‘Your sons are killing me!’ April 08
Jesus, where can I even begin? This has been the month when we thought maybe you two had won, and we’re still not sure we won’t be clambering into a helicopter on the roof before the next month is out, leaving the place to you and your oppressive regime of endless howling and wanting.
Then you’ll be all nice for 25 seconds and we’ll congratulate ourselves on having procreated until the next whine marathon throws us back into our circular recriminations of so whose bright idea was it to have two of them?
Basically, it’s been 30 days of ear-splitting noise punctuated by the occasional crack of a head against a floor or television set — or, remarkably frequently, another head. The weather has not helped, as spring postponed itself behind a veil of nearly constant rain and drizzle, turning the apartment into a stressure-cooker of times-out and germ incubation. And so of course there’s been the related health lock-down as well. When neither of you was coughing up parts of yourself, nearly all of our energy has been spent in trying to come up with ways to distract you from destroying each other. As soon as we got a break from nearly constant nose-siphoning, for example, we fed your shared locomotive obsession by paying a visit to the old Yugoslav steam engine near the railway station:
And there was the first-ice-cream-of-almost-spring outing:
Serving as both a scream-defeating distraction and an incentive to get Adam’s behavior to suck marginally less, there’s been the Swimming Pool Project. This began as a simple If you want x then behave y arrangement, but it quickly devolved into a byzantine array of charts, graphs, calendars, and color-coded stickers for bad, medium-bad, and marginally not-technically-horribly-bad behaviors in a complex Behavior Matrix. Of course Adam understands all the rules and corollaries thereto.
Anyway, he did get to go to the massive Vodno Mesto Atlantis as an Easter Monday treat, evaded the sinister pitfalls of the Behavior Matrix by the skin of his teeth for a return visit (during which he mastered the water slide), and today as I write this he is one time-out/Alek-choking away from the Behavior Matrix’s incontestable decision on whether another visit will take place soon.
Though Adam is the one determining whether or not we go, Alek took to the water with even more enthusiasm and natural talent.
Alek’s other budding enthusiasms include rubbish inspecting, which is nothing new.
We’ve really been impressed with what a pretty little monkey you’ve been turning out to be, but the sweeter you look the more vexing you become in actual fact, which turns out to be rather important. This is a kind of transition month for you, Alek, as you begin to really shed your baby shell and emerge as something approaching a boy. This is accompanied by much deep frustration on your part and a certain amount of resistance from your brother, who is not ready to let you out of his stick-shaped shadow nor to share the limited amount of boy resources in this house. This has only added to the enormous amount of stress in the place, and there really are days that we’re ready to sell you both for medical experiments.
Fortunately, you’ve developed a habit your brother never cultivated: you’ve got a duda addiction bad, a real monkey on your back. We’re trying to break you of it, but it’s no easier for us than it is for you, since it’s often the only way we ever get any silence these days.
A trip to the playground keeps you two from each other’s throats for ten to fifteen minutes, with luck.
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Left: quiet Alek puts in a token appearance. At right, the real story (please mute your computer’s speakers). If Adam’s phase provides any guidance, things should quiet down sometime in mid-2010. | ![]() |
I do not know what this is about. Ask your mother.
Now it’s time to admit that we have turned in desperation to the benevolent cyclopic gaze of the TV screen, in amounts that shame us as much as they bring relief. If endless iterations of Thomas The Tank Engine: The Early Years Disc One will not soothe it, it cannot be soothed. Unsoothable. Papa spent long hours slaving over a hot Handbrake to get the Apple TV packed with kid vid, and now it’s paying off in daily languid waves of LCD opiates.
In addition to the deathless embrace of Thomas and Friends, this month we’ve been watching a lot of They Might Be Giants’ ABC/123 stuff, and you guys are deeply in its thrall. Above, you are watching “One Dozen Monkeys”, which, coincidentally, is also the scientific unit for measuring the destructive power of a 15-month-old baby.
And here we all are watching something about two girls and a cup, I guess:
One day you’ll look back on all this television and thank us for convincing you that trains have personalities and weltanschauungen, you’ll be grateful that we exposed you to the twisted outlook of TMBG at such tender ages. But to be thankful later you’ll have to make it that long, so STOP CHOKING EACH OTHER, YOU MONKEYS.
Please don’t destroy each other. Not quite yet.
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April 21st, 2008 at 14.48 CEST+2.00
The lower lip grin is great, but I think my favorite is the “going down the slide with Mama” photo. Such pure joy in Alek’s face.
I’d be curious to hear more about this behavior matrix sometime if you feel like sharing your parenting algorithms.
April 21st, 2008 at 15.48 CEST+2.00
This is not helping Matt’s cause. I’m ready to call it good, but Matt has this CRAZY idea that Bridget needs a sister.
April 21st, 2008 at 16.30 CEST+2.00
Nice to see you back and idyllic as ever.
That video may very well be the scariest thing you’ve ever linked to.
April 21st, 2008 at 16.33 CEST+2.00
Love the last photo.
We too have been resorting to the ‘tube a little more than I’d have liked (mostly Disney movies broken up into 20-minute chunks, and the occasional episode of Dora the Explorer but the latter only when I’m not around because I hate Dora with every fibre of my being).
April 21st, 2008 at 18.00 CEST+2.00
Excellent post. I’m forwarding it to my wife as part of my “one is plenty” campaign.
Re: “duda” — Sg calls our laptops “dooders” and, if she is anything like her parents, will develop a severe dooder addiction. Not sure which is worse.
April 22nd, 2008 at 15.33 CEST+2.00
Dude, that was Great! I could copy and paste the text, throw in some pics of my sons and that would be my life.
My youngest son exemplifies the old saying, “If I had of had my second child first, I wouldn’t have had any more”. I love him to death, but boy is he a handful.
My wife, while on break from school once had the kids full time. I received a text message from her on the third day that read, “I’ve made an appointment for your vasectomy!”. …ouch…
April 22nd, 2008 at 20.52 CEST+2.00
Thanks, guys, for your kind remarks about the pictures. This month we had a nice pool to draw from, but also had to include some of lesser quality but higher verité. Erik: I know what you mean about the one with Alek’s first experience on a slide — he has that look on his face an awful lot these days.
Martha and aquariumdrinker: H O L D F A S T.
Simon: I have to say that the potential guilt about the one-eyed babysitter is assuaged somewhat by my lack of hatred for most of the stuff we offer them. Thomas may preach conformity and overall smarminess, but not without a certain charm. Dora I am not familiar with, and based on your say-so I will likely never make a point of seeking her out.
Alan: Magda brought up the V-word even before Boy #2 saw the light of day. I haven’t gone under the knife yet, but that’s due more to local restrictions than my being a chicken. Which, oh yeah, I am.
April 23rd, 2008 at 00.39 CEST+2.00
Among my parent friends, there seems to be as little love for Dora as there was back in the day for Barney.
April 23rd, 2008 at 00.49 CEST+2.00
Relevant Family Guy YouTube link.
“It’s like, ‘Why do you wear that if you don’t want attention,’ but you know you shouldn’t think that way because of the sexual harassment meeting you all had to go to. Seriously, how lame was that? And you couldn’t help but notice that the female lawyer running the seminar had a huge rack, like ridiculously huge for someone who has to talk about that kind of stuff. Well, I guess that’s the definition of the word IRONYYYYYY.”
You’re welcome.
April 25th, 2008 at 02.41 CEST+2.00
Sgazzetti, you have the most superb way with words. Your blogs about the boys make me laugh out loud. I especially enjoyed the one a month or so ago about you and Adam hatching out the mysterious worm (?) that your sister sent for Christmas. I don’t know what you do for a living, but I hope it involves writing.
April 25th, 2008 at 15.50 CEST+2.00
Dude, you’re scaring me. Can I request that the baby shell stay on Claire? Puhleeze? I’m scared of the whines and trash-digging in my future. Yikes!
April 30th, 2008 at 02.20 CEST+2.00
Wonderful photos! Alek indeed looks like a young boy now. It would appear though that Adam is still prone to taking a wiz in the great outdoors, this time on the steam engine wheel. Surely not.