Author: wrekehavoc

give away the giving tree

give away the giving tree

i’ve started looking at a site called librarything. for anyone who grooves on books, this is a wonderland of cataloging books you’ve read or own. i’m having a lot of fun picking books i’ve read and making a list (as if i have any time to do any of this, of course. what did i do before the internet, i wonder? sleep? watch TV? interact with actual people?)

but i just came upon the giving tree by shel silverstein. and i can stay quiet no longer. someone bake me a cake with a file in it, for i know the library police will surely be by to take me away to library hell (where everyone is stuck reading proust or nietzsche.)

everyone gushes about this amazing book as if it’s the best thing since sliced bread. but on behalf of all the mothers in the world, i would like to point out that there is nothing good about teaching children that they should expect their loved ones to throw themselves into the fires of martyrdom, all to satisfy their own underdeveloped desires. i do a hell of a lot more good in my children’s lives as a person who remains alive; and occasionally, their requests threaten to knock that balance off-kilter. to keep myself alive, there are times when i simply have to say one terrible, horrible, no good word (with apologies to ms. viorst, who i love): “NO!”

if there is anyone out there who can actually convince me that this book actually has merit, i’m all ears… anyone who hasn’t died from cutting off her arms to satisfy her child, that is.

making scents

making scents

last night, while drying off after taking what seemed like a thousand-year shower, BC turned to me and asked, “mama, do i smell bad?” clearly, my delightful little seven and a half year old is ready to embark on those lovely questions which must never be answered truthfully — questions like “does this dress make me look fat?” and “do you love me?”

she smelled divine, like a little blueberry, thanks to the half-gallon of shampoo she poured on her head, her body, and probably on the walls of the shower. “why are you asking me that?” i asked in return.

“adriana told me i smelled bad,” she said with a pout. i know a lot of BC’s little friends. this name was new to me.

“who is adriana?”

“she’s one of the more “fashionable” (she said while putting little quotation marks in the air – has she learned quotation marks yet?) girls in school.”

“well, i don’t know much about her, but you don’t smell bad, and i would tell you if you did, now, wouldn’t i?”

“yes, mama.”

“what a mean thing for someone to say, that you smell bad. is this girl someone you want to be friends with?”

BC sighed. “well, she was nice to me later on this afternoon. she hangs out with a bunch of other girls.”

“well, i don’t need to be around anyone who tells me i smell bad. if she starts being nice to you, that’s one thing. if she tells you that you smell, well, i would just tell her that you aren’t interested in talking to her unless she has something nice to say.”

“mama, do i smell?”

“honey, not today. ”

yep. teen angst. it starts at seven now.

why do i do these stupid things?

why do i do these stupid things?

More EmotionalYou have:
47% SCIENTIFIC INTUITION and
62% EMOTIONAL INTUITION
The graph on the right represents your place in Intuition 2-Space. As you can see, you scored above average on emotional intuition and about average on scientific intuition.Keep
in mind that very few people score high on both! In effect, you can
compare your two intuition scores with each other to learn what kind of
intuition you’re best at. Your emotional intuition is stronger than
your scientific intuition.
Your Emotional Intuition
score is a measure of how well you understand people, especially their
unspoken needs and sympathies. A high score score usually indicates
social grace and persuasiveness. A low score usually means you’re good
at Quake.Your Scientific Intuition
score tells you how in tune you are with the world around you; how well
you understand your physical and intellectual environment. People with
high scores here are apt to succeed in business and, of course, the
sciences.


Try my other test!
The 3 Variable Funny Test
It rules.

 
My test tracked 2 variables How you compared to other people your age and gender:

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You scored higher than 5% on Scientific
free online dating free online dating
You scored higher than 34% on Interpersonal

Link: The 2-Variable Intuition Test written by jason_bateman on Ok Cupid, home of the 32-Type Dating Test

shopping with my seven year old grandmother

shopping with my seven year old grandmother

tonight is the coveted snowflake ball, a big dress-up-do for brownies and their significant daddies. BS even went out and bought her a corsage for the occasion (one parent informed him that she would be the only one without one if he neglected this, thus suffering shame and disappointing and ending up on an analyst’s couch at 30.) BC is very excited about attending, although she really didn’t have a thing to wear for the blessed event. we went tosyms this afternoon (because an educated consumer is their best customer, but me, i’m just trying to avoid the mall maelstrom) figuring we’d find shoes, tights, and maybe even a dress.

miss thang found two fancy-shmancy bonnie jean spring/summer dresses, two pair of tights, a pair of black patent leather shoes, and a purse to match. (when you’re seven, you see, you are seasonless and can get away with sleeveless thingies in february.) as the dresses were both $19.99 a piece, i figured, aw, what the hell. she has her cousin’s communion later this spring, so she should be able to wear the other then. one dress is a drop waist pink eyelet number with lots of flounces. “mama,” she said, “i love this dress, but it doesn’t t w i r l.” twirling, you see, is a very important criteria for a dress. the other dress has a funky, 1960s vibe, complete with a big kitschy pin in the front. i could never pull that one off, but BC? even strangers in the dressing room were commenting. (that, of course, bit me in the butt later on. at syms, an educated customer has to try on clothes in front of other educated customers, all butt nekkid. despite my neverending stream of no one’s looking at YOU, honeys, i couldn’t shake her entreaties. “but mama, they ARE looking at me!” anyway, this dressed, it t w i r l e d in a big way.

happiness is…

anyway, we decided to troll a little for mommy things. BC picked out a bikini. in my size. in theory. “darling,” i noted, “i haven’t worn a bikini since you were born.” a man walking by laughed so loud that i wanted to crawl into a hole and self-immolate. we then proceeded to check out shirts and sweaters. she found a leopard print sweater that reminded me of the bonnie and bill leopard sweater i have that was my grandmother’s and that is so fahncy that i cannot bear to part with it, even though i don’t think i would ever walk out of the house in that thang. she found every post-xmas sale sparkly sweater. i looked at the ceiling and said a small thank you. it was like shopping with my gram (BC is her namesake.) she touched every single item on the rack.

yep. belle freeman is alive and well and working her way through syms.

sturm and drang in the 1st grade

sturm and drang in the 1st grade

BC just figured out that one of her little friends, a girl whose birthday is about a week before her own, did not invite her to her birthday party, even after we invited her to BC’s. i had to take the moral high road on this one publicly: “well, honey, maybe she had a very expensive birthday party where she could only invite one or two friends…?” how else can you explain why someone who plays with you every day neglects to invite you to a birthday party? i’m frankly otherwise mystified why this happened unless the little girl secretly loathes BC. i mean, i happen to even know the parent casually, so i’m really surprised at any other reason other than expense.

and yet you can’t be rude and confront the issue.

these are things that make me crazy. see, i’m one of those head-on, straight-on, let me have it, good or bad, so i can move on with my life type of people. i hate game-playing; i am not exactly great at feigning coy politeness. one of my best friends and i to this day have a tough time talking about her dating ideology, as she believes in The Rules, whereas i just can’t imagine anything that isn’t basic and direct. so of course, i want to know why a parent would help to ensure that right now, at this moment, my kid is a sad little tomato. if there were months in between the two parties, then i would understand; i mean, shit happens. kids fall out. whatever. but one mother slipped when talking with me about BC’s party: “wow, it’s the same day as X’s party… oh, but it is a different time, so it should be okay.” i just smiled and bit my tongue

the best part of it: this same child invited another child to BC’s birthday party. essentially.

so i have to keep my mouth shut. get over it. all that. but you know what? first graders aren’t restricted by the same rules of etiquette that bind an old mama like me. i mean, this other child, when inviting another child (who came) to BC’s birthday party, said, “BC will give you an invitation soon.” so when discussing the issue, i said to BC: “hey. you know, you can ask her why you weren’t invited to her birthday party.”

or, from where i come from, turnabout is fair play.

where does the innocence go?

where does the innocence go?

…it really hits home the day your child tells you about school security drills….

BC came home from school the other day and told me that they had practiced tornado drills and security drills. “what do you do for tornado drills, I asked. “oh, we go into our cubbies and smush ourselves in. it’s lots of fun!” she squealed, reminding me for a moment of that wonderful WWII movie Hope and Glory.

“what do you do for security drills, sweetheart?” i asked.

“we run into the classroom, lock the door, and put something over the door window so the bad person can’t see us or get into our classroom.”

we never had to do that growing up.

my child painted a Picasso with his peas. and you?

my child painted a Picasso with his peas. and you?

i am always intrigued when i hear parents wondering what to do about their gifted children. i don’t know a single mom out there who thinks, gee, my kid’s a dumbass, what will i do to keep him from eating his boogers? it’s always the opposite: oh dear, my child has just composed music to accompany the seriocomic play he also wrote. he’s two and a half. what shall i do to keep him stimulated and ready for brain surgery by age 5?

i must confess that i have had moments like this myself. the other day in the car, we were riding to work and school and daycare with the radio blaring. the first 4 notes or so of “a day in the life” came on. before you could say lysergic acid diethylamide, Jools blurted out “The Beatles!” BS and i looked at each other quizzically (until BS realized by doing so, he would not be paying full time and attention to the road.) most adults i know can’t do that. and “a day in the life” is not a song we play in heavy rotation around here. i’m really fired up about what the hell his little synapses are up to these days.

of course, i mentioned this to my dad the other day. “sher,” he said, “you were able to do that too. apple trees don’t have pears.” which is sorta logical, i suppose. if i’m a freak, it stands to reason that i would pass on some freak-like traits to my kids. don’t know if it means they’ll get on game shows and win, too, but what fun to think about it, huh.

i think people who hope and pray for gifted children have never been gifted themselves. roll over, then, and let me tell you a little bit about what it can be like for a gifted kid. i taught myself to read. i actually wrote stories before i entered school. when they tested me in 2nd grade, i had a college reading level. now all of this can of course make a parent wildly proud, like it is some wonderful reflection on their upbringing abilities and genes. maybe it is. maybe it isn’t.

but being gifted isn’t always the biggest blessing in the world. you end up as class librarian because your teacher doesn’t know what the hell to do with you when it’s time for reading groups. you end up very frustrated when your friends are not reading the same sorts of things you are (i still remember book report time in seventh grade when i chose “soul on ice” by eldridge cleaver and none of my friends had a clue what a black panther was outside of a zoo). sometimes, your expectations of your friends’ abilities is so weirdly skewed. i play piano by ear and have perfect pitch. i remember a game when i was young where i would randomly pick a radio station, listen to it, then pick out the song i just heard. then, i would do the same for my friend amy and get annoyed with her when she couldn’t do it. (and my mom gave me hell for that once, too.) and, of course, there was the time when i told amy to resolve her anger by smashing her driveway with a sledgehammer (i had read a psychology book that talked about getting your anger out in such ways) and her father nearly took said sledgehammer to my head when he saw what we had done.

i hope my kids learn to love to learn like i do — that’s the very best part of being gifted, and you don’t even have to be gifted to have that gift. if they are gifted or not, i guess i don’t care so much as long as they like school and feel challenged. in the end, i don’t think it wildly worthwhile to worry a lot about whether Jools or BC are getting enough stimulation. they probably get more stimulation than what’s good for them, i think. what they need is to play outside. often. get dirty. often. yell and holler and sing and make up stories. often.

and i need to calm down about this whole childhood development thing. often.

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