theclumsyredhead.com

February 11, 2010

Mish Mosh

Filed under: Random — Tags: , , — jen @ 10:08 am

Tuesday night we visited our daughter’s school to learn more about kindergarten. She’ll be entering KINDERGARTEN in the fall. Not quite the fall, since it starts August 12. Didn’t school start in September in the days of yore? Seems it starts sooner and sooner every year.

So, the very sweet kindergarten teacher is talking about what a typical day is like there, and she has a very nice PowerPoint presentation going as well. Then, up pops a picture of “Spanish Class.”

Now, let me digress for a moment: my husband and I watch the NBC show “Community” (Thursdays at 7 CT) and one of our favorite characters is Senor Chang, the Chinese man who teaches Spanish (see video). So of course, I look at my husband, who has a big grin on his face and I start giggling. And I couldn’t stop. I felt like I was 10 years old, sitting in church, waiting for Sr. Barb to come by and smack me in the back of the head. I felt so sorry for the teacher – she probably thought I was the biggest jerk – and if you’re making fun of a kindergarten teacher, you are one of the biggest jerks ever. Tess will probably get held back for that.

Secondly, my son has a new walk. It reminds me of Joe Cocker performing on stage. Or at least, John Belushi imitating Joe Cocker on stage. At first I thought maybe he had some sort of head injury, because he just wasn’t walking normally. I couldn’t ask him if he smelled toast (a sure sign of a stroke, they say, though my RN friend has never heard of that) so I picked him up and he smiled and said “down!” so I put him down and he ran off like he usually does. Then he did the walk again, so I guess he’s just trying new stuff to see if it works for him.

Lastly, I fell off the couch the other night. I was sitting on the arm of the couch with my right foot tucked under me left leg. I was waiting for my husband to get done reading a story to Tess so I could then go read her one. I tried to reposition my leg, but it was somehow stuck and without warning, I fell off the couch and landed on my hip, still in the same position as I was on the couch. It was like I had become a statue and someone had knocked me over. It hurt like a mother too. I laid in that position for a few seconds, bewildered. Thank the Lord no one was around, though I don’t think anyone would have noticed since it’s such a regular occurrence. I just thought I’d share that so as to reinforce the clumsy redhead thing. And to prepare you for the fact that I will probably have a metal hip at some point in the near future.

February 3, 2010

Me & Licky McGee

Filed under: kids — Tags: , , , , , — jen @ 7:00 pm

Yes, that's a ponytail holder in his hair. Should that really be the concern here?

My 1 1/2  year-old son has decided to start licking everything. He squats down, puts his arms back into a sort of diving position and runs toward the object he’s going to lick, then firmly plants his tongue on it. The couch and the stove are his two favorites. I’m guessing I should ignore this, but I’m a little concerned.

He’ll lick the stove when it’s on, step back and look at me with an, “I don’t think I’m enjoying this sensation” expression and then do it again. And again. Each time stepping back with that same look of befuddlement. I don’t know how many times I’ve told him “no” or removed him from the stoval-area; nothing works. He reminds me of the kid in “A Christmas Story” who sticks his tongue to the pole. Is my son destined to be the kid who does that on a dare at school?

And what if it doesn’t stop there? What if he’s that kid who’s always willing to do the stupidest thing possible, just for a laugh?  Or what if the other kids think he’s weird and just egg him on to amuse themselves? He already jumps off bar stools in the kitchen and launches himself off the couch. He’s trying to get hurt – the more painful the fall looks to me, the harder he laughs. I’ve been working on my poker face so after each landing when he turns to see my reaction there will be nothing. He’ll just call my bluff.

I’m not a panicky mom.  If they aren’t bleeding or a bone isn’t protruding from the skin, I just tell them in a calm voice that they’re okay and to pick themselves up. But what if he gets really hurt? I’m talking broken bones and stitches, blood gushing and unconsciousness. I know babies are first-time parents proof, but what about us second-timers? And does that rule apply to toddlers? What’s the cut off age? Or maybe it’s a height requirement, like riding the Tornado at Adventureland.

What if DCS comes knocking on my door? I mean, you take a picture of your kid’s first bath and have them developed (developed? What decade am I living in? I mean printed) at Wal-Mart and they turn you in for child pornography. It’s true – look it up. I get nervous at the pediatrician’s office when my kids have bruises. I’m paranoid that the doctor will think one of them has just one bruise too many and make the call.

Granted, my daughter is as graceful as I am and thankfully she’s fallen down in front of the doctor, so I think he kinda gets that. She could barely take two steps without falling over when she was learning to walk. We learned when she was three that she needed glasses, so it wasn’t funny anymore. It was sad really, because we’d laugh at poor “Mini Jen” when really she couldn’t see where she was going (again, does that qualify for a DCS call – laughing at my sight-challenged daughter?).

I guess the only thing to do is to let him keep jumping off stuff and running full speed into walls, even if he gets hurt. I’ll have to ignore his fondness for furniture licking and wait for the bigger stuff like sports and driving and girls. Oh good lord. . . .

 So there’s that.

February 1, 2010

Stupid

Filed under: kids — Tags: , , , , — jen @ 12:51 pm

I used to have a lovely vocabulary. Sometimes people looked at me like I was making up words, I guess because they had never heard them used in real life before. I imagined them racing home to find their dictionary to make sure the words I used were real. I’m positive they didn’t do that, because they’re not nerdy like me. But the dream was there. 

Now, with two kids, those beautiful words have been forced out of my brain, replaced by monosyllabic words like, “no” and “stop it.” Sometimes I string them together to form a run-on sentence: “no no no no no no noooooooooo no no stop it no hey I’m serious I said stop I said wait!”  If there’s no one around to see the two little lovelies running and stumbling around my legs-one with my bra and the other with scissors, I probably just appear to be insane. If they do see them, they would probably assume I’m a bad mother. I have no problem with either, because I think I’m both at this point.

For example, last night we were sitting down eating dinner and I said to my husband: “how’s your. . .uh. . . you know. . . that stuff?” I had to gesture with my fork; stabbing in the air toward his plate like Jodie Foster in “Nell.” I knew that it was dinner-time, I knew what we were all doing together, because it’s about the only thing we actually all do together, yet the word was gone. I saw the chicken (orange chicken, by the way, Wan Chai Ferry from a box, I highly recommend), the rice. I know those words, but putting it all together to create that one noun – not there. One of my children has stolen it and hidden it away.  It’s probably covered with cracker crumbs and glitter glue so I wouldn’t really want it back anyway.

I think that’s why we moms have created “the look.” Not because we have an unspoken bond with our children. Not because we are exasperated at all times. We have simply forgotten words. The words we need to calmly explain why the situation currently unfolding is not in their best interest. We talk through our teeth and count to three because we are desperately searching for whatever response is appropriate when a four year-old is blissfully smashing Cheerios on the wood floor with our one pair of nice shoes (bought on clearance because we had to get the kids’ summer clothes).

One (that kind of looks like fun). Two (how do I explain to her that it’s not fun?). If I say three, that’s it (I have no idea what ‘it’ is because I’ve never gotten past two-what if I get to three? Crap). If we’ve done this enough times, however, the child usually stops, pouts and then proceeds to find something else in the house to damage, maim, or otherwise render unrecognizable. The person who invented the counting thing was a genius. Most likely a former genius, now exhausted and unable to have an adult conversation.

Spending the entire day with two small children does not aid in keeping adult words in your head. Watching cartoons and making play-doh food doesn’t require a lot of fancy talk, which is nice for the most part. Not as mind-numbing as one would expect. But there are times when a nice chat about current events not related to talking aquatic cartoons would be nice. And when I find myself questioning said underwater creatures, it scares me a little. (Why is there a lagoon to swim in when it’s underwater? Why do they use cups with straws-can’t they just inhale?) When my suspension of disbelief toward a cartoon is called into question, it’s time to go.

It’s not just the words that I’ve lost, though. I think a lot of women my age found becoming a mom was a bit of a shock. Not actually finding out I was pregnant, that was the plan, but finally realizing what our mothers went through and then trying to survive with some sense of self-that’s the shocking part. It’s hard. It’s painful. It can make you angry. It can make you cry in the shower (the only place we can be alone for about 5 minutes). Most people would respond with exasperation – of course it’s hard, what did you expect?

My response to your “no doy” is this: we’re a generation of women whose moms worked so we were more or less raised by t.v. You can call it an excuse, but I really think there’s something to it. We were taught to believe that misunderstandings happen and some sort of crazy hijinks ensue (think: Greg’s hair turns orange!) but in half an hour, it’s all wrapped up in a nice neat resolution. Everyone pitches in and problem solved. So the reality slaps us in the back of the head with a small Tonka truck and shows us we have to do it all by ourselves.

It gets easier, but we have to work at it. Really work at it. Our moms worked; some by choice, others probably wanted to stay home with us but had to pay the bills so they couldn’t. Maybe two of my friends growing up had a stay-at-home mom. The rest of us had baby-sitters or grandmas and televisions taking care of us after school. So cut us some slack. Or offer to baby-sit if you can do it so much better. In the meantime, turn away if you must, or offer advice (which we will ignore with a smile), or just take away the chainsaw from my child and walk away. Consider it a parting gift just for playing.

January 30, 2010

About the Redhead

Filed under: Me — Tags: , , , — jen @ 12:49 pm

My first typewriter, circa 1978

My name is Jen and I’m a thirty-ish year old writer without a writing job. I live in Omaha, Nebraska; people say this is the Heartland, but I’m not really sure anybody knows what that means – I don’t. I know people think we’re all hicks out here, but let me state for the record: I’ve never driven or ridden a tractor, milked a cow or made out with a relative. However, I didn’t see an ocean until I was 27 years old (so I am a bit of a hick, I guess).

I have two beautiful kids (more on them later), a dashing husband (you don’t hear that word a lot and it makes me a little sad), a dog (not the brightest of his species) and a mortgage (refinance: 1). I’m a work-from-home mom who is on the verge of trying something new (again, more on that later). And yes, I am clumsy. I fall up stairs almost daily, I fall off chairs, out of bed and once I even fell off of a curb and broke my foot. A curb. Not a mountain or a horse. A bright yellow, 4” high piece of cement.

I used to think my life was boring, but I’ve realized boring might be a good thing. I think most people have boring lives, so maybe we can all relate better to each other if we quit pretending that we’re all so fabulously interesting. We’re not. Unless you really are, then you should consider an autobiography and hire me as your ghostwriter.

I studied writing in college; I even received an official looking piece of paper that says I know how to write creatively. That little piece of paper with the fancy gold foil sticker has not helped me much in real life (sorry mom & dad). The writing was put on hold so I could get a non-writing job to pay the bills. But now I’ve decided to give it another go, because that’s what I feel like I need to do.

You’ll find on here some pictures and videos I think are cool, funny or stupid and just random things I like. And of course, what it’s like to be a clumsy idiot.

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