a certificate for finishing. It has been many years since I got a certificate.
I got back late in the afternoon. The boys were having veg and hummous, a very late lunch, in front of the telly. A friend and her three-year-old came round. Son 1 pogo-d around with excitement. The big boys got the bows and arrows out. “Not in here!” I barked. “Outside!” “And me!” chirruped Son 2. We chatted on the patio while the boys played. “We are going to shoot wild pigs,” announced Son 1. And then: “Does anyone want to cook this wild pig?” He mimed holding something. “I’ll cook it,” I said. “Can I have an arrow?” “You don’t need an arrow. We have already shooted it.” “I was going to put the arrow through the middle to roast the pig,” I said. “Then you can have this red one,” said Son 1. “I will go and kill a giraffe. Do you know how you kill a giraffe? You climb up very high and put a knife up its nose.” We Need To Talk About Son 1.
Tags: bows and arrows, co-sleeping, countryside, crying out, Early waking, eyebrowing, fundraising, giraffes, Sat Nav, sleep problems, sponsored walk, The Office, wild pig Posted in Sundays | No Comments »
Saturday, July 11th, 2009
1. Secret Screams
2. Secret Pictures
3. Secret Peace
Son 1 aged 4y 9m has escaped Night Terrors. Other Mums have sat there with their screaming, staring children, sleeping spookily bolt upright in bed as they yelled and yelled. Not Son 1. Until we put Son 2 aged 21m in with him. And lo. Last night. Shouts and screams, loud enough to wake The Terrace. While sound asleep. Son 2 - who can be woken by an eyeblink - slept through it.
Wonder Nanny has an eye problem, so we were on our own today. The children were worn out, so we aimed at a Boat Trip, the idea being, as usual, that the chug of the Little Fishing Boat engine would White Noise the lads off to sleep. And The Man and I would get Peace And Quiet. Son 1 didn’t want to go on The Boat. Son 1 had seen Mr Maker doing secret pictures. White wax crayons, biscuit cutters and ink. He was busting. We left Son 2 playing with water (”Wa Wa. Wa Wa.”) in the garden while we quickly made the secret pictures. I crayoned. Son 1 inked. He loved the results.
Son 2 saw some choc rolls going into the picnic bag. “Choc choc. Choc choc.” He pushed a little green chair across the kitchen, stood up and pulled the picnic bag off. It fell on his head, and knocked him off the chair. He landed on his bag on the floor with the picnic bag on top of him. Both boys dived for lunch as soon as we got out on The Boat. I’d forgotten the suntan lotion, which ruled out the beach as an option. We chugged along the river instead. Son 2 eventually went to sleep. Son 1 didn’t. He painted in the cabin. The Man and I drank coffee. ”Is there any hot chocolate for children?” asked Son 1. Good point. We’ll get some. The river is wide and peaceful, greenly wooded on each side below great expanses of sky. Like swimming in the sea, it helps.
Tags: Mr Maker, night terrors, picnic, sleep problems, suntan lotion, The Boat Posted in Thursdays | No Comments »
Thursday, July 2nd, 2009
1. A Storm In The Night
2. A Storm In The Morning
3. Sunshine
Mighty thunderstorm in the night. Great big crashing cracks of thunder, sudden bright-as-daylight flashes of lightning. No Von Trapp children skidded into bed with me. I peeked in the bedrooms to check on Son 1 aged 4y 9m and Son 2 aged 21m, tiptoeing carefully, not making a peep with the doors. KER-RACK BOOM. Someone lifted up the roof of the house and let it slam back down again. The children didn’t stir. The storm went on and on. The rain drummed down. i had to close the windows, open against the stultifying heat, to stop us all being washed away. The storm passed. I went to sleep. Son 1 arrived, at 4am. I took him back to his bed.
Son 1 insisted on taking his Dinosaur Bone to Nursery. “Ok,” I said. “For a start Miss Lovely won’t let you have it. It’s too big. If she does let you have it, you will hear people all day long telling you it’s not a dinosaur bone, it’s a twig - ” ” - It’s NOT a twig. You can smash it on anything and it doesn’t break. It’s a bone, a leg bone -” “- and when you tell them that they will try and break it and they will succeed. It will be smashed to smithereens. And Mummy will be right and you will be wrong.” “I don’t want to listen to you anymore.”
The Dinosaur Bone went in the car boot. “It stays there. We will ask Miss Lovely if you can bring it in.” Son 1 wouldn’t even come in while I checked. “We have an issue. Son 1 found a Dinosaur Bone on the beach. Son 1 has always wanted to find a Dinosaur Bone. I have said it is Too Big For Nursery. I have said everyone here will say it is a stick, because it looks like a very ornate stick which has been worn down by the sea. I have said it will get broken. ” A small, expectant face had appeared at my elbow, gazing up at Miss Lovely. ”I’d love to see it,” she said. Back to the car I trogged. Back to the Nursery. “Oh that looks like a bone from a very scarey dinosaur.” “It’s a leg bone,” said Son 1, his eyes shining. “I can see that. Do you think it’s from a Tyrannosaurus Rex?” “Yes!”
I was back from The Office Very Late. Son 1 was just about in bed. “How was the bone?” “All right. No-one said it was a twig.” Traitors.
Tags: dinosaur bone, lightning, Miss Lovely, nursery, sleep problems, thunderstorm, Tyrannosaurus Rex Posted in Wednesdays | No Comments »
Wednesday, July 1st, 2009
1. Jamming Till The Break Of Dawn
2. Hotter Than July
3. Rhythms In The Park
Too Darn Hot. The Man padded up and down the stairs in the night, a great, uncomfortable bear with a sore back, sore ankle and a bad case of overheating. Son 1 aged 4y 9m arrived in The Big Bed at 3am. “My room is too hot.” His room was too hot. I’d closed the door to shut out the light to try to keep the little beggar in bed first thing in the morning. I heard Son 2 aged 21m roaring “Mummeee!” The Man’s in there, I thought, he can get him up. Then grizzling: “I’s dhuk!” “I’s dhuk!” Oh God, I thought, scrabbling up. Where’s he got himself stuck… has he fallen in his cot… is he ok… He was in the Double Bed. The Man had him in a cuddled half-Nelson to keep stop him snaking off in his sleeping bag. “Dhuk!” “Dhuk!”
We went to the Rockpool Beach to meet a Wednesday Mother and her three and a half year old. Incredibly hot. The tide was on its way in, so we only had a strip of rock and sand… which we more or less filled with two pushchairs and a beach mat. Son 2 played with water, Son 1 was crotchety, I looked for cowries and found three. The Wednesday Mum has a spirited child, and is enjoying my new childcare book, “Honey I Wrecked The Kids,” so much she plans to get her own. Drop The Rope is our new motto (for when you are in a tug-of-war power struggle with a child…)
Son 1’s Nursery was holding a Pirate Afternoon, and he wanted to go. So. We went for ice creams, stopped off at The House for his Captain Hook costume, and drove over to The Big Town. We dropped him off and Son 2 and I went to play in The Park. I had visions of us having Wonder Nanny-style hours of play together. He wanted to watch teenagers playing tennis. He grasped the principles at once, saying loud ”Uh-oh”s every time they fluffed a shot or hit the net. He picked up feathers (Feh Feh,) pointed at dogs, had a little swing and played on the slide ladder. He wouldn’t go on the slide. “Hot.” “It isn’t hot darling, feel it.” Wouldn’t touch it. “Hot.” Clearly a hot slide issue on another day, at another playground. I had some iced water in a flask and I poured him some. Not interested in the water. Very interested in pressing the buttons on the top of the flask and pouring it out. Two hours later we picked up an exhausted Son 1 and went home. The boys watched Ice Age 2 while The Man and I made stir fry. “Mummy!” called Son 1. “Son 2’s drawing on your chair.” I sprang up the stairs. “What with?” “Pen.” Does anyone know how to get biro out of leather? They came down for tea. I’d cleaned the kitchen floor in the morning before we left. Son 2 ate his rice with his fingers. He got one grain in his mouth for every 17 he dropped on the floor. AFter, they played in the back yard. Son 2 took off the drain covers and dropped balls down the pipe. When they were finally asleep, I went for a hot, humid run.
Tags: Captain Hook, cowries, disturbed sleep, Drop The Rope, Early waking, heatwave, Honey I Wrecked The Kids, insomnia, leather chair, night-time waking, Pirate Afternoon, Rockpool Beach, running, sleep problems, tennis, The Park, Wednesday friends Posted in Wednesdays | No Comments »
Tuesday, June 16th, 2009
1. Off Colour
2. Off Day
3. Off Switch
The Man left ridiculously early on a Business Trip. I was up at 6am, to tidy up, get the lunches, sort out the clothes, chop chop busy busy work work bang bang. The boys slept and slept. Oh for them to lie in their comas on a day when I can sleep in as well. I showered and did my hair and make up. Still no sign of life. I woke Son 2 aged 21 m and did his reading with him. I woke Son 1 aged 4y 8m. He flopped on to the double bed in Son 2’s room. Son 1 has a cough, his throat sounds sore and he was clearly exhausted. Wonder Nanny arrived and we got him in his uniform. We said our goodbyes and off I drove. I looked at him in the rearview mirror. He was flopped in his car seat, his head propped by the side rest, his eyes glazed and staring. I spun round and took him home.
I too am blatted by the lurgy, and had a wretched day at The Office. Being positive, I saw a colleague on maternity leave who’s returned one of Son 1’s potties for Son 2 to try. But throughout the day I got more fluey, and I really shouldn’t be driving. Just little things go, like my ability to judge speed and distance. After work I took about 4 goes to reverse park the car outside the house. I looked up and Wonder Nanny, Son 1 and Son 2 were sitting in the window clapping and laughing. Wonder Nanny said they’d been fine, they’d both had a sleep, she’d kept them calpol-d up and they’d had a quiet day. She left.
And they sprouted horns. I was feeling dog rough. i put Son 2 in his cot, sang him his lullabies, did my usual Night Night with my hand on him, left to go into Son 1 and hell was unleashed. He cried and screamed. “Mummeee! Mummmmeee! Mummmeee!” It went on and on and on. One of those Oh-God-I-Should-Have-Gone-To-Him-Earlier-But-I-Can’t-Now-Because-He’ll-Just-Scream-Forever-Next-Time horrors. All through Son 1’s stories. When it finally stopped, I tiptoed in to check him. And he was still awake, lying exhausted on the pillow. As soon as he saw me he started again. I gave him milk, held him, put him down, stroked him, kissed him, said Good Night and left. “Mummmeeee!” I got down from Son 1 at 20 to 8. By 8 he was already downstairs again, crawling around under the washing. “Come child, you have delighted us enough,” I said, serenely. All right then. Cold-ridden, tired, pissed off, I snapped. “Bugger off Son 1, this is Mummy Time.” He burst into tears and scampered upstairs. I ate, worked and rang a colleague from The Office. And again, down came a little ghostie. ”I couldn’t hear you and I was worried sick about you.” I put a fleece on him, gave him a hot chocolate and let him sit there and watch the mundanity of my late evening world of housework. “Can I wee in the potty?” he asked. “No,” I said, 17 times. “Why?” “Because I can’t be bothered to clean it out.” He went for a wee. He did it in the potty. He tried to empty it himself. I cleared up the wee from the loo seat, the side of the loo, the loo floor and washed the potty out.
Tags: business trip, cough, evening waking, flu, potty, sleep problems, virus, Wonder Nanny Posted in Mondays | No Comments »
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