“What is their bedtime?” the babysitter would inquire on those rare occasions when we could trick, er, convince one to stay with the Big Guy and sibs. Her look of utter confusion was always just so darn stinkin’ priceless when our response was to burst into gales of laughter. Sometimes we would take pity on the poor girl and explain but then we would have to explain why they didn’t have to brush their teeth before bed, why they could watch whatever they wanted on TV and why they were welcome to anything in the fridge and cupboards. As long as they washed their hands after they ate. (Oh, and that pesky rule about murder.) That was it.
The reason for this was one thing and one thing only: the Big Guy. We felt that having him go into a tirade and skewer the babysitter’s eyeballs with a fork would be a Bad Thing. I can’t help but think the babysitter would agree had we asked. For obvious reasons, we never did. (We didn’t get out much.)
However.
The years have passed, the Big Guy is mostly a cuddly (large, hairy) teddy bear and the need for rules, very specific ones, have increased. And they had best cover everything, contain no loopholes and be looked over by the family attorney if we know what’s good for us. This is because, though the Big Guy is without guile, the other two are not. To my surprise, I have had to come up with rules along the lines of,
No cookies before breakfast
Oh, and by the way, you have a bedtime
You absolutely may not, under any circumstances, wipe your boogers on the wall (or the window or the upholstery in the car)
Picking up trash off of the playground is okay. Taking it out of the garbage receptacles in order to win “who has the biggest pile of trash” game is not acceptable. (The principal is so with me on this one.)
And for the love of Mike, no using the dog as a dartboard!
Oh, and last but not least, Miss Delacourt Speaks Her Mind is required reading.
Pool Desecration: Why We Can't Take The Big Guy Anywhere #47
Posted by Heidi in Down Memory Lane, swimming pool desecration, The Big Guy
We have a tough time doing anything together as a family. For example, the Middle Child can’t tolerate a lot of noise yet the Big Guy can’t live and breathe without making a lot of noise. When noise happens, particularly whilst watching TV or eating dinner or just hanging out in the same general area, the Middle Child gets very nasty. Meanwhile, the Big Guy can’t tolerate an excess of emotion of any kind, particularly the brand of nastiness at which the Middle Child excels. Indeed, it is imperative that all of us be inordinately even-keeled and soft spoken in order to prevent the Big Guy from spinning off into one emotional extreme or the other. This makes watching TV or even eating dinner together nigh on impossible. You know that whole thing about eating dinner together as a family every night in order to safeguard the welfare of our children? At our house, it has the opposite effect.
In addition, (as if that weren’t enough) the Big Guy needs a very consistent routine, particularly during the witching hour which at our house starts pretty much around 4 P.M. and continues until we can manage to hog-tie, blindfold and gag the three of them and get ‘em into bed. Needless to say, we don’t go out very often, especially not at night, not even individually. The hog-tying is a two person job and as the Spouse and I are fond of one another, we hate to abandon each other at such a time. However, one hot late-summer day, we received an invitation to attend a pool party later that night at the home of a family from church. I wanted to say no, I should have said no, it was on the tip of my tongue to say no, but this family is part of a large extended family, a pillar of the church kind of family, and I felt that we would somehow become social outcasts if I rejected their invitation. Besides, they had just built a large lovely home with an indoor pool and I confess I wanted to see how the other half live.
So we went.
We were the first of about seven or eight families to arrive but the Nice Family have a large number of fun active boys who were all in the pool having a swell time playing King of the Giant Inflatable Octopus. Our Little Guy took one look at the rough play and went right to the hot tub. The Middle Child disdained the boy action as well, despite her emphatic claims that she is not a girly-girl. The Big Guy, however, joined right in the fun. Never mind that he outweighed the biggest boy in the pool by at least 100 pounds and was sadly lacking in coordination, he attempted to fling himself onto the giant octopus with the determination of a beached whale desperate to live. Amazingly, in light of the time of evening and his utter and total failure to become king of the giant octopus (or anything else for that matter) the Big Guy was having a great time and laughing like a drowning hyena (that is, if hyenas laugh while drowning or even come near water except to drink it and so on and so forth). Sad to say, launching ones-self into the air simultaneous to hysterical laughter, uses a lot of stomach muscles, muscles which, in this case, don’t often get that kind of intense work-out. Sadder to say, stomach muscles have everything to do with your, er, stomach and when they contract uncontrollably from unaccustomed usage, they, well, er, contract.
Needless to say, said stomach muscles contracted spectacularly and with perfect timing; in other words, just in time for the rest of the families who had been invited to the party to enter the pool area and have a front row seat to the show we like to call “What The Big Guy Had For Dinner”. Those who were (inevitably) late to the party didn’t miss much as it took The Spouse a full forty five minutes to broom the evidence from the bottom of the pool. Lucky for the other swimmers (who, in fairness, could have been sent flying to their deaths through the Big Guy’s attempts at King-dom rather than merely erupted upon) this nice indoor pool was so ginormous they could retire to the other side while clean-up (gag!) proceeded. Meanwhile, Mr. Nice took the Big Guy to the attached bathroom/steam room/shower, the one that prevented wet dirty kids from tracking dirty wetness through the house, and got him cleaned up. I admired the kindness of Mr. Nice. Still I was willing to bet a pony Mr. Nice, as he hosed down my large son, was thinking the chunk of change he spent on that washroom was worth every penny.
Was it a horribly humiliating traumatic experience? Yes, it was. Did we get over it? Yes, I am proud to say we carried on exactly as if it hadn’t happened. The party went on, people reacted (or didn’t) exactly as I would have wished and I was busy happily contemplating punch and cookies. That was when The Spouse appeared at my elbow, leaned into me the way he does when he is feeling paranoid about being overheard and hissed, “The Big Guy and I are leaving. We’re going to slip out the side door. See ya!”
“But, but,” I spluttered, “what if someone notices? How will I and the Middle Child and the Little Guy get home?!?”
He made no reply, only tossed the cell phone at me and slipped away into the night.
(Why We Can’t Take The Big Guy Anywhere #48)
I knew what The Spouse was thinking, “Here we are, invited to the home of a scion of the church for the very first time, a nice big expensive home with a nice big expensive pool, and my son ralphs all over everything! We can’t take him anywhere! He is 16! When are family activities going to get any better? Will they ever be tolerable? Will we be isolated from the rest of humanity forever?” And then, “I’m hungry (read: tired, humiliated, over-whelmed and exhausted)! I’m going home to get something to eat!” (read: eat, watch TV, sleep and generally self-medicate).
Heck, we coulda done that without leaving the house! We could have avoided the whole sorry mess. Our children could have knocked an entire session off of a long line of therapy sessions AND I wouldn’t have had to feel sorry for the Nice Family who had to endure the desecration of their pool.
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