You poor fuckers.
You have no idea what’s coming.
Our baby goat — *is handed note* — sorry, “baby human child” will soon turn four. And you’re saying, “Uhh, it’s a bit early to be warning those of us on the road behind you. You’re like, uhhh, ten feet ahead of us.” And that sounds right. Seems accurate. I’ve got another 14 years or so before we eject this goat child into the real world with a forceful slam of the door (“TIME’S UP, NERD,” I will yell, and fling his stuff on the front lawn and then change all the locks while he’s scrambling to pick up all his weird cyborg porn or whatever’s ‘cool’ in 14 years). And parents ahead of us on the road have been warning us about all the things that will one day manifest in and around our kidling. Some of it has been right. Some of it has been so right, they had no idea. Some of it? Totally wrong. Just the same, I feel like it’s my responsibility to warn those of you with children younger than ours — perhaps even those with children that remain pre-born).
Because I see you.
I see how complacent you are.
For those of you without kids, lemme ask you: can you just like, go somewhere? Can you decide on a whim, “I am going to pee in private, then I will shower, then I plan to leave my house and go out into the world to eat food, dance, take a walk, buy a dog, buy groceries, participate in an orgy, fly a kite, kill a man, meet people, party with those people, buy IKEA furniture for my sex dungeon,” and so on, and so forth? Right. That shit ends.
For those of you with infants or babies: can you put your child down somewhere and be fairly confident that the child will remain in that space for fifteen minutes? If you return to the room, are you comfortable assuming that the child will still be somewhere near to where you left it? You won’t find the TV knocked over, clothes strewn everywhere, the window open with the curtains blowing in a breeze, a postcard from Tijuana stuck to your bedroom mirror with thumbprints of dried strawberry jelly? Yeah, eventually they get mobile.
Kids.
They get loud.
They get mobile.
And most importantly, they get weird.
They get weird quickly. The volume on their Weirdness goes from a 2, maybe a 3, all the way up to 11 pretty fast. Then they break the knob off and stab you in the neck with it.
I like to tell B-Dub stories online, and occasionally folks think I’m making them up.
I am not.
These are true things.
I would like to tell you some of the things we have seen. We are shell-shocked, like people who have witnessed something incomprehensible — an alien abduction, two Yetis making love, or this woman doing this thing with this carrot.
Please behold our tales. And tell others. Tell others what is to come.
Skeletons
The other night, B-Dub says: “There are skeletons everywhere.”
Which is true enough, one supposes, though it’s still pretty creepy when your preschooler just says that shit out of the blue. Either he can peer through our costumes of human meat to see what lurks beneath, or he’s legit seeing skeletons everywhere. And he said it in this kind of non-chalant, one-off way. Like, yeah, so what? Skeletons everywhere.
We thought that might be the end of that, but oh, no.
The next day at lunch, he starts yammering — because that’s a thing our child does now, he out-and-out babbles. Like he got an upgrade to his Language Module and is excited to use it. And he performs this monologue about skeletons, once again in a non-chalant yeah-so-what way:
“I saw a skeleton at the window this morning. And I threw something at him to make him go away. Yeah. And right now there are skeletons everywhere. They’re at the windows. They’re at the doors. There’s some right there.” *he points at the kitchen window* “I’ll punch him.” *he lazily punches both fists at the air* “Yeah. I don’t know where all these skeletons keep coming from. They’re in my room. They’re just like, running around and stuff. Yeah. They’re just so annoying. Sometimes I have to blast them.” *holds up both hands as if he’s shooting lasers out of his palms* “Skeletons. Yeah.”
He says all of this with the near boredom of a plumber describing a plumbing job. Like he’s actively irritated at the invading and presumably imaginary skeletons. I half-expected an eye-roll — and when B-Dub eye-rolls it’s notable — his eyes literally go all the way back and he rotates his entire head on his neck like he’s having a seizure. Don’t believe me? Look:
Anyway.
What I’m trying to say is:
There are skeletons everywhere, and my son realizes it.
Skeletons. Yeah.
This Song
Now, B-Dub doesn’t just gabble and yammer.
He sings.
Which is nice. He’s got a surprisingly good voice.
But again, his songs? Super gonzo bonanza weird.
Half the time, they’re total nonsense. Utter gibberish. So much so that I’m fairly certain he’s summoning Outer Entities (who are probably responsible for all these skeletons).
The most recent song goes like this:
FLOMMO GLOPPO!
FLOMMO GLOPPO!
JELLY JELLY!
JELLY JELLY!
That’s his song. I don’t know what it means. I do not know where it comes from. I do know that every time he sings it, the air shimmers, and reality fragments like light through a prism, and I can see squirming things on the other side of the veil — interstitial creatures, mad toddlers from beyond space and time, many-eyed precognitive preschoolers with sticky jam-hands and a hunger for incalculable geometries (and chocolate milk).
Constant Flailing
The boy is constantly moving. Even when he’s sitting still, he is flailing. You will be sitting there in the living room, and one second he’s just hanging out, playing with some LEGO, and next thing you know, he’s somehow on the couch, upside-down. Then he’s in your lap and he’s kneeing you in the face. Then he’s swinging from the ceiling fan. Then he’s piloting an F-111 stealth bomber. Then he’s on the moon. He’s like a teleporting orangutan.
He can’t stop moving. Watching him will make you dizzy. If ever we enter into another energy crisis, I will submit a plan to harness the energy of four-year-olds. Just seven of those wiggly little weirdos could power an entire city with all that kinetic razzmatazz.
That’s right. I said “razzmatazz.”
It’s scientific, you wouldn’t understand.
The Poop Reversal
Poop is still a hot topic at our house, which I suppose is good news because I find it endlessly hilarious. B-Dub will sometimes just go on a litany of poop-related phrases, “Duck poop, poop butt, TV poop, Hulk poop, poop doggy,” and on and on. One of his favorite activities at present is me firing up SIRI on the iPhone and then we say these poop-related phrases to her. SIRI responds by telling us we’re not being very nice, and B-Dub cracks up.
But poop isn’t just a topic of conversation.
It’s a way of life.
Earlier I noted that kids go through these bizarre and unexpected phases, some of them quite short. One of B-Dub’s phases was: “Refusing to poop.” Which led eventually to him having to poop so much and so bad that what he deposited in the potty looked to belong not to a tiny human but rather a morbidly-obese, pizza-roll-addicted yak.
As I said, we tried incentivizing the process.
A few weeks ago, we switched gears and changed the incentive.
It was these crunchy chocolate “rocks.”
It became these little chocolate hearts.
Hardly a change at all, right?
It worked.
It worked well.
It worked too well.
Now, our child has developed super-human control over how much he poops. It’s as if his butt is a paper cutter, like he has robotic control where he can leave behind a turd that is roughly the size and shape of a slice of hot dog. Then he’s all, “Hey, look! I pooped! GUESS IT’S TIME FOR MORE CHOCOLATE.” And we scrounge up a tiny piece of chocolate and he eats it greedily like he’s Gollum with a fresh-caught trout in his hands. It happens like, 47 times a day. We are going to give our child diabetes because of how much chocolate he gets to eat because of his newfound preternatural poop control. Once more we pull back the incentive in the hopes that the habit has taken and that he will shake the POOP = CHOCOLATE habit before he reaches adulthood because otherwise, man, his life will maintain its current weirdness trajectory. (“Hey, boss? I just took a poopy in the men’s bathroom. Don’t look at me like that. Just hand over the Snickers. It’s my reward. GIVE ME THE GODDAMN SNICKERS, OLD MAN, OR I QUIT.”)
Other Things B-Dub Has Said
Here is a list of things B-Dub has said recently.
“I HATE THIS HOUSE. I DO NOT WANT TO LIVE HERE ANYMORE. I WANT TO LIVE AT TARGET. I AM LEAVING.”
“Mustard butt! Cookie dude! Big red bed head! Fridge!”
“GOOD MORNING, BATMAN. I HAVE SOME NEW MOVES.”
“I’m the Flash. I have powers like super-strength and heat breathing. But I can’t fly.”
“I have a baby in my tummy.”
“YOU BE INCREDIBLE HULK. I’LL BE A BABY PANDA.”
Me: “What do you want for breakfast?” Him: “I want to eat fresh snow. It will taste like chicken.”
“My poop looks like dinosaur feet.”
“SWEET DREAMS, REFRIED BEEF!”
“I have a baby cardinal.” *pause* “I do not have a baby cardinal. But I should. And if I did, it would be really cute.”
“The silverfish are all alone. So alone. They need me to find them.”
*hands me a headless LEGO figure* “Now he has a ghost head.”
Me: “What do you want for breakfast?” Him: “A glass of wine.”
*hands me his stuffed animal doggy* Him: “Boo is sick. He needs a doggy doctor.” Me: “What’s wrong with him?” Him: “He was jumping in dungeons.”
*points to me* “All of this is buttness. Your feet, your arms, your shoulder. But not your head. Everything else is poop-butty.”
*gives me a correct lecture on the difference between ‘transparent’ and ‘translucent.’*
“Daddy, you’re full of teacups.”
*gesticulates wildly at the dinner table* “I AM A ROBOT. WHY ARE MY ARMS MOVING.” *pause* “I like robots. I am a robot. I like: flowers, rainbows, owls, doggies, glasses, DVDs, colors, and carrots.” *pauses to ponder this, then repeats the list again*
*points to his butt* “This is my energy compartment” *he toots* “That’s my energy release.”
See?
Kids? Super-weird.
And if yours haven’t gotten there yet, they will.
They will.
Jason says:
Since you brought it up, does it ever cross your mind how many people probably read this mid day column on their lunch breaks, in the bathroom, on tiny mobile screens, pants around their ankles? Also, how does that affect the part of you that is essentially still an artist?
March 10, 2015 — 1:37 PM
terribleminds says:
Given the quality of the blog and my writing, that probably lines up quite nicely, then.
March 10, 2015 — 1:40 PM
Hamnerd says:
He’s adorable though! Looks just like you.
But..I don’t recall saying crazy things at that age. (And my memories go to age 3) I’ll have to ask my mom. I just remember being obsessed with dentists and my teeth, and playing in the toilet.
March 10, 2015 — 1:40 PM
terribleminds says:
Playing in the toilet is pretty kooky.
March 10, 2015 — 1:40 PM
Hamnerd says:
Oh… *hangs head in shame*
March 10, 2015 — 1:45 PM
Melinda Primrose says:
Just in case no one has warned you yet, I’m still waiting for my 15 year old to get out of the weird phase. Just last night, she named a biscuit “Louie” and told her dad, grandparents and I that no one was allowed to eat Louie but her.
March 10, 2015 — 1:46 PM
Ciara says:
I’m 17, and I don’t think that’s a phase. Why do I say that? Because the roomba is named Mrs. Hudson and our Time Capsule backup is named The Heart of Darkness. Naming things is fun.
March 10, 2015 — 2:00 PM
Mir says:
I’m 21. My laptop is named Bartimaeus, my phone is Simmon, my Magic decks have adorable subtitles. I think you’re in it for the long haul.
March 11, 2015 — 12:16 AM
Andrew T says:
Car: Silvey; field GPS: Matt; car GPS: Jill; large stuffed pig I spent too much to win at a local festival: Ms. Piggy. My wife’s two favourite stuffed animals: Piggy (who I couldn’t help but point out is actually a bear cub, not a pig), and Lucky (a lion). Haven’t named my phone yet.
March 11, 2015 — 12:25 AM
addy says:
I don’t have names for inanimate objects but I do apologies when I bump into them and rub them as if I hurt it.
And of course I congratulate and grill the performance of electronics as if they were people
March 11, 2015 — 7:38 AM
Andrew T says:
I saw a ghost around my dad’s chair. I also saw a big black bee in the basement. Freaked me right out, and I was afraid of bees for most of my childhood. I probably saw other weird stuff. I don’t remember skeletons though.
Turned out to be side-effects of phenobarbital which I had to take until I was five. My visions were drug-induced. Oh well.
March 10, 2015 — 1:50 PM
Lynne Cantwell says:
I don’t know how to tell you this, Chuck, but my kids are 28 and 26, and the weirdness has yet to end. Particularly with the 28-year-old. (eyes said alleged adult’s collection of Loki and Elsa figurines with something akin to resignation)
March 10, 2015 — 1:53 PM
Andrew T says:
Hey, I’m in my thirties, and I still say weird stuff. Just ask my wife. I once told her, I’m not crazy. I don’t talk to coat hangers. The coat hangers talk to me. It’s the coat hangers that are crazy.
March 10, 2015 — 1:57 PM
Tessa says:
Oh my heavens I was laughing so hard. Thanks for the laugh I really needed it. 🙂
March 10, 2015 — 1:54 PM
Ciara says:
I have memories going pretty far back, too (age 2, 3, thereabouts), and I’m pretty sure I never said stuff like that. Though I did talk a lot. Even if I couldn’t remember it, I’m sure if it had happened my mother would still be bringing it up regularly if it did happen. After all, we still have a family friend who reminds me of the mini-goth phase I went through at age ten, every single time we meet up.
Every. Single. Time.
And this is unrelated but, hey, maybe one of your flash fiction prompts could be some of the stuff your kid said? Some of those comments definitely have some story-sparking potential. Particularly the silverfish one, in my opinion. Hmm…
March 10, 2015 — 1:56 PM
addy says:
the silver fish is a minecraft creature and the fact that b-dub thinks they are lonely is adorable 😀
March 11, 2015 — 7:44 AM
Denise Willson says:
Think you’ve got a mini Chuck, Chuck. Hide. Laugh. Enjoy. Either way, he’s yours to love.
Denise (Dee) Willson
Author of A Keeper’s Truth and GOT
March 10, 2015 — 2:00 PM
Jim Kiley says:
I clearly recall a night when the kids were very young (say, 1 and 4) and my wife and both kids had gone on a trip together without me. My brother was visiting. I got home from work, and he said, “You want to grab a bite to eat?” and I said, “Sure,” and then paused, thinking, “Hell, it’s going to take 15 minutes to get out the door…”
And then we put on our shoes and jackets and left in thirty seconds.
And I thought: This is what nirvana feels like.
March 10, 2015 — 2:01 PM
Jennie Ivins says:
We were out to eat with the kids. Everyone had their food. The youngest (then 5) looked across the table at my husband between bites of fries and says, “Daddy’s going to die first.” Then went right back to eating. Kids are not only weird they are creepy.
March 10, 2015 — 2:03 PM
Matt Perkins says:
Is it weird that this kind of makes me want to have a kid?
March 10, 2015 — 2:07 PM
krwilburn says:
It only gets worse. My then six year old once informed me that Thor was God and created everyone. Except his big sister. Loki made his sister as a cruel joke.
March 10, 2015 — 2:13 PM
joebrewing says:
My daughter has an aversion to clothes, and is prone to taking them off whenever she has the opportunity to.
March 10, 2015 — 2:14 PM
Andrew T says:
So she’s a nudist. Nothing weird about that.
March 10, 2015 — 2:24 PM
Jessica says:
Is she four? Five? We have the same thing going here.
March 10, 2015 — 3:27 PM
Pat says:
When my daughter was four, she asked if she could sweep my mother’s bedroom floor (we were visiting). I said sure, just don’t get dirty. Sixty seconds later, a very naked child was happily sweeping the floor. I have pictures to prove it.
March 10, 2015 — 5:36 PM
joebrewing says:
She’s three.
March 10, 2015 — 6:43 PM
SL Eastler says:
Nudists unite! My kids get so hot playing Kinect sports that they take ALL of their clothes off! It’s like the original Olympics in there. I keep telling them to leave their underwear on, but nope.
March 10, 2015 — 6:22 PM
Nefer says:
Many years ago, I brought my infant son to a baby shower. He had been babbling for several weeks in what seemed to be a language with normal inflections and grammarish constructions. It was just that there were no English words involved. I asked a nice lady when he would start making sense and she said “Oh, honey, my daughter’s 26 and I’m still waiting.” Well, my son is 37 and I’m still wai…, no actually, he is a nice sensible person. His four and two year old sons are not, however. Bwahahahah.
March 10, 2015 — 2:16 PM
MisterDrow says:
I’ve got three kiddos, 11, 8, and 6 and stories like this speak so close to home! My 8 year old is convinced that he is secretly a human pokemon and has all sorts of powers. A year ago, he was secretly a vampire… but he didn’t drink blood so he was able to go in the sunlight. My 11 year old would wave at all of the people he saw in the cemetery as we drove by when he was 6… I noted each time that there were no living people in said cemetery. My 6 year old has several imaginary friend, a couple of which are a little TOO real.
Kids make life both incredibly difficult and absolutely amazing at the same time, and I would trade my time with them for anything.
Also, someone needs to write the parody of Sweet Dreams Are Made of This and rewrite it as, “Sweet dreams of refried beef…”
March 10, 2015 — 2:30 PM
MisterDrow says:
Apparently I should proofread my comments… I meant to say that I WOULDN’T trade my time with them for anything…
Someday they will find this post and years of therapy will commence.
March 10, 2015 — 2:32 PM
mariceljimenez says:
I hear ya. My 12 year old speaks pokemonian, yu-gi-oh-nian, and manga-nian. Seriously, he goes on and on and I wish I knew what he was talking about.
March 10, 2015 — 2:48 PM
ElctrcRngr says:
Yugiyo is still a thing? Christ, when I think of all the money I spent on Yugio cards. I could have started the kid a trust fund. Anyway, he’s in the Marines now, and they’re still hawking those things? Amazing
March 10, 2015 — 7:23 PM
stranger says:
Damn. Kids do seem weird.
I better get going before IKEA closes and my sex dungeon is left without furniture. Also Köttbullar.
March 10, 2015 — 2:33 PM
Laura Simcox says:
I really wish you would have had a *pee your pants laughing* warning on this post, because I nearly did. I, too, have a little boy who has an endless supply of weird-isms. Mine is five. In a minute (or twenty, depending on how fast I can get him out of his snow boots and ratty-ass super hero cape) we are going ‘stop by’ the grocery store for a gallon of milk. Due to whatever unforeseen crap he pulls while we’re there, we will probably be gone about an hour. Here are some of his recent words of wisdom:
“Why can’t Jesus go trick-or-treating with me?”
“Mama, your arms are dead today. I dead-ed them with lightning power so you can’t type books today.”
“I don’t like house food anymore. I only want to eat at Old McDonald’s.”
“Mama, will you help me draw a picture of cats pooping?”
“I want to go to Barn of Marbles (Barnes and Noble) to take a nap but just pretend because only babies sleep and I’m not going to sleep ever.”
March 10, 2015 — 2:35 PM
MonaKarel says:
In my sixties. Still say weird stuff on a regular basis as do many of my acquaintances. I choose to believe it’s a sign of an inventive mind. Hate to break it to you, Chuck…your son is an artist.
March 10, 2015 — 2:35 PM
Paula Stout Burke says:
I have a 4 year old and a 5 year old and I feel like I live in a looney bin. Seriously. Between the imaginary friends, ghosts, monsters, crazy ideas… drama… I spend a lot of time laughing and a lot of time trying to shake off the creepy. Especially when the 5 year old tells stories about her and her grandfather who died four years before she was born..she gives incredibly accurate details about a man we have never discussed with her. She’s been doing that since she started talking.
March 10, 2015 — 2:36 PM
Susan K. Swords says:
This is all truth, including the follow-up comments here that they don’t actually grow out of this, they just shift into child/preteen/teen/adult phases of it.
For further insight and hilarity, I recommend following Honest Toddler on Twitter. Everything from the POV of a toddler, right down to nasty food choices, aversion to naps, and interrupting mommy and daddy at the worst moments. I know you’re already living it, but sometimes it helps to just laugh.
March 10, 2015 — 2:36 PM
Teresa Reasor (@teresareasor) says:
I had three of these. Two girls and one boy. Boys are weirder than girls. Trust me. I know. B-Dub will probably be a write like his dad. He needs to be with that imagination.
Teresa R.
March 10, 2015 — 2:37 PM
lizaskew says:
Pft! Girls are plenty weird. Boys are just generally more energetic and physical. My little sister made up a bunch of her own curse words that she was technically allowed to say. My favorite was “Palm-Poop”. She’d snicker like she’d said something really bad after calling you a Palm-Poop too. When I was about 5 I was sure that when I grew up I could be a unicorn, but my second choice was a wale, as though “growing up” implied some strange metamorphosis. It got so much weirder though. So much weirder that we don’t discuss these things in too much detail.
March 10, 2015 — 10:25 PM
leighshulmanLeigh says:
I have an almost 11 yo and a 9 month old baby. Just long enough to forget what happened the first time around, and I admit, your description makes me weirdly nostalgic considering I don’t remember much. I’m really looking forward to it.
The 11 year old is awesome, too.
March 10, 2015 — 2:38 PM
mariceljimenez says:
This was hilarious Chuck! I can safely report that all the way up to 12, the poop subject will remain a favorite. Songs about farts will inevitably reach the top 40 charts and elicit giggles regularly all the way to adulthood. Hey, I still laugh at these and participate in the making of fart song lyrics. After all, I should get a little fun. There will be weird “scientific” experiments involving ketchup, condiments, glue, and anything liquid they can find. Strange objects will clog your toilet. So strange, you’ll need a convincing poker face to look the plumber in the eye when they retrieve said object. There will be poop and pee in strange places. If your kids are not the ones doing it, they’re friends will. I once walked into my son’s bathroom after his little friend peed. I swear there was pee all over the mirror and walls. How in hell did he do that?
But someday Chuck, when I kick them out exactly as you described, I’ll get to go out, on a whim, by myself… Or simply poop in peace in the bathroom.
March 10, 2015 — 2:42 PM
Kate George says:
And I can report that at 18 poop is as popular as ever. What am I saying. The boys are almost 18 – their dad however is 50 – still as in love with poop too. Maybe even more so.
March 11, 2015 — 9:38 PM
Robyn says:
I never used baby talk with my daughter. I have always had a very large vocabulary because my parents never used baby talk with me. This produced some incredibly hilarious results such as adult facial expressions when your 5 year old says “There will be consequences!” But then, she liked beets, cottage cheese and spinach; colored the cat purple (luckily with washable Magic Marker) and created a 5 foot long trail of cheese on the hallway wall (impressively straight for a 5 year old, too). Somedays I was sure she was a Changeling. She is now 24 with a Degree in Technical Theater, holds a full-time job and plays D&D and spends her free-time creating incredible handcrafted costumes and props and attends Cosplay conventions. Yeah, she’s all mine!
March 10, 2015 — 2:48 PM
GKByrne says:
Oh, man. You speak truth. My youngest kid used to love sticking her finger in her own belly button. She named all her fingers and they would argue over who got to hang-out in her navel. “Nurga” was the fourth finger (possibly also the eighth horseman of the apocalypse) and always got left out. My other kid, all glassy-eyed in her dimly lit bedroom, once told me she was “older than the dark” and that she “didn’t have enough power.” Okaaaay. I kept a little journal of the weird stuff they said and I’m so glad I did. Thanks for sharing some of B-dubs with us, Chuck!
March 10, 2015 — 2:51 PM
Bernice Mills (@jaggedrain) says:
I always forward the B-Dub posts to my sister in law. I’m pretty sure she thinks you’re spying on her with rays, Chuck…
March 10, 2015 — 2:59 PM
Beth Turnage says:
It’s not REALLY fun until you have more than one.
“MA! Bobby touched me with poop!”
“I did not!”
“He did, Ma. He touched me with his poopey hands!”
“I did NOT!”
“Look, Ma!”
Mother inspects hands of offending child. “That’s not poop, honey. That’s chocolate.”
“Waaaaaaa!”
“What is it now?”
“Bobby has chocolate! I want chocolate.”
~Somewhere in America now.
March 10, 2015 — 2:59 PM
Kathy says:
Ahhhhhhh! You think something happens that is magic at 18? That they leave you and their stuff is chucked on the lawn and its goodbieee forever? Hate to do this to you CW. It gets WORSE. You think you can’t figure out about skeletons and song lyrics and stuff now? Just wait. When he/she is twenty something and thirty something and you just don’t understand what they are saying but you know whatever it is it means that you are going to be a part of it. Oh yes you are! When they leave home and half of their stuff returns. Then. They return then they leave. Then they get half of the stuff they left. Then they return again. Oh yes they do! A bit like the failing eyesight no one ever told me about. Happens to everyone They come back. And they leave again just when you’re beginning to understand them. But it’s all lovely. And just wait until the grand kids are staying. Without their parents. Oh yes they will! My dear CW. You have it all to come. Enjoy every precious wonderful moment. Skeletons? My closets full of them! Granny K
March 10, 2015 — 3:02 PM
Suzie says:
Oh so true… I also have a flailing 4 year old girl who was trying to jam a child-sized chair into my knees as I’m reading your email. She has this super power to trash a room in 5 seconds flat and NO ONE can sit on the couch right now due to all toys sitting there all neatly lined up (including nude Barbie dolls) and she’s just said “I’m a little afraid, I can only fly!” Yeah, weird. She also has this song about how she wishes she didn’t have a big sister and she cackles when her 8 year old sister burst out crying. Maybe I should keep a journal to get my own back when she’s a teenager….
March 10, 2015 — 3:02 PM
minervatma says:
Ha ha ha ha ha …. *laugs hysterically for a long while, unnerving the other people boarding the airplane* oh the good old days. Trade you one fifteen year old girl and one twelve year old boy for your four year old? You can keep them through college. I will even pay for the college. I will throw in a pizza delivery twice a week for life. With beer. Wine. Whiskey. Whatever it takes.
March 10, 2015 — 3:04 PM
Rebecca Douglass says:
I have been meaning for years (like the 10+ since I had a preschooler) to figure out how to harness the power of preschoolers. I’m pretty sure we could solve all the energy problems that way.
Of course, have you noticed that they harvest the energy for their perpetual motion straight out of Mom (& Dad)?
March 10, 2015 — 3:06 PM
Jenni C says:
Funny. My kid said his man nipples were his super powers because that is where Buzz Lightyear’s buttons were on his “action figure” (doll) lol
March 10, 2015 — 3:21 PM
Jessica says:
” Me: “What do you want for breakfast?” Him: “A glass of wine.” ”
I get it, B-Dub. I get it.
Charlotte (age: five going on 23) is fascinated by dragons, dinosaurs, lizards, alligators. and that general branch of creature, living or otherwise. So we get her a little dragon game for our phone and let her play it.
The other day she’s sitting on the couch playing and suddenly just bursts into utter, uncontrollable sobbing. We finally get her calmed down after a good ten minutes and ask her what happened, did a bug bite her, was she okay. The answer?
“The music was so beautiful on the game it made me cry.”
March 10, 2015 — 3:30 PM
SL Eastler says:
Jessica – our kidlets say the same thing about their favorite collaborative app – Dragon Story – the music is so beautiful they want to listen to it all the live long day.
March 10, 2015 — 6:20 PM
Jessica says:
THAT’S THE SAME APP SHE CRIED ABOUT.
My ghast, it is flabbered.
April 1, 2015 — 3:44 AM
Pam says:
To agree with you is a profound understatement.
Only to be followed by Grand-parenthood. You have no idea.
It only gets more weird from here. I promise.
March 10, 2015 — 3:34 PM
William Grit says:
I am visiting Terribleminds today for a little relief. Good stuff. Entertaining like always. By the way, (hippie) Pam. Are you aware of any drugs that make you study for a-long-er period? My Risk appetite is broad (in other words, I want the good stuff.)
Email. Below. Thanks (peace, love and Pamhand.)
March 11, 2015 — 12:56 AM
Pam says:
Hello Rick, welcome to the cult of terribleminds. You can check in, but you can never leave…as far as drugs go, I have only legal prescribed access (as an RN). Wouldn’t touch the stuff myself. Barely take aspirins in dire emergencies.
I wish I could take credit as a hippie…but my parents were the hippie folk. I’m just the backside prodigy…all the laid back, without the hallucinogens. Good Luck in your pursuit of living better through chemicals and free lance pharmaceutical sales! Peace out.
March 11, 2015 — 4:05 AM
Em says:
We call our third Dubs. What I found weird were the things I would say out loud in public with the kids. And no not the “Mommy is going to buy broccoli. Broccoli is green” I think THAT is weird. I wish I could give you an example but my brain…… I had 4 of them in 5.5 years and so…I hope to recover some day. My husband traveled. He was the smart one. My 23 year old just named our tea kettle Shelley Duvall and wrote it on the kettle. I have a 17 and 19 year old living here as well… but my 21 year old daughter left when she was 17. Takes after her Dad. I enjoyed the flash backs. And you never know… thought I would be able to slam the door too hahaha….but some are still here and still weird.
March 10, 2015 — 3:44 PM
ryanjamesblack says:
Strangely enough–
“*points to his butt* “This is my energy compartment” *he toots* “That’s my energy release.”
–sounds eerily like an exchange I had with my 2 year old daughter this morning. Just to clarify, I–the 34 year old parent–was the one pointing, explaining, and releasing energy, not her.
March 10, 2015 — 3:52 PM
Craig Forsyth says:
My son (also approaching four) has recently started singing “Happy birthday to you, happy birthday to you, happy birthday dear Captain, now you don’t smell of poo”.
March 10, 2015 — 4:30 PM
Leif Husselbee says:
Half the engineering class couldn’t tell me the difference between transparent and translucent. So congrats. Can poop be translucent?
March 10, 2015 — 4:37 PM
ElctrcRngr says:
I had a four year old once. Can’t remember where I found him. He’s a Marine now. Christmas time, when he was 5? Asked me where all the Baby Jesuses came from, and why we needed so many. Still trying to figure that one out
March 10, 2015 — 4:38 PM
marianna says:
Wine is a perfect breakfast choice for a 40 year…ohhh, your son is 4. B-Dub is ahead of his time!
March 10, 2015 — 4:48 PM
Nicole says:
My 5 year old waves as we drive pass the graveyard and then laughs because all the kids stuck in the ‘dead yard’ aren’t allowed out to play and she is.
I’m currently studying for exams. My 15 year old walked into the room, looks at all my textbooks spread out everywhere and asks, “Why are you book-googling?”. Might need to be checking his study skills a bit more closely.
March 10, 2015 — 4:55 PM
thesexiestwriter says:
Our son would run around on all fours, just like an animal. He was pretty damned fast too. He would explain that he was a zebra, and he was running from creditors. It worked for us.
March 10, 2015 — 5:21 PM
Julie R Butcher says:
You don’t get the good stuff until you have two kids, or six–like me. You haven’t gotten to sat “Don’t shove that green bean in your brother’s ear,” while you’re on a call with the attorney. Make another one 😀
March 10, 2015 — 5:37 PM
lesleehare says:
Yup. Mine is 18 now. But when he was five I went to take a pee and found him 10 minutes later on the roof of a castle in England. Go figure. He knew exactly where he was going.
March 10, 2015 — 5:40 PM
SL Eastler says:
After I finished rolling off my sofa desk (cause that’s where I work) with a muscle spasm from too much laughing, all I could think of was this: you think B-Dub is weird? Have you met his dad???
March 10, 2015 — 6:16 PM
SL Eastler says:
More on weirdness: My five-year-old told his class this week that their communal bear, Kipper, had rhinoplasty when he visited our house because his mom (moi!) is a bear surgeon. True, I did replace his nose. Kipper lost it in a fight with a dog at another classmate’s house. Poor Kipper, he’d probably prefer dog fights to rhinoplasty, right?
March 10, 2015 — 6:26 PM
Lisa Akers says:
I laughed at this until I cried. Then I freaked out. Are you here? In my fucking house? Listening to my 12 yr old talk about poop…every.single.day?!
Get. The. Fuck. Out.
March 10, 2015 — 7:01 PM
Laura Quirola says:
Ok, full disclosure.
I have an infant. I also have a nephew who seems to be more or less exactly B-Dub’s age.
He’s also currently visiting while I read this. I would read a paragraph, look up at CJ.
And actively snort coffee cake out of my nose. Seriously, I think there’s freaking streusel up my nostrils at the moment.
My in-laws are looking at me like I’m psychotic. I start reading the blog post out loud. Everyone loses it at “Then they break off the knob and stab you in the neck with it.”
Everything about this is gold.
Thank you so much, sir!
March 10, 2015 — 7:08 PM
Nicolette says:
Me at four at my great grandparents’ funeral: “I’m very eager to see the dead body.”
My sister at four in the dentists office watching my mom get a filling: “I like blood.”
Four-year-olds are hella weird.
March 10, 2015 — 8:29 PM
literarydalliance says:
I love being a parent. You described it very well.
March 10, 2015 — 9:16 PM