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Nervous

23 January, 2007
Posted in: Siblings, Work

A while back a colleague said to me “you don’t have a blog or something daft like that?” and instead of replying in a suitably Jesuitical manner “why would you ask me something like that, do I look like I’m 16?”, I was caught on the hop and I said “yes”. He is the first person I’ve ever worked with who has known about the blog. It’s a little unnerving. We are friends as well as colleagues and I trust him to keep my secret safe (are you listening J?) but yet, the whole Chinese wall thing is mildly unsatisfactory. My colleague rubbed his hands in glee when he found out and said “it’s like being gay and wanting not to be outed”. Who would have thought this blog would bring me such a range of new experiences?

And then there’s another friend and former colleague who has heard that the blog exists and is, I am paranoidly convinced, slowly but surely scanning the blogosphere until he finds me. Not that there’s anything here I haven’t already told people; as one friend memorably remarked to me, “you would tell your life story to the person beside you at the bus stop”. Do other people’s colleagues know that they blog? Do they still have paid employment? Answers on a postcard, please.

In other news, my feckless brother is coming to visit tomorrow and as my mother says “you must be absolutely delighted”. Yes, yes, I am, of course I am. I just had to remind her that he has faults but she remains annonyingly unconvinced.

Hello there cruel world

22 January, 2007
Posted in: Princess

Please don’t make me beg. The children already do that. At 10.30 pm, I negotiated as follows with the Princess:

Me: You need to go to your own bed.

Her: Silent clinging.

Me: Daddy wants to go to sleep.

Her: Silent clinging.

Me: OK, you can sleep in our bed until I come into bed.

Her: Silent clinging.

Me: Do you want me to come to bed too?

Her: Silent clinging.

Me: OK, look, I’ll lie down with you for a bit in Mummy and Daddy’s bed.

Her: Victorious smile.

So, ahem, I see from the Irish Times that there are Irish blog awards. I mean fancy. If you were to nominate me, I would be pleased, I would be grateful, I would promise faithfully to reply more regularly to the odd commenter who comments here (just to let you know, your comments are the sunshine of my life), so, that’s it then, except would you call this a specialist blog? I’ve decided that it is. This is not a hint or any attempt to influence potential voters should they exist. Should you choose to do so, you could nominate me here, or not, of course. It’s a delightfully straightforward process, honestly. Would you prefer, if I slept on the floor?

She sings

19 January, 2007
Posted in: Princess, Twins

Yes, I know, more videos of my children, well you don’t have to look, if you don’t want to. I’d like you to know that her devoted aunt thinks she may have perfect pitch. Ahem. What do you think?

Wish me luck, I’m off to collect herself from school, thereafter we go to the creche to collect the boys and then on to the doctor’s where at least two of them will have to have jabs. I quake with fear, people.

Random

18 January, 2007
Posted in: Reading etc., Youngest Child

Firsts:

Michael walked across the room today. Daniel cannot do this and he is bitter.

The Princess remembered where she had left her doggy. She also reminded us that my brother is coming to visit next week; we have a lot on our minds, some things leak out.

I answered an internet questionnaire thingy for Peggy. I don’t normally do these things because I’m too lazy, but there you go. I sit here with my little fingers frozen to the keyboard to oblige (did I mention that we have no hot water and no heating tonight?)

1. Attrapez le livre le plus proche, allez à la page 18 et écrivez la 4ème ligne. corpses: most lie within what has become popularly known as

2. Sans vérifier, quelle heure est-il ? 23.49

3. Vérifiez :23.51

4. Que portez-vous ?

Electric blue Christmas present fleece over work clothes – not a great look.

5. Avant de répondre à ce questionnaire, que regardiez-vous ?

Flickr – trying to work out the mysteries of photo posting. I may be making progress.

6. Quel bruit entendez-vous à part celui de l’ordinateur ?

Nothing – all is silence though I expect to hear a little cry shortly.

7. Quand êtes-vous sortie la dernière fois, qu’avez-vous fait ?

I went out to the night shop to buy milk for the boys. They have consumed in excess of 3 litres since yesterday. Sigh

8. Avez-vous rêvé cette nuit ?

No. I slept from 11.00 to 6.00 and only got out of bed at 8.15. Fabulous.

9. Quand avez-vous ri la dernière fois ?Not since my loving spouse went to bed at 10.00 telling me not to stay playing with the computer all night. Can it really be nearly midnight?10. Qu’y a-t-il sur les murs de la pièce où vous êtes ?

A picture of men with currachs. A picture of yachts in Cork harbour framed by John Gilbert of Patrick Street, Cork: Print Seller, Frame Maker, Leather and Fancy Goods; Optician to the Eye Hospital and to the Faculty. A man of positively Victorian talents. A port of Cork calendar. A couple of Giles Norman prints of, um, boats. I am somewhat surprised by the nautical theme here. And a picture of her highness taken just before she finished at the creche. I remember Heather writing once about those houses which have acres of family pictures everywhere you look and I cringed in recognition but what can I say, I have three children and everyone conspires to photo them and charge me for it. And then, of course, there are my own sins of photography. There is also a list of school holidays, creche holidays and work holidays. Behind me are two of Bobble‘s beautiful photos which Mr. Waffle got me as an inspired present and a stained glass picture we got as a wedding present. I would go on, but I think we’re all getting tired of this exercise.

11. Si vous deveniez multimillionnaire dans la nuit, quelle est la première chose que vous achèteriez ?

A house in Dublin sufficient for our needs. Three story over basement in the centre with a large garden. Oh rats, only a multimillionaire? I was hoping for billionaire status.

12. Quel est le dernier film que vous ayez vu ?

Angela’s Ashes. Why?

13. Avez-vous vu quelque chose d’étrange aujourd’hui ?

No.

14. Que pensez-vous de ce questionnaire ?

It’s long – Peggy, why did you make me do it? I should be in bed.

15. Dites-nous quelque chose de vous que ne savons pas encore.

You know everything about me. No, wait, let me think. Actually, yes, you do.

16. Quel serait le prénom de votre enfant si c’était une fille ?

Well, Cecelia, if Mr. Waffle didn’t hate it so much that he would have to spit every time he said it.

17. Quel serait le prénom de votre enfant si c’était un garçon ?

Well, I’m thinking maybe Michael, maybe Daniel. Is everyone else on the internet too young to have children?

19. Que voudriez-vous que Dieu vous dise lorsque vous franchirez les portes du paradis ?
Wishy washiness rewarded, or, perhaps, more traditionally, blessed are the peacemakers.
20. Si vous pouviez changer quelque chose dans le monde en dehors de la culpabilité et la politique, que changeriez-vous ?
I’m not sure I understand culpabilite but if it means, no world peace type choices then, as a former Miss World candidate, I’m baffled. Did I tell you that a friend of mine’s uncle married a former Miss World. It’s been a curse to her; she has very beautiful cousins.
21. Aimez-vous danser ?
Yes, I’m just not very good at it.
22. Georges Bush ?
Do I like him or his policies? I think he is probably a pleasant dinner companion and, if he were a friend of your parents, you’d probably think that he and Laura were lovely people. I bet they’d look at all the photos of your children too. As for policies, well, I don’t even think that George likes those much any more.
23. Quelle est la dernière chose que vous ayez regardée à la télévision ?
Holby City. Oh dear.
24. Quelles sont les 4 personnes qui doivent prendre le relais sur leur blog ?
Nobody will have to suffer. Thank you and good night.

Choices, choices

17 January, 2007
Posted in: Princess

I have often employed the tactic of offering the Princess, unpalatable choices, for example, she will say “I don’t want to go out” and I will reply “well, it’s either go out or go for a nap; you decide”. She is then temporarily stuck and I use the pause to press home my advantage. She seems to be getting the hang of this game, though. The other day she asked me to read her a story as I was getting Daniel out of the bath. “I can’t” I said. “Well, it’s either read me a story or get a smack; you decide”. I should point out that although she personally is a big fan of corporal punishment, we have never smacked the Princess, though we have often been tempted. She does not appear to have imbibed our values and believes in the “spare the rod and spoil the child” maxim, particularly, insofar as it applies to her brothers.

Nightlife or there is no virtue in brevity

16 January, 2007
Posted in: Family

18.25: Arrive home from the office.

18.26: The Princess comes screaming along the corridor wearing an outfit that my sister brought her from India telling me to get out “I was going to be Chamsous Saba as a surprise, go away”. Chamsous Saba is the Princess from the film “Azur et Asmar” and she has been our ‘mostly companion’ recently. This picture may give some idea why this character is so particularly appealing to her imperial majesty.

18.27: The boys realise I am home and start wailing to be picked up. The Princess continues resolutely trying to thrust me back out the front door.

18.28: Mr. Waffle arrives home and the Princess realises that her attempts to dress up and remove her parents at the same time are futile. She collapses in noisy, indignant sobs. The boys continue to wail in the background. Mr. Waffle and I struggle to remove our coats.

18.29: The childminder and her daughter leave, though not before placating the Princess with the offer of a bun.

18.30: Mr. Waffle goes to the bedroom to change. The Princess eats her bun thoughtfully. The boys climb all over me.

18.31: Daniel indicates clearly that he would like some of the Princess’s bun. I ask her to share.

18.34: The Princess, with great reluctance, hands over a morsel of bun “I hope he won’t choke on it” she says sagely, shaking her head. “Of course he won’t” I say.

18.35: Daniel chokes on the bun and vomits copiously, he appears to have had something orange for dinner. He gets the floor and me. The Princess runs off in terror.

18.36: Mr. Waffle comes running from the bedroom in his underwear to placate the Princess and stop Michael playing in the vomit. I take Daniel in to the bathroom and start cleaning him up. I run the bath and put him into it.

18.40: Mr. Waffle brings in Michael and adds him to the bath. He is a cross, tired little boy and will only stop crying if given his toothbrush in the bath. The Princess deems this to be incorrect, prises it from him and runs off. I cannot leave the bathroom as the two boys are in the bath. Mr. Waffle is wiping up vomit in the other room.

18.43: Michael’s howling begins to affect Daniel. They are now both standing up in the bath, red in the face and howling.

18.48: Mr. Waffle returns. We haul them out of the bath and bring them to their bedroom, still roaring. “Why isn’t anybody paying attention to me?” the Princess asks in hysterical tones. “Goo, goo, I’m a baby too. I want a bokkle!”

18.55: The boys are put to bed.

18.56: Daniel starts to cry and I go back to bedroom to rock him to sleep in my arms. Mr. Waffle takes the Princess to the bathroom and puts her in the bath.

19.15: Both boys are asleep, the Princess is still luxuriating in her tepid bath (if at all possible, she would like the bathwater to be freezing).

19.16: Mr. Waffle goes to work on dinner, I haul the Princess out of the bath and, using this moment of calm, finally manage to remove my vomit spattered suede (alas) skirt. I dry her and put on her pyjamas.

19.20: Mr. Waffle reappears in the bathroom holding a small damp pair of tights and an underpants which he has discovered somewhere on the premises. “Did you have an accident, sweetheart?” “Yes”. “Where?” “On the couch”. Excellent. “It wasn’t a big wee” she said placatingly “it didn’t get very wet”.

19.25: We sit down to dinner. “It’s just like last night’s dinner” the Princess says suspiciously. In this, she is correct. We had roast chicken on Sunday and we had cold roast chicken yesterday. I can see how this might be a problem, if you had also had chicken sandwiches for lunch. I ask what she would like. “You decide, you’re the grown-up, did you forget that?”.

19.26: I ask the Princess whether she brought her lunch box home from school. She insists on getting it to show me though I was quite prepared to take her word for it.

19.29: Mr. Waffle observes that the Princess has eaten none of her dinner. She rubs her fingers in the gravy and sucks them. Mr. Waffle puts his head in his hands.

19.30: The Princess announces she wants her penguin mug. We get it. Mr. Waffle puts a little water in. She wants more. I put in more. She laughs delightedly.

19.35: The Princess announces that she is not hungry. “Then”, we say “it is time for bed”. It transpires that she is hungry after all. She eats painfully slowly. We discuss in some detail my failure to transmit to her or her father the information that she was supposed to wear red to school that day. I forgot. The following day is a blue day. We are all prepared for that. Though, as Mr. Waffle points out, if there were a pink day, she would really come into her own.

19.55: We decide that the Princess has had enough. We certainly have. I announce that I am putting her to bed. She clings pathetically to her father and says “Please, Daddy, put me to bed, I don’t like Mummy.” We prise her loose and I take her to the bathroom. She asks hopefully “If I’m bold for you, will Daddy put me to bed?”.

20.05: She turns on the light outside the boys’ room. “Don’t” I hiss furiously “you’ll wake them up, turn it off, right now”. She doesn’t. “If you don’t turn it off, your gold shoes will go ‘hors jeu’”. She laughs manically “I really want my gold shoes to go ‘hors jeu’”. I wonder whether this is working. Mr. Waffle grimly places her beloved gold shoes in the pampers’ box set aside for confiscated toys. She skips into the bathroom. I turn off the light in the corridor.

20.10: She refuses to wash her teeth. She sticks her hand over her mouth. I get her in a half nelson and try to wash her teeth. She protests vociferously. Mr. Waffle points out, too late, alas, that holding her nose is a good tactic to address this. “I will wash my teeth, if I can have that toothbrush” she says firmly, pointing at Michael’s toothbrush. “But that’s the one he had in the bath” I say feebly “he could have scrubbed his bottom with it or anything”. She giggles uproariously and insists. “I don’t like that toothpaste, do you mind?” she says. I offer her a choice of the three child appropriate and two adult appropriate tubes of toothpastes available in the bathroom. She settles for one of them.

20.20: We go to her room. “What story would you like?” “Spot’s noisy toy box”. In this volume, purchased as a Christmas present for her brothers by kindly relatives, if you push buttons, it makes noise (the clue is in the title). I look nervously across the corridor to where her little brothers are, against the odds, still sleeping peacefully. She changes her mind “I want the little Brown Bear”. I thank God and point out that her pyjama bottoms are falling down. She pulls them up “Now you can’t see my bottom.” “Nope, it’s invisible”. “Like God, my bottom is like God”. She considers “not really like God because my bottom is still there underneath my pyjamas. I can see it, if I want”. I agree that this is correct. She puts out her hand “look, I’m holding God’s hand”. Pause. “Is he here?”. “Yes, God is everywhere” I reply. “Then are there lots of gods?” she asks. “Well, no, though of course, different people believe in different gods” I say feeling myself getting bogged down. “Why don’t we just read about the little brown bear?” I ask chirpily.

20.35: I leave her room and cravenly leave the light on for her to ‘read’. I go to join Mr. Waffle who is wrestling with our ever-growing pile of laundry (vomit covered, for extra flavour).

20.45: Mr. Waffle goes to turn out her light. She wants Mummy. I go. “I want a new Mummy”. “Do you want L’s Mummy?”. “Yes!”. “When I go to school would you like me to collect L instead of you?”. “Yes” she said in slightly less sure tones; then “no, Mummy, I want you”. And, in what seems to me something of a leap of logic, she looked at me dolefully and said “I don’t want you to die Mummy, why won’t you be my Mummy when you’re dead?”. I did my best to reassure her, sang a song and turned out the light.

20.55: Play with the computer.

21.00: Sit down on the sofa with Mr. Waffle to watch University Challenge.

21.10: The Princess knocks on the door in the hall. Mr. Waffle stalks out to deal with her. “Mummy, mummy” she says plaintively and eluding his grasp, she zooms in and wraps herself around me. Her worst suspicions are confirmed as she notes that after she goes to bed not only is the television on but we appear to be eating biscuits as well.

21.15: I bring her into our bedroom and put her into the bed. She is delighted. I return to University Challenge looking at Mr. Waffle somewhat guiltily. I am not proud of this reward for bad behaviour but, you know, there might be an art history round and I could miss my chance to show off.

21.30: I shift uncomfortably on the couch. “You know, it feels wet, could that be possible?” Oh yes, it could, the wee on the couch, of course.

21.35: Mr. Waffle retires to the kitchen to prepare bottles for the night shift.

21.40: Mr. Waffle scoops a sleeping Princess from our bed and returns her to her own.

21.45: Mr. Waffle retires.

22.00: I retire and turn on the light, announcing mutinously to Mr. Waffle that it is a “reading in bed night”. He sighs resignedly.

22.10: Lights out. Everyone asleep.

23.40: Daniel wakes, I go to the kitchen to get him a bottle.

02.00ish: The Princess comes in to our bed, I am unsure of the time as I was sound asleep and her arrival didn’t wake me.

04.30: Daniel wakes, Mr. Waffle goes to the kitchen to get him a bottle. I go to lift the Princess back to her own bed and find she has no pyjama bottoms. I fear the worst (and she hasn’t wet the bed or had an accident in ages). Mr. Waffle gives Daniel his bottle and strips her highness’s bed. I go back to sleep. The Princess continues to sleep the sleep of the just in our bed.

05.30: Michael wakes. I go to get him a bottle. The dining room table is covered in Mr. Waffle’s work papers and the lights are on but there is no sign of the man himself. I go into the kitchen to find him taking clothes out of the washing machine to put in the drier. “I couldn’t sleep, so I thought I could get some work done” he explains.

06.00: Mr. Waffle comes back to bed.

06.30: Michael wakes. I go to get him. He is disastrously wide awake. We go to ring my sister (it’s 11.00am in India) sitting in the soothing dark and carefully avoiding the wet spot on the couch. It is dark and on the speed dial, I inadvertently ring the Novotel in Luxembourg. I am pleased to announce that they are awake and perky at 6.30. My sister, on the other hand, is nowhere to be found. Probably enjoying a four star hotel somewhere. Michael has a happy time bashing me with the telephone receiver for the next while.

07.10: Mr. Waffle arrives in, showered, shaved and dressed. I am speechless with admiration. I hand over Michael and crawl back to bed inadvertently waking the Princess who spends some time poking me in the eyes and mouth.

07.30: The Princess rises from our bed and forces me up also. Daniel is woken by the general noise and howls in indignation. Michael crawls down gleefully to see what’s happening.

07.35: I cravenly retire to the bathroom leaving Mr. Waffle to deal with the troops. At this stage, he presumably makes the Princess’s sandwich, which he dutifully does every morning. If the poor child were relying on me, then she would probably starve to death.

07.50: I could give you the whole morning routine but I’ve already covered it here. Of course, we did have the added excitement of trying to dress herself in blue. She insisted on blue underwear as well, she likes everything to be just so.

08.26: With one thing and another, it is this time before the Princess and Mr. Waffle depart for school. When he arrives, he is severely reprimanded by the scary teacher. The Princess is the 15th late child that morning. All it takes says Madame Tatienne is “un petit effort”. Indeed. Must try harder.

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