For those who refer to their significant other as "the ol' ball and chain" I would like to introduce the three and 3/4 year old girl. My dear baby child is exceptionally bright, charismatic, funny, precocious, and loving. On the days when it's good, it's really, really good. But on the days when it's not so, you just might see the terror in my eyes. She's not spoiled, not more than any other suburban American, pre-K girl whose parents are concerned about her not being too selfish or spoiled or self-involved, inconsiderate, bratty, and obnoxious, and she's usually quite thoughtful and open and concerned about those around her. Now I will admit to letting her ride in the stroller rather than having her walk along on longer trips. Mostly because I want to move the program along. And I talk with her and play with her like she's older than her 3 3/4 years because I know that intellectually she needs that challenge.
Both girls are loved and adored. We kiss and hug and listen intently, try to shore up their sense of self-worth before the demands of being a girl and then a woman in the world start to fray the edges of their confidence. Much that we do, like many other parents, is focused on the girls or at least considers them. We are not of the "children should be seen and never heard" belief but my strictly disciplined childhood and Didier's proper French behavior do not allow us to put up with too much nonsense. To us, everyone in the family has a voice, even if some (Mommy's and Papa's) are weighed more heavily.
On the walk to the sledding hill yesterday, Virginie and I followed behind a larger group because I wanted to be sure that she ate a proper lunch. I knew that the sledding would be exhausting and that we would afterwards have dinner and spend some time with our friends, so I wanted to give her a little time on her own with me, going at her own pace, before we caught up with the big girls. She was surely not going to get a nap, not that she has been interested in one of those for quite a while, so I wanted her to move at the little girl's pace and not try to keep up with the older ones. She ate and we dressed to head out. The snow banks and sidewalk corners would have made travel with the stroller rather difficult (besides the fact that it was in the trunk of the car Didier had driven into the city) so I decided we'd walk if we were to go at all. We walked and I carried her and then carried her until she'd walk and then I'd carry her and then carry her and then, once my back was sufficiently twisted and we'd arrived, I put her down. Ball and chain. Sure, I could have stood my ground and waited for her to just walked in out, but seriously, we'd been here before and she can outlast me. I don't want to stand in the cold, miss the action and have THAT meltdown, so I carry her. All in all, she probably walked a third of the trek and that felt like something to me.
The sledding hill, though not particularly steep, was a bit daunting for her, so I agreed to go down with her. I love sledding and it's a good thing. We must have gone at least ten times together. Riding down then walking up the hill holding her hand and carrying the awesome glider and then doing it all again. I'm hardly youngish and the workout provided, though ultimately needed, maybe welcomed, kinda wrecked me and threw off my equilibrium. When we'd all had our fill, everyone began the walk home. On the return there was walking and carrying and dragging on the sled and carrying and crying and fighting and my desperate hope that she just might, somehow, fall asleep in my arms. No such luck. Just a heavy lump of a coal and a crap attitude from an overtired three and 3/4 year old. Ball and chain.
We ate, drank, and were merry. The kiddles ate and played until they were all bug-eyed and weary. I kept saying over and over again that I should leave, leave while the baby girl was still in good spirits. She put on a dance costume, drew pictures, ate a banana and an apple after some pasta. She ran ragged with the other kids upstairs and could be heard laughing and telling pre-K jokes. After an incredibly enjoyable day, sledding and hanging with friends and neighbors, my girl, overtired, exhausted, sunned and snowed, fell out. What I'm talking about is not getting upset or even having a tantrum. I am talking about eyes rolling, screeching, arms flailing, internal clock resetting that happens on such an epic scale, even adults stop and stare at her like, "WTF?"
She fell out on the floor. She cussed me in a way only a tired child can. It's not the words, it's the expression on her face and the knowing glance that somehow it is my fault a little. Or entirely. Though we live just a few houses down, our host volunteered to drive us home and my little person screamed and acted a monkey the entire ride. We got into the house and, unhappy at how I had taken off her boots outside the door, she asked me to reenact the scene with a more pleasant disposition from me. I obliged after standing off for 15 minutes. I tried to walk away a bit, to give myself some distance, and she begged me to hold her. Hold her while she was screaming in my face. I held her, kissed her, whispered that I understood she was tired and tried to lead her to her room. The mention of being tired sent her back to Crazytown and I found myself stumbling down the hallway with a whining, screaming freak show and an older sister trying to ease my soul with kisses to my knees and elbows. Ball and chain.
Dressing Lily, the oldest, for bed, I lay Virginie on her bed propped up so that she felt that she was not going to bed but just talking to Mommy and Lily. She passed out there. Lily fell asleep quickly and I went to sleep shortly thereafter feeling like I had won a small victory. I had. Until 5 am when Virginie came to my room and asked me why I was sleeping there. I told her that it was my room and that it was the middle of the night. She asked if she could sleep with me for a bit and the answer was, of course, yes. We lay together for about 5 minutes when she asked if we could return to her room. Sigh. Sure. So we squeezed into her IKEA bed together where we pretzeled into a sleeping yogini pose. I closed my eyes to rest all of ten minutes when she woke me to tell me that she likes pajamas without feeties too. I told her that I did too and tried to go back to sleep. She then tapped me again. "How about no feeties?"
"Let's sleep, baby," I suggested. But she was having none of it.
"I want the pajamas with no feet."
"I think we should go back to sleep, dear girl."
With tears and increasing volume, "The other pajamas! The other pajamas!" So sue me, I changed her. We went back to sleep for 35 seconds whens he realized that she did not actually want feetless jammies. I mean, who would? So she begged and pleaded to be put back in the others. I changed her and cried and she thanked me and we went back to sleep. Ball and chain.
I got up at 7 am, after one jagged hour of sleep, with Lily and Virginie slept until 8:45 am. I love her to bits. She is gaining independence and growing by leaps and bounds. I know that one year, maybe even six months from now I will look back at these times and just giggle to myself at how ridiculous they were. But right now, with the little one chained to my side, with me, learning from me, the laughter is sharp and occasionally bitter, laced with awe and fatigue. These people are amazing and maddening and they will never feel me releasing my grasp, never feel a jerk in the chain, never be dismissed or shrugged off. I made a commitment to the ball and chain and I'm sticking with it.
(c) Copyright 2013. Repatriated Mama: Back to the Suburban Grind.
No comments:
Post a Comment