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By
the last week of the summer the mothers in the park were prostrate.
I had to revive a friend with smelling salts. The worst heat of
the summer. The pool was closed because of problems with unidentified
bacteria and other floating matter. The mothers were beside themselves.
They couldn't bear the thought of one day
more with the children. One day more of inventing activities.
How
many projects can you do with egg boxes and food coloring?
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How many projects can you do with egg boxes
and food coloring? How many days can you have mud tramped through
the house as the kids traipse back and forth into the house from
the wading pool? How many days can you feed the children three
meals, all before noon? How many baking projects can you manage
in the stifling hot kitchen? How many mobiles with wire hangars
can you help a child create? How many paper plate faces? How many
crayon melts in the oven?
There are always some mothers who enjoy
summer. They say, "But it was so relaxed. No homework. No
school. We just hang out."
When they say things like that I feel very
guilty. Then I want to wring their necks.
I would like to take one of these mothers
to my house and let her spend the day with my children and then
see what she had to say. Maybe she could turn them into relaxed
children who just like to hang out.
I doubt it.
Those mothers must have a different species
of child. Homo relaxus. My kids are homo eruptus.
Hanging out for my kids means pulling the
arms off of their action figures, writing with permanent marker
on the tables and floors, climbing on top of dressers and jumping
to see if they can break the floor, slamming doors, and missing
the toilet when they pee.
I know what you're thinking. But I do discipline
them. It's just that four young children can create a lot of havoc.
Then there are those other mothers. The
ones who take their children on outings almost every day. And
enjoy it. They must have perfected some car etiquette that I seem
to be missing. The thought of driving in traffic with my kids
screaming for water, food, a different seat, and bathroom stops
makes me sweat behind my knees.
If you're one of those mothers who sends
her kids to camp for eight full weeks -- and sees them one day
over the summer -- don't even tell me. I cannot be your friend.
I am too envious.
What a dream. It would be like being newlyweds.
Dinners without ketchup. Life without apple juice. TV without
Pokemon. It would be so quiet. I would be too relaxed.
Sure I would miss the kids. But when they
returned, would I be able to let them back in the house?
Thank God - - the summer has ended.
Now they're back in school. When they return
in the afternoon, I'm thrilled to see them. It's like they've
been away for months.
Now I know the real reason for summer -
- to make me appreciate my kids the rest of the year.
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