When my twins were babies, I couldn’t wait for them to be
old enough to do mommy-kid activities. I wanted to finger paint, cook, play
Memory and Candyland, snuggle and read for hours, and make happy, rosy memories
with my boys.
When they were around 2 years old, inspired by the success
of my mommy friends and the parenting blogs I adored, I excitedly
laid out paper and paints, prepared elaborate craft projects, bought games, and
borrowed books from the library. We were going to have FUN and be happy and
laugh and I would take pictures and make photo albums of my happy kids and my
happy motherhood.
Here’s what really happened:
The paints were a mess. The paper got soaked and ripped. The
colors were mixed into a color that resembled a really bad poopy diaper. The art project took
longer to clean up than the boys spent "painting."
My boys played “Ants in my pants” instead of moving their
gingerbread men through Candyland. The colored cards flew all over the living room,
joining the tiny demon-cherries from “Hi-Ho! Cherrio!” The homemade Memory
cards were ripped and crumpled.
Cooking was a circus. Cups of flour were dumped on the
counter instead of in the bowl. Eggs slipped and smashed on the floor. And one
of my sons was so afraid of the hand-mixer that he ran screaming out of the
room before it was even turned on.
There was no snuggling and reading for hours. My two year
olds could barely sit still for one picture book. “Green Eggs and Ham”? WAY too
long! I learned to flip through books at the library and throw back the ones that
had more than 15 pages or 10 words per page.
This was supposed to be a "Two hours of FUN" box! not "10 minutes and I'm done" box
I was discouraged, depressed even. I was failing at Mommy-hood. Most days I thought: “Well, that was a fun 5 minutes. What am I
going to do for the rest of the day? I guess I could start by cleaning up this
mess.”
We made snakes with beads for 3 minutes one day. Then I cleaned up beads for the next 3 months
I wanted to make
those special memories with my kids but every activity was either a failure or
over before I could even snap a picture.
Plus I was going nuts and yelling things like “THIS IS
SUPPOSED TO BE FUN! We are GOING to have FUN, OK???”
I was a real Fun Mom.
I eventually gave up. I lowered my expectations for Fun
Mommy-hood.
We didn’t do messy craft projects anymore. I threw “Hi-Ho
Cherrio” and the memory cards in the trash. I made cookies while my boys
napped. We read “The Foot Book” instead of “Green Eggs and Ham.”
And this was the best thing I could have ever done.
I
discovered that the things I liked to do were not the things that my kids liked
to do. The happy memories I had of coloring, playing board games, cooking
sweets and treats, and reading on the couch with my mom for hours were not the
same things that made my boys happy.
I had to accept that they loved running and wrestling, not
sitting still playing board games.
I swallowed the fact that they weren’t interested in
coloring or “making things.” And I realized that any craft that took longer to
prepare or clean up than it did to make and play with was way overrated.
I still made them sit and read with me but we would read one
board book instead of three picture books.
And when I did tackle that Pintrest Project from my “Fun
Activities for Kids!” board, I learned to say “Well, that was fun!” after 3.5
minutes and really mean it.
So glad I have this picture because I think this is the only time they wore these adorable pirate costumes
No comments:
Post a Comment