Parents, remember the days when all you had to do in the morning was wake up, get the coffee going, find some clothing that reasonably matched, maybe wonder for a few moments what has become of your life, and then get yourself to work? Better yet, remember when those mornings felt busy and stressed and frazzled? The traffic, the emails, the overbearing bosses, the unreasonable clients and their unreasonable deadlines, it was all so…
Yeah, in comparison to your mornings now, I think the words you are looking for include “pretty”, “damn”, and “easy.”
Why? What’s in a morning, in the Land of Small Children-Raising?
I will share with you what’s typically in mine.
Oh, where to begin? Let’s start in the darkness of pre-dawn, when it all must necessarily start, if I am to stand any chance of getting through this thing. For me, this is the smooth part, the part when, in the eerie quiet of my kitchen, I come up with the Game Plan: what lunches will be sent, what breakfasts will be attempted, what clothing will be worn, what medicines need to be taken. Then I get to work, going through the progressions of packaging sandwiches pleasing in their predictability with fruits and vegetables likely to be ignored; of apportioning cereal into plastic bowls and putting Gummy Bear vitamins in Dixie Cups, two for each child; of getting the shoes out of the closets and measuring out antibiotics for the treatment of ear infections. During this time everything is so under control and well-organized and I feel like I know what I’m doing. The breakfasts are on separate place-mats, demarcating everyone’s table space, and the lunches are all packed and ready to be put in the Minivan trunk, and I know what the weather is going to be like and whether there is any need for hats and gloves, and if by now if they still haven’t woken up I am so ready to dominate this game go ahead kids wake up and come on down here and BRING THAT [_____] ON!!!
Things start going sideways almost comically early. What really should happen first is that either (a) J and G wake up at the same time, which would allow me to get them dressed and get their teeth brushed while E is still sleeping; or (b) they all get up at the same time, which, while a little crazy initially, would let me get all the dressing and the teeth-brushing out of the way at once.
But (a) or (b) only occur about 5% of the time, if that. What is far more likely is that G wakes up first, setting off a nasty chain-reaction of unplanned occurrences. At first, he is a cheerful morning companion, greeting me as he often does with a big hug and an eager morning smile and dutifully eating his breakfast (likely because he didn’t eat his dinner the night before). But his morning pleasantness changes abruptly, without any real cause, and for some reason he gets strangely restless, and after I run up the stairs and scramble as nimbly and quietly as I can (he and J share a room; E’s is directly adjacent to it) to find him some clothing, he proceeds to not want to get dressed, and to run away from me when I try to do that. Naturally, then E wakes up, probably because I wasn’t quiet enough, or because our stairs are excessively creaky, or because G is making too much noise, or does the actual reason really matter now?
At some point in time, which seems now like the distant past, I used to be able to let E hang out in her crib and sing “Maybe” and other songs from “Annie” to herself while I attended to things like dressing reluctant children. She still sings the Annie songs, but she has also mastered the art of climbing out of the crib. So, before dressing G, I’ve got to run up there and prevent this from happening. G follows me up and into her room, at which point he and E start singing the Annie songs together very, very loudly, which, really, is a bit much for the morning, but since time is continuing to tick away, at least all the noise will start the process of waking J up. Right?
Nope. When I take a quick peek in his room, he is sleeping as if it’s the middle of the night, as if the ghastly Broadway Performance going on in the other room isn’t happening at all. After I struggle to get E’s clothes on, and address all of her preferences (“I DON’T WANT DAT SHIRT…I WANT DIS SHIRT!”; “I PUT PANTS ON MYSELF!!!”; “NO SOCKS!! NO SOCKS!!”; and so forth), we go into the boys’ room, to wake J up, and to get his and G’s clothing on (at this point, I have forgotten that I previously brought clothes downstairs for G; those will remain wherever they are for the rest of the day). Well, if you mix Crabbiness with Extreme Melodrama, put it in a long body, and add some curly hair and tight pajamas, you get J, in the morning, having not woken up, and being forced to do so. I will spare you the details of the moaning and the groaning and the complaints of Injustice and Unfairness in the World; let’s just say that while he’s going through all of that, I am able to, pretty seamlessly, get G dressed and brush his and E’s teeth. It is at this point that I realize the Fundamental Truth of having three kids: at almost any given point in time, one of them isn’t cooperating.
Tick-tock, Tick-tock.
I tell J that we are going downstairs, and that he should meet us down there when he is ready. He sadly and pathetically asks if we can wait for him; and I am weak, I can admit that, so we wait. Have you ever had to wait for something to happen painfully slowly, with a 2-year old and a 4-year old? Exactly, Charlie Brown – good grief! In the process, he asks whether G has eaten breakfast. Yes, I say, he did, because he woke up earlier. “No fair!”, he pouts, adding to the long list of morning gripes. Of course, this complaint is totally insensible, but I find some patience, and I explain that maybe tomorrow morning, he should get up earli…..
He’s already not paying attention, focusing instead on a few stray Lego pieces on the floor, and remembering they are from some project he might have been working on. Then he stops putting his clothes on altogether, and starts to continue the project.
Tick-tock, tick-tock.
It is at these kinds of junctures that I have taken to gently closing my eyes and taking deep breaths, to exert some control over the now combustible combination of my desire to move things forward, to get on with the next stage (we just need to get down the damn steps!!), and my utter inability to do so.
Deep breath, deep breath.
One more time.. .deep breath, deep breath.
I re-direct him back to putting the clothes on, and I do that calmly, because the deep breathing helps and I’ve gotten my Zen back, however temporarily. Finally, he is dressed. Down the stairs we go.
Tick-tock, tick-tock.
Now we’re downstairs, in the kitchen, where J and E still need to eat breakfast. I sit them down and get them started, but E is quickly distracted by G’s running around the imaginary circle that surrounds our staircase and runs through the front foyer and the living room and the kitchen. So she flops off her chair and starts to follow him, doing something that isn’t quite running, but more like part horse-galloping and part skipping, and I don’t know where she got it from but I know she is not eating her breakfast. I tell G to stop running and E to stop doing whatever it is she is doing and I gather her up and bring her back to the table. But now I discover that there is a Number 2 in Number 3’s diaper. Back up the stairs we go.
While I am changing the tire, J finishes his breakfast, which dissolves any hope of E eating her breakfast, for if she couldn’t sit at the table with one boy not sitting at the table, she certainly isn’t going to do that with both of them not there. So I pour her milk into the nearest Sippy Cup, our version of The Roadie. While I am doing this, G declares that he has to use the bathroom, something I encouraged him to do when he first woke up, but of course he refused, and what the [____] do I know, right? Now, for the life of me, I can’t understand why he continues to forget to lift up his shirt before he pees, or why he can’t just aim the damn thing better, but in any event, he pees all over his shirt, and while I am by no means a stickler about sending them in with perfectly clean clothing, I can’t send him in a pee-soaked shirt.
I go back up the stairs, for another shirt.
At which point I hear the cries of E, which sound like she took a mild to maybe more serious-than-mild fall in the course of her horse galloping/skipping.
And then J can’t find the scissors he wants to use to make a cutout of The Tooth Fairy.
Tick-tock, tick-tock.
We are obviously not making any Progress. In fact, we are going backwards. We are like a bad football team. We maybe got a few First Downs, completing the old Screen Pass or two, but now we are getting sacked and we are fumbling and we are missing tackles and we are running the wrong way, all at the same time, which I know sounds impossible, but we are finding ways to do it!
I am feeling combustible again. And, like I said before, I am also weak, so that quickly gives way to despair. We are never going to get out of here, I think. What’s the point of all this, I ask myself? I want to give up and I suck at this and I just want to throw in the Towel. But even if that were a possibility, the plight is existential; there is no real escape. For if I give up, they would still be there, right in front of me, peeing on their shirts and horse-galloping and complaining, and at this moment, Work looks, if nothing else, like the only way to end this game which I am so clearly losing, and if there is anything worse than losing a game, it is losing a game that doesn’t actually end.
How’s that for inspiration?!?! Cue up the Rocky music!! I didn’t hear no bell!! One more round!! Let’s get these Things out the door!
Strangely enough, when I declare something like “OK everybody, let’s get going!”, everyone moves in the right direction, that being toward the Mud Room, which leads to our garage, which is where we primarily enter and exit the house. Oh yeah…look at that! That’s the spirit! I came out swinging! Finally! Don’t call it a Come-back! I own this!
But then we get to the Mud Room. I really have no idea what it is about our Mud Room, but it has become in our house the equivalent of the Bermuda Triangle. Literally everyone’s movement suddenly stops; all Progress comes to a halt; limbs suddenly become floppy and uncharged; and people start sitting down and staring blankly at things like the lone florescent light on the ceiling, or the washing machine. It has the same effect if we are coming in from being out somewhere; sometimes, after school, the boys, in particular, will literally not take their jackets off, lie down on the floor, and go to sleep. Yes, they go to sleep! If they actually do anything in this treacherous zone, it is nothing that furthers the cause for which we are there; it is, for them, an end in and of itself. One morning, for example, after I stuffed G’s feet into his shoes and tied them up, you know that he did while I chased E, who ran back toward the kitchen?
He untied them and took them off.
Deep breath deep breath deep breath deep breath.
So I’m like, hey, why did you take your shoes off, and he’s like, because I want J to show me how to tie them. Now J abruptly stops putting his shoes on and says “Oh yes, I can help him do that!”, and proceeds to do so. Really, I think? You’re going to be the Good Big Brother now? Don’t you know that now is NOT the time to be the Good Big Brother? Now is the time for you to ignore his ass like you do literally every other time he asks you for anything, in the great Tradition of Oldest Siblings Everywhere! Why? Because we have to GO! But I let the whole thing happen while I get E’s shoes and jacket on, and when it becomes clear that no laces are being tied, I put both sets of shoes on, and then the jackets, and at this point I don’t remember or care about what the weather is going to be like, because we are skipping hats and gloves and whatever else may or may not be advisable.
I march them out to the Minivan. I open the doors, and things like snack wrappers and banana peels and unfinished boxes of chocolate milk all fall out like an overstuffed closet, and there are random toys and unfinished art projects and all other kinds of [_____] all over the floors that distract them from being inserted into their car-seats (how, actually, does one get distracted from this?). Once they are all strapped in, I go back in the house and get the not less than 7 bags of stuff – 3 lunch boxes, 3 backpacks, and my work-bag – and I throw those in the trunk. Then I realize I forgot the Roadie, so I go back in to get that, which then causes J and G to want Roadies, so I go back in to get something for them, if only for the 3 or so minutes of quiet that will bring. Then I realize I forgot to set the stupid house alarm, which I go back in and do, and then, finally, if I have forgotten anything by now – for example, the close reader might have observed that J’s teeth never got brushed – it is too late, because we are getting out of here.
The game’s not yet over. I still have to unload them and drop them off at school, and I’ve got another 2000 or so words to describe that typical process. But at this moment, we are out of the house, and not still in the house, and I am going to enjoy those facts, at least for the time being.