The Mother Tongue

I kiss my baby with this mouth

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    When Heather Chapman isn't wrangling her 3-year-old son or having the rare meal with her husband, she works as a Herald-Leader news assistant in the Features and Metro departments. She is a life-long resident of Lexington, and in her infrequent spare time enjoys crocheting, calligraphy, and losing badly at Guitar Hero II. Heather very rarely has a good hair day.

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Archive for June, 2008

Hoping to find the soul of wit

Posted by Heather on June 26, 2008

So help me, I am going to do something violent to my keyboard if this stupid Twitter widget doesn’t start working soon.

At any rate, if anyone is interested, I now have a Twitter feed right here. I’m having fun exploring the new medium, would love to find some other Twitter feeds to follow.

Posted in Uncategorized | 6 Comments »

I, weenie.

Posted by Heather on June 25, 2008

This is absolutely absurd. I am 29 years old. I am reputed to be somewhat intelligent. I know, logically speaking, that I have nothing to be afraid of. But the primordial lizard brain way deep down inside me is telling me that there is of course something to be afraid of.

Which brings me to where I am right now: I’m done with work, but I’m terrified to go home because I know that the tiny little garden spider who lives in our hedge will have built a huge web right across the front steps. I swear, that spider isn’t even the size of a dime, but it spins a mighty web. If I run into that web, lizard brain is telling me that I will DIE, and that it will HURT, and that the bitty baby spider will instantly morph into a giant, slavering Shelob as it skitters toward me on sticky threads of doom.

I wonder if they’ll let me sleep under my desk.

Update: Right after I posted this entry, my husband called me to see when I was coming home. I told him I was on my way, and asked him to please do me a favor and make sure the front-porch was spider-free. He sighed, laughed, and agreed. We hung up and I drove home. As I walked up to the front porch, I stopped by habit and checked to see if there were any spider webs.

Oh boy, were there spider webs. There was, in fact, a huge web strung right between the two hedges that flank the porch. And right in the middle of that web were not one, but two garden spiders merrily going about their business.

I will deal with puke, poop, snakes, rats, bats, bugs, you name it. But there are some things I just cannot bring myself to fool with, and a giant spider web on my front porch is one of them, full stop, end of discussion.

Going in the back door was problematic since it was likely to be even more spider-infested than the front. So I sat right down on the sidewalk, pulled out my cell phone, and called my husband back. It took two tries to get him to pick up.

Him: Hello?!?!

Me: Hi honey. Soooo…you told me that you just napalmed the front porch.

Him: I did!

Me: You missed a spot. There’s a huge spider web right across the bushes and I am not going near that thing. Will you please bring me the broom?

Him: Do I have to? I’m trying to sleep! Just knock it away with your newspaper.

Me: I will not go near it, sorry. I would rather sleep in the car than try to get past that web.

I heard the phone crackle and some stomping just before the phone went dead. Then, a few seconds later, there he was, holding the broom and illuminated in the porch light like the patron saint of street hockey. My hero.

He gave the stairs and shrubs a few good whacks, then trudged back into the house, shaking his head and muttering about irrational fears and silly phobias.

Me: Okay, fine. You go learn to swim and then we’ll talk.

Him: Touché.

Posted in Uncategorized | 12 Comments »

IKEA is for kids

Posted by Heather on June 20, 2008

I have a confession to make: Instead of going to church this past Sunday, I DVR’ed the Southland Hour and went on a pilgrimage to worship the Norse god of retail at its temple in Cincinnati.

That is to say, I went to IKEA and shopped my little heart out.

In my defense, the trip was my friend Raviya’s suggestion, and I hadn’t seen her since she got back from a six-week stint in Iraq. And I want to kind of sort of brag about how, when I picked her up in the Herald-Leader parking lot, I managed not to throw my arms around her and cry like a homesick camper. Barely.

Anyway, we had a great time. The crowds weren’t nearly so thick as they were opening weekend, so I noticed quite a few things I didn’t see the first time around. The biggest thing I saw was how unbelievably family-friendly the whole place was. It was hands-down the most kid-hospitable big box store I’ve ever been to. Very smart decision on their part, too: women control 85% of household spending, so a store that offers inexpensive, stylish goods and makes shopping with kids tolerable is going to do very, very well. Just how kid-friendly is IKEA? Let me count the ways:

–The best parking in the lot is for families with small children and expectant mothers, and thoughtfully located so that you and the kids don’t have to cross any roadways to get to the store.

–They have a free daycare called Småland so you can drop off your kids and go shop for a while. It’s open to potty-trained children between 37″ – 54″ tall, and there’s a time limit–I think it’s 45 minutes on the weekend and 90 minutes on the weekdays, but I’m not 100% sure. An employee told me that parents can use Småland once per day and that the daycare workers all know CPR and first aid, and must undergo heavy background checks. The child-teacher ratio is 10:1, which is pretty standard for 3-year-olds.

–The women’s bathrooms have changing tables, Diaper Champs, and free Huggies. I’m not sure what size, though. Looked like 3’s, maybe? There’s also a very low sink there for little kids to wash their hands. There isn’t a low potty (like the kind you see in daycares), but some of the bathrooms have stepping stools. One or two of the stalls have those wall-mounted high-chairs so you can strap a baby in and go to the toilet without worrying about your kidlet wallowing around on the bathroom floor.

–There are also family restrooms available for parents with opposite sex kids, and a baby care room with a toilet, low sink, and a big comfy arm chair with pillows for nursing.

–Sprinkled throughout the store are these things called “play towers”: waist-high triangular kiosks with little spinny, touchy, whirligig games and stuff on them. That way, the kids will hopefully leave the merchandise alone and not bug their parents about being bored. I cannot remember, but I think some of them might have had little TVs on them with cartoons.

–Right at the store entrance there is a bank of free wall lockers so you can stash your diaper bag and/or purse while you shop.

–The cafeteria has children’s meals for 99¢ or $1.99. The portions are generous and the meal includes a drink. You can also buy jarred Nature’s Goodness baby food in the cafeteria line for 79¢.

–There’s a children’s area in the cafeteria with tiny, brightly-colored tables and chairs, soft flooring, a huge flat-screen TV showing PBS-type cartoons, and more of the aforementioned whirligig toys set into the walls for when the kids are done.

–Right next to the children’s area, there’s an island where you can pick up chunky neon plastic plates and cutlery, booster seats, and napkins. And for the babies, there are high chairs, disposable bibs, a microwave, and two bottle warmers.

–One more thing about the cafeteria: It was Father’s Day when Raviya and I went, so they had opened up a separate section of the cafeteria with paper and art supplies on all the tables so kids could make a card for their dads. I just thought that was a nice touch–the cherry on the thoughtful, convenient sundae that is IKEA.

Their commitment to children goes farther than the shopper’s comfort, though: IKEA is committed to using materials that are responsibly harvested and free from hazardous materials, and they require that IKEA suppliers in other countries do not use child labor and provide humane working conditions for their employees. Furthermore, IKEA actively works with UNICEF and the WHO in different programs aimed at preventing child labor.

Now, put all that together: the convenience of shopping there, plus the outstanding corporate philosophy, and it’s easy to see why IKEA gets my shopping dollars every time I get half a chance to drive up there.

Posted in Breastfeeding, Shopping, The Sprog, Won't somebody think of the children?!? | 12 Comments »

High heeled shoes for babies. For real.

Posted by Heather on June 16, 2008

[FADE IN] Two parents are standing over a crib, gazing fondly at the tiny baby who just fell asleep.

Mom: Aw, isn’t she just the sweetest thing you ever saw?

Dad: Well, of course. What a doll!

Mom: I am so smitten.

Dad: Me too, sweetie. Aren’t you glad we decided to have kids?

Mom: Mmhmm. [frowns]

Dad: What is it?

Mom: Oh, nothing, really.

Dad: No, tell me, honey. Please?

Mom: Well, it’s just that…I was just thinking that she just lacks style. A certain je ne sais quois, don’t you think?

Dad: Now that you mention it…

Mom: She rolls around all day playing happily in those frumpy little onesies and rompers, and poor girl, but they just don’t do a thing for her figure.

Dad: That, and the fuzzy bunny motif is just so five minutes ago.

Mom: Right! And you know how I’ve always wanted a daughter who looked kind of like Minnie Mouse…

Dad: And kind of like a hooker, right.

Mom: Well, I hope you don’t mind, but I went ahead and bought her these. [Pulls out a pair of hot pink satin Heelarious shoes]

Dad: Wait…are those what I think they are?

Mom: They sure are! Real high heeled shoes for babies. I got them in hot pink satin, black patent leather, and zebra skin!

Dad: Oh honey, they’re stunning! We can buy her a little black pleather mini skirt to go with them.

Mom: What a lovely idea! And I bet the baby barf will wipe right off that skirt. It’s such a relief to know that our tiny, innocent daughter will start out life looking great and with just the right idea about a woman’s priorities in life.

Dad: That’s right, darling. And when she turns eight we can go and buy a t-shirt that says “SKANK” in pink glitter for Daddy’s little princess.

Mom: That’s the spirit! With Heelarious shoes, I just know we’re starting her out on the right foot!

Both share a fond chuckle. [LIGHTS FADE]

(With credit to Fark.com for featuring the link to the very real Heelarious website.)

P.S. And to those of you poised to leave a comment about this is just a silly novelty item and I have no sense of humor, please know: I get that it’s essentially a gag gift. But I still think it’s a gag gift in unbelievably poor taste. That’s my story and I’m stickin’ to it.

Posted in Uncategorized | 9 Comments »

A moment of self doubt. More than usual, anyhow

Posted by Heather on June 12, 2008

A morose little thought just struck me. I was feeding Baby Girl a bottle this morning, and she was smiling adoringly at me as the early sun lit her hair afire. Even her eyelashes were neon. She cooed and patted my cheek, then snuggled down contentedly in my arms and tucked happily back into her bottle. She sighed and closed her eyes, drifting off to sleep as she suckled, perfectly warm, perfectly safe, perfectly secure.

Then I realized all once how much I mean to her, that I am truly the center of her whole world. She doesn’t care about my weight, or my crazy hair that badly needs a cut and color, or the bags under my eyes. She loves my body because it’s soft for cuddling. She loves my hair because she can bat at it and run her fingers wonderingly through it. She doesn’t see my dark circles because she’s only looking into my eyes and loving the attention and interaction she gets.

This should be a warming, empowering thought, but it isn’t because I can’t help but wonder what she’ll think of me a few years from now. The honeymoon is almost over with the Sprog. He has begun to turn a critical eye toward me, and I cringe at that. Every flaw I have comes back amplified by a thousand when I catch him looking at me thoughtfully.

I don’t lose sleep when I upset him because of a time-out or something, but I shrink in terror at the thought of disappointing him. How can I be someone’s role model when I screw up so much? Just about all I have going for me is my love for them. Reminds me of an old Oscar Wilde quote: “Children begin by loving their parents; as they grow older they judge them; sometimes they forgive them.”

Posted in The Sprog | 6 Comments »

Inside the mind of a 4-year-old boy

Posted by Heather on June 9, 2008

So what’s it like inside the mind of a 4-year-old boy? I’m not really sure, but after looking at my son’s first couple of journal entries, I think it’s a lot like that one time in college where I went to a party and ended up laying on the hood of someone’s Camaro with my friend Sarah, waving my fingers in front of my face and saying stuff like, “Duuuuude, fingers are weird. What if my hands existed in a parallel universe? Like, if their molecular structure was somehow duplicated and transported into another dimension? I wonder what they’d be doing right now. Wait, where are my shoes?”

Come to think of it, that’s still pretty much what it’s like inside my mind. But anyway: the Sprog. I wanted to get him into the habit of keeping a journal—it’ll make him a better writer later on and it’s a wonderful way to slow down after a busy day and reflect on what’s happened. It’s also incriminating evidence, just in case he ever grows up and tells his own children what a saint he was, and that Daddy would never have punched a wall because his Underoos didn’t match his t-shirt. So on Sunday I bought him a blank book (with a suitably cool cover) and explained to him what a journal was and how and why to use it. I said that, if he was interested in keeping a journal, he could tell me what he wanted to write in it, and I would do it for him until he was old enough to do it himself.

I also shamelessly told him that he could write exciting secrets in his journal and that nobody was allowed to look in there without his permission. Boy, that was just the ticket. The Sprog lit up like a Christmas tree on Red Bull and ran to get me a pen. The following journal entry is the result, exactly as he dictated it to me (I did ask him some open-ended questions to help him keep going when he seemed stuck); the only alterations I made were for name redactions. And he did, of course, give me permission to share it with you all. So read on and witness the dizzying majesty of my son’s mind.

June 8, 2008

We listened to sirens today. They were way way far away. They went out to Alumni and they went in a circle all around the city on New Circle Rd. We were at Arby’s when we heard the sirens. I’m not joking. When we were at Joseph-Beth we played, we got books, and we went through the Arby’s drive-through for drinks because it was a bunch of hot out there. At Joseph-Beth we went down the escalator. I liked it. We sat on the butterfly benches too. And we saw a big piggy bank hanging way up on the ceiling at Joseph-Beth with words on it for people who were riding on the escalator.

We bought a notebook we’re writing on, and Little House in the Big Woods, and Farmer Boy. Mommy read me some of Farmer Boy. It’s about the kid who grew up on the farm. He was tiny like a mouse**. I like the book. I want to buy it. I’m joking. We already bought it.

I broke my arm, Journal, ’cause I jumped off couch in [Baby Girl's] exersaucer. Then we went downstairs with a washcloth and an ice pack, then we turned and went downstairs and watched Noggin. It hurt and I cried. Then Mommy and Daddy came and we went to the hospital. Grandma and Papaw took [Baby Girl] to the hospital. The hospital exploded. I’m not joking. The doctor adopted me. Joking! I snuggled with Mommy and she was singing me a song. She was singing “You Are My Sunshine”. The doctors took a picture of my bones. They gave me a monkey. I’m liking the monkey. His name is Rite-Aid. The doctor put a cast on my arm and I’m eating popcorn.

I’m going to the doctor tomorrow to get a new cast. I want a yellow one. It’s not stickers—it’s really yellow. I want Mommy to draw Princess Leia and Luke Skywalker having a duel with Darth Vader on the cast. The End.

**Note: When I wrote this part, the Sprog touched my arm and said breathlessly, “Mama, make the words tiny like a mouse too! It’ll look cool!” Friends, this is what writers dream about when they want kids.

Oh, and by the way? We’ve been working on learning to write letters over the past few weeks, and the Sprog wrote his name all by himself for the first time this afternoon. I was so full of SQUEE that unicorns and confetti came out every time I opened my mouth today.

Posted in Uncategorized | 9 Comments »

Homecoming from Hell

Posted by Heather on June 2, 2008

It is said that Roman generals, parading through the streets in their chariots after a military victory, would have a slave next to them whose job was to whisper “Remember, thou art mortal” in the general’s ear. It was supposed to remind the generals that all things are fleeting, including victory, honor, even life itself.

I need to find one of those slaves to follow my son around, because he clearly believes he will live forever.

We came back from vacation yesterday at around 6 p.m. Had a great time, tell you about it later. We got some burritos from Taco Bell and intended to eat dinner quickly at home, reinstall the car seats, then go pick up the kids from my parents’ house.

It was not to be. No more than a minute after we walked in the door, my mother called me and said that the Sprog had jumped off the couch while playing about 10 minutes ago and wouldn’t stop crying. She thought he might have sprained or even broken his arm.Jackass logo

So we put the booster seat in the car (no time for Baby Girl’s seat) and dashed to Mom and Dad’s house. Baby Girl was overjoyed to see us, but the Sprog was a pitiful sight. My husband took one look at his arm, picked him up, and put him in the car to take him to the ER. I asked Mom and Dad to keep Baby Girl with them, and away we went.

The wait was mercifully short, but the whole time we waited, the Sprog was only happy when he was in my lap with me singing “You Are My Sunshine” over and over. I think he was so stressed out and worn out and hurting, the only way he could deal with it was by totally shutting down. So I sang to him, and he dozed, drooling on my chest.

We got in to see the doctor pretty quickly, got him some X-rays, and discovered that he had snapped both of the bones in his forearm. Fantastic. Once he could talk coherently, he said that he had hit his arm on Baby Girl’s Exersaucer. So there’s one good thing—we could at least sue Graco and fetch a comfortable retirement since they were so clearly negligent in issuing a product that might cause my son’s arm to break. You know, that one time when he was doing something stupid and dangerous when my mother’s back was turned for a second? Totally Graco’s fault. *rolls eyes*

But I digress. Right after the X-rays, a beautiful angel appeared next to my son’s bedside and told us all it was going to be okay. Well, okay, it was the nurse with the codeine, but close enough. Oddly enough, the Sprog perked right up after he was loaded to the gills on smack. I thought he might fall asleep for good or something, but no, he was bright-eyed and bushy tailed: “What’s that beeping sound, Mama? Why is that baby crying? Is another mommy having a baby? RIGHT NOW? Can I see it? What’s the thing on my arm? What’s a sling? Can I see my X-ray pictures? THAT WOULD BE SO COOL.” Turns out my son is a chatty drunk.

Anyhow, we got him home by 10:30, after a marathon visit to the pharmacy to get his pain meds. He clung tight to the stuffed purple monkey they gave him in the ER, which he had named “Rite-Aid ‘Giant Monkey’ Walgreens”, after the two pharmacies we had had to visit in order to get his prescriptions filled. We call the monkey Wally for short.

Undressing him for bedtime was an ordeal, and I finally had to cut his t-shirt off of him. I foresee a lot of button-down short sleeve shirts in his future. That, or I could get that Roman slave to dress him. As long as he’s making himself useful and all.

Posted in Uncategorized | 12 Comments »