I would have taken and posted photos of all the times she got up after lights went out, but I don’t have enough bandwidth available.


Keep her away from the sugar.
I would have taken and posted photos of all the times she got up after lights went out, but I don’t have enough bandwidth available.


Over the last month or so, Stella has realized the cozy lusciousness of snuggling in bed. I think we have managed to learn her up on the difference between middle of the night and morning-time, and which is the appropriate time in which to climb into our bed. (Although she will still give an occasional try to a 2:00am snuggle session). On weekdays, after Steve has gotten up and started his morning rituals like touching all the doorknobs and running regression analysis on the weekly weather forecast, she’ll patter across the hall to come lay in bed with me. It may sound simple and sweet, but there are certain ground rules that Stella never was given access to, and I am now the one paying the price.
Firstly, there is the morning pee ritual. Although she has been absolutely awesome when it comes to potty training, when it comes to that first morning pee, she will fight you to the death. You KNOW she has to go, but when you ask her she adamantly denies it, and when you try to subtly guide her towards the bathroom, she promptly begins the meltdown sequence. The part that is most baffling is that when you finally do wrangle her onto the toilet and make her sit there long enough, she will eventually go and you can literally watch the venom drain from her system. She relaxes. She smiles. The flames shooting from her nostrils are snuffed out with flowery goodness and light.
A screaming 2-year-old at 5:30 in the a.m. just doesn’t really set the tone for a cozy morning ritual. Unless there is some clear and present reason for it, I really don’t find it part of my life-plan to be up before 6:00am – something I am finding harder and harder to enforce. So, on those rare mornings where she will agreeably pee without invoking a screaming tornado first, she’ll make it into bed with me only to begin fidgeting and talking and trying to scoot so close as to be able to crawl underneath my skin. The difficulty I find in this situation is that even though she is wiggling, kicking me, pulling my hair and yelling in my ear, each and every one of those things she is doing with the sweetest and most loving intentions. In Stella’s world, she is playing with my hair (which, for any of you who know her, know that this is A-1 in comfort and happiness), scooting close enough to be nose to nose and telling me,“You da bet mommy ebuh.â€
I have pretty much started to resign myself to the fact that once she climbs into bed with me, I won’t be sleeping. And, really, there are far worse things in life than having to wake up a half hour early to lay nose to nose with a cute and snuggly toddler. I do, however, have my work cutout for me in fine-tuning the process. Feel free to post these rules in your own home to deal with spouses, pets or other household members who don’t quite know the rules.
When we woke up on Monday and realized the extent of Stella’s cold, I volunteered to do my duty as a dedicated mother and stay home with her. I immediately sensed that Steve was kicking himself that he hadn’t volunteered first. Not to be outdone, he quickly announced that he would arrange to have a sub cover him for Tuesday. The irony to this story is that after each of us spent a full day at home with her, and had to make the decision if we needed to keep her at home any longer, we began heartily convincing each other that “she really seems to have turned the corner!†and “look, her nose is barely even running anymore!†and “really, we hardly had to get up with her at all last night!†The obvious subtext being: “PLEEEEEEASE let me go back to work!â€
When you realize that you can take a legitimate sick day off work even though you are not actually sick, AND you aren’t faking sick, or taking liberties with a “mental health day,†you get this deep down little feeling like “Woo Hoo! This is so cool!†You get so wrapped up in the idea of getting a day off from work that you forget that your cumulative lack of sleep is starting to make you hallucinate, and that it is pouring rain outside, AND that a sick two-year-old is pretty much the equivalent of an angry swarm of bees.
She continued to get more and more sleep deprived, but adamantly refused to nap anywhere but on the couch – and absolutely no longer than at 15 minute intervals. Because of her fever, she flat-out refused any food offered to her – no matter that we had reached the point where we were offering her sugary sugar puffs with syrup topping and a side of french fries – just eat SOMETHING! Her nose wouldn’t stop running, and she became adamant that she use her sleeve instead of a Kleenex. By the time Steve got home on Monday afternoon both Stella and I were still in our pajamas.
When I got home from work on Tuesday, Stella was still wearing the same pajamas. Aside from the fact that she had been wearing the exact same clothing for almost 48 continuous hours, Steve also informed me that they had gone out in public together. “In that?!†I asked. “Yeah, and her pair of black rubber irrigation boots. Oh, and her jean jacket.†Nice.
At that point there was no question in my mind: Stella was going back to day care, we were going back to work, and we’d all just pretend like none of this ever happened.
