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It’s The Experience You Pay For

Pizza

“So where do you go to eat out as a family? I’m really curious.”

We were having dinner with Toronto Star food writer, Corey Mintz, who invited us to discuss Ed’s new book for his Fed column.

“Oh. Um. Er.”

We were sputtering.

“The Eaton Centre food court, now that it’s been renovated is nice,” I finally answered.

“The food court?!”

“Well, it’s fast and we can be loud and I can have Amaya and my son can have pizza.”

“The kids like to go to Licks and, really, they like a lot of fast food,” Ed said. “There’s a place we like for brunch in Etobicoke.”

“And there are local brunch places too,” I say quietly.

I was mentally flipping through all the places we’d eaten as a family in the past year or so and it was a sad, sad list. There was a time when Ed and I spent almost all of our spending money on eating out. New clothes, fancy vacations, home decor and things like a car were all sacrificed in the name of not having to cook trying all kinds of restaurants. I worked in the restaurant industry for almost a decade, after all. We met working at a restaurant. Our schedules were out of sync too, for the longest time, and cooking for one person kind of sucks.

Even after Colum was born, eating out was a big part of what we did for fun. I think kids belong in restaurants as much as anybody else as long as they are well behaved. It’s never easy, per se, to contain a toddler during a protracted meal time but when it’s two-on-one it’s certainly possible.

I guess there was a gradual decline from there. A second baby meant there were double the children to manage and the bigger the kids got, the more expensive the whole ordeal, ahem, outing, became. It seems like the third baby really tipped the scales from “Let’s go out!” to “How are we going to feed these guys now that we’re out?” “McDonalds!” “No, I’m not talking to you, kids!”

Then, yesterday, we were visiting family in the afternoon and started talking about a new, nicer, pizza restaurant opening up in our end of town. My sister-in-law said that a similar restaurant in their old neighbourhood was a great place to take kids. Good to know, I thought.

Then, all the way home, I couldn’t stop thinking about sitting down in a nice-ish restaurant and ordering a simple meal. Our kids are good. I’m an expert on how to manage kids in restaurants. I could write a freaking article on the topic. (Mental note: pitch an article on the topic.) We could do this. Let’s do this!

We pulled up in front of Vesuvios and tried to rouse Irene from her car nap. “I don’t want to eat anything! No! No! No!” We were off to a great start.

I immediately had to run to the bathroom because apparently this is going to keep happening every month for another solid decade or two. Of course Irene had to go with me and of course she didn’t want to go into her own stall because she was too scared. So I had use the toilet myself and then stand around and watch her pee and then stand around and watch her wash her hands all by herself.

By the time we returned to the table Colum had read the entire menu and settled on one of the most expensive pizza choices — one with anchovies. (The kid won’t eat cold cereal or delicious maple-flavoured quinoa, but he just has to try anchovies on his pizza.) I had been planning on ordering one pizza for the table and some salad and maybe some calamari. Instead, squinting at the “personal size” pizzas listed on the dine in menu (as opposed to the take out menu we usually order from), I realize that we’re going to need two pizzas and that my salad and calamari are going to push us over what I can justify spending on a spontaneous! no reason! meal for the family.

“Pepperoniiiiiiiiiiiii! Pepperoniiiiiiii! I don’t want anchovies! Yucky, yucky, yucky.”

“Irene. Relax. We’re getting pepperoni, no matter what,” I said.

“Are you sure you want to order that pizza?” I asked Ed, “He’s not going to like those anchovies and it’s four dollars more expensive than just pepperoni.”

“Dino Dan’s mom loves anchovies on pizza,” Colum was beaming. Thanks a lot, Alana Harkin. 

“Ewww! I DON’T WANT ANCHOVIES!!”

“Irene,” I hissed, “Be quiet. You are getting pepperoni.”

We place our order: two personal pizzas and water all around. Big spenders.

Ed and Colum took their turn at the bathroom and I plied the girls with bread and butter until they got back. Then Ed took a perfectly happy and content Mary for a walk around the restaurant and brought back a pissed off toddler who wanted nothing to do with getting back into that highchair.  There was an aborted attempt at “I Spy,” a fair amount of begging Irene to keep her boots off the upholstered banquet, half a dozen dropped napkins and a whole lot of quiet yelling at Colum to stop rolling around under the table for god sake how old are you anyway.

Then the food came.

Two piping hot, straight from the oven, pizzas were placed on the table. We served Colum and Irene a slice each. “Here’s your pizza. Don’t touch it! Too hot!” That was fun for them. I cut up some smaller slices for Mary and waited for them to cool as well. By the time it was finally time to eat all Irene wanted to do was pick the pepperoni off her pizza and Mary methodically picked up one small piece after another and threw them on the ground. Next up   was the back-arching toddler trick in which she tried to flip herself out of her high chair. She ended up on my lap and alternated between sticking her hand down my shirt and trying to nurse and making grabs for everybody else’s water.

The thing that ruined the meal most for everyone, though, was my own incessant whining. “This is horrible. We should never have come. What was I thinking. We’re just paying three times as much for the same food we could have ordered to go.” And so on. Holy shit, I’m pretty sure no kid was ever that intent on making the worst out of a situation. It’s the three “e”s, man: effort, energy and expense. I should know better by now, but trying to feed children can bring out the worst in me. It was bad enough that the meal was almost entirely bereft of any vegetable matter, but my two daughters barely ate anything at all.

As for the anchovy pizza, Colum loved it. He had two slices and Ed polished up the rest. That right there is the silver lining.

We’ll try this again when the toddler grows up a bit and hope for the best.

Image credit.

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Stuff I’m Digging: Philips LED Light Bulbs

Raise your hand if you’re guilty of still using incandescent light bulbs. I can’t be the only one.

Don’t get me wrong, we have several compact fluorescents throughout the house, our living room fixture takes halogens and our basement is still decked out with the old-school fluorescent tubes. But you and I both know that many of those CFLs are pretty crappy. The light from them feels dingy to me and it does no favours for my family’s naturally pasty, white and sickly skin complexion (unless grey and blotchy is your thing). And let’s not even get into the fact that they contain mercury which is a whole other health and safety and disposal issue.

So, yeah, I’ll admit it. I was still buying incandescent lights for the kitchen. It’s really important to have good quality light in the kitchen — especially if, hypothetically, you installed two big, chrome pendant lights and then haven’t had a chance to get around to the complimentary recessed cabinet lighting you planned.

I tried to do right by the environment and my electricity bill by shopping for top quality, energy efficient light bulb. I really did. I mean, come one, changing those incandescent bulbs every two weeks was starting to feel like a part time job. But every time I looked at the array of light bulb options my stomach would start churning. There are so many out there and they are not cheap, either. I am more than happy to pay for a light bulb that will actually give off a clear and bright light, but I don’t want to have to spend over a hundred dollars test driving several in order to find it. I’m starting to sweat just thinking about it.

So of course I jumped at the chance to try out a couple Philips LED light bulbs. These are even more energy efficient than fluorescents and are supposed to last longer. I was sent the 12.5W LED Household bulb and the 13W Philips LED BR30 indoor flood light. If only the light quality would stand up to an incandescent, my bulb anxiety could be cured.

I kid you not, dear readers, these light bulbs rock. They are actually brighter and whiter than the incandescent bulbs I was using. My kitchen has never been this bright. (Note to husband: we still need to finish that recessed lighting.)(Note to self: the floor is filthy.)

I am incredibly pleased and a total convert to LED light bulbs. Here’s a link to a PDF so you can check out the whole range of Philips LED products:

Philips Consumer LED Fact Sheet

 

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And Then We Ate

Today is the first day back to school after the Christmas holidays. The holidays were the first time in, um, ever (maybe) that we all got to hang out at home with nothing pressing to do. (Of course, by “we all” I mean both myself and Ed. God knows that hanging out at home with the kids has been my freaking raison d’etre for the past 6 3/4 years but who’s counting. It is a joy and an honour and apples of my eye and so on.)

So clearly I had time to pre-write blog posts into March and pitch a million different freelance ideas and update my resume and organize the office and the mud room and the pantry and my bedroom closet. “There’s a week between Christmas and New Year’s,” I said over and over and over again. “I’ll take care of [insert important task I’ve been putting off for weeks] then.” Clearly.

Except that our marathon of Christmas festivities includes the 26th. This left only the Thursday and Friday of the week of Christmas which we spent in recuperation mode, trying to find the floor in the the sea of wrappers and bows and packaging and toys and holy hell, do not open that Lego set right here, right now, for the love of god. It also meant chugging back egg nog and cramming shortbread into my face while the going was still good. (I am currently snacking on dry, “sprouted grain” toast, a New Year’s penance for my transgressions.) Then there was the weekend and it’s corresponding social obligations, New Year’s Eve was Monday and Ed was back to work by Wednesday. So that “entire week off with the endless hours of productive fun for me” pipe dream I was selling turned out to be just that, a lie.

And that’s how I wound up doing the week’s worth of grocery shopping at 4:00 pm on a Sunday with a toddler in tow. Did you know that everybody else was also doing their shopping at the exact same time? And in the hipster-parent paradise where I live, at least half of my fellow shoppers also had a baby or toddler with them. Pure chaos.

Irene greeted me at the door, eager to help lug the bags of groceries into the kitchen. “Now we can sort the food!  Colum! Colum! Colum! Colum! Let’s sort the food!”

“Pasta!” one of them said, “What food group does this belong in?”

“Bread and cereal.”

“Tortillas?”

“Bread and cereal.”

“Yogurt?”

“Dairy.”

And so on until every last item was categorized. Ohmigod, they are such nerds.

In the meantime, the kitchen was one level short of being declared a toxic waste disaster zone. Because if you accidentally take half a day off from aggressively fighting the indefatigable front of dirty dishes, spoons, sippy cups and pots and pans you come very close to losing the entire bloody war.

So every last iota of concentration and energy I had was focused on unloading/loading the dishwasher, washing/using pots and pans, clearing out/stocking the fridge all at the same time. I was cooking and cleaning, clearing out the fridge and putting away groceries, helping to categorize every last food item that I bought and fending off a hungry and tired toddler at once.

“Mommy, can I help make the salad?” Don’t even get me started.

I dropped dinner on the dining room table an hour late and started to dole it out. “Colum has more salad than me! I want more! More! Whaaaaa!” Of course she only picked at her salad and refused to eat any noodles with sauce (the horror!). Cooking for four year olds is the worst.

Just as I finally started to serve myself, Mary started freaking the hell out. She was flinging food off her highchair, spilling milk and throwing forks and spoons clear across the room. I can ignore that, I thought, and took a bite. That’s when she started with the horror movie soundtrack noises. She was screaming and yelling and shrieking at top volume; it was only a matter of time before the neighbours called the police. So I took her out of the high chair and pointed her toward the toy box in the living room.

No such luck. She insisted on being held on my lap and then started clawing at my shirt, reaching her hand down to cop a feel and then repeatedly banging her face into my chest.

“You are asking to be weaned,” I said.

“I think she’s asking to be fed,” said Colum.

I like him. He ate all his dinner plus seconds.

 

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Best Playground Confidential of 2012

Drinking to the New Year, NY (LOC)

Here’s a round up of the best posts of the past year as decided by me.

But let’s first take a moment for all of the posts that could have been but never were. There was the greatly-anticipated-but-never-delivered-on follow up to my cloth diapering post. Suffice it to say that I have a bin full of dirty diapers and three empty Costco-sized boxes of disposable diapers under my change table right now. Whatever, I worked it for long enough. I also could have done a better job oversharing about my engorged breasts after I left my nursing baby behind to party network and learn at Blogher12.  I may yet write about how I self-diagnosed an aggressive form of skin cancer on my upper back that turned out to be — oh god, this is embarrassing — a bit of sensitivity to garment tags. It wasn’t just itchy, guys. It was hurty-itchy. I thought I was dying. And, you know, I may have bought just one more Ikea “as is” chair. It’s okay. I can stop whenever I want.

And now, drumroll.

The best of the year.

Cereal Binging

What happens when someone pours a mountain of Rice Krispies in front of a seven month old? Funny you should ask.

So there’s, like, a mountain of dry Rice Krispies on the high chair and Mary just face plants into it. Rice Krispies are flying everywhere and Mary comes up for air, grinning like no tomorrow, gumming huge mouthfuls of the stuff.

The Beaches

We piled all the kids in the car for burgers on the town and ran into a childless couple from our old life. I forgot about this one, but re-reading it now, I love it. It’s funny and true and surprisingly sweet.

At some point Irene did climb into the stroller and Ed wound up pushing her while I wore Mary and the gigantic diaper bag and held hands with Colum. There we were, in full-tilt parent mode, when we came across an old friend and his girlfriend enjoying a beer on a patio.

How Not to Shop (In Excruciating Detail)

I thought I could go to a Loblaws Superstore and shop for clothes and food in less than two hours. I thought I could do it with a baby. Learn from my mistakes.

Then I pulled on the pants and — OMG NO! I guess I didn’t look very closely at the rise, but I assumed that they would at least cover my ass and perhaps meet halfway to my belly button. I mean, I guess they “fit” in that they were the right size, but the way they just sat under my three-kids-and-twenty-extra-pounds-worth of belly pooch, kind of propping it up for display was not right. IT WAS NOT RIGHT.

Ten Years Today

I take a rare, heartfelt walk down memory lane on my ten year wedding anniversary.

It started when I noticed he was reading The Thought Gang by Tibor Fischer, I guess. And he would sit in the hall outside the kitchen drawing up posters by hand for an open mike night that he would photocopy and tape to the window, and pin up in coffee joints all through the city. He’d host these nights and he’d read poetry and stories and sing songs with a guitar. People would come out and for a while those nights were really happening. Once I even got up and read something about a woman from Thunder Bay.

Birds!

A real life tragicomedy about a bird attack on my family. You really can’t make this stuff up.

Somehow, Ed managed to knock the bird off Irene and it lay dazed on the ground. She was shaken up despite my shining example of grace under fire, but otherwise unharmed. We began to gather our things again and I was walking Irene past the baby bird when WHAT THE FUCK WAS THAT?! I started screaming again, this time because a bird just flew into the back of my head and started pecking at me. Ed was trying to get me to calm down, everything’s all right, woman, and I was trying to explain that a bird had attacked my head. Then I saw it coming at me again.

Picnic Payback

Every year I have a post or two about how much I hate the heat. This year’s was a doozy.

 “Colum,” I called out, “Call Dad at work and tell him I’m sick.” I was shivering and sweating at once, my head was throbbing and the whole room was spinning. He finally made the call:

“Hi Dad.”

“Hi Colum. How are you?”

“Good.”

“How was swimming today?”

“It was good.”

Me, gasping from floor, “Tell him. Telllll him. Tell him.”

“Oh, mom’s sick. She’s on the floor.”

Why I Will Never Buy A Cottage

This was one of my most popular posts this year even though it’s completely different from what I normally do. Right, there may be something to that, huh? Anyway, those cottage people are serious about defending their insane expenditure of time and money and bug repellent.

The perpetual certainty of bad traffic going both to and from the cottage is only one of several reasons why I will never, ever, not even if I win the lottery, want anything to do with owning a cottage. I’m not trying to disparage anyone else’s lifestyle choice. (Or is it less of a choice and more like you’re just born that way, like homosexuality? I don’t understand how cottage people work.) I’m simply trying to point out that backwoods Ontario might not be the slice of paradise you think it is.

An Ode To A Dying Laptop

Can you believe I still haven’t replaced that thing? It started to work again and then finally, really and truly, died a few weeks ago.

Almost immediately your battery started sucking and I didn’t even get through that year without having to look for the nearest outlet at the library to write up my papers on metaphysics. The whopping 15GB of space on your C drive and the 30GB on your D drive weren’t very much six years ago and now they are laughably small. To make matters worse, you must have become infected with some sort of worm or virus or something about three or four years ago because your memory kept disappearing even though I never downloaded anything ever.

Camp LaGuardia: SOS

If you have to be stranded in an airport bar with anyone, you want it to be the Cocktail Deeva.

We snagged a window seat with a view of the tarmac — scenic! — and sought out the safest, most unscrew-up-able, menu items. No blue fin tuna or rib eye steak for us! We’re savvy enough to know better. And then our flight got delayed another hour and a half because WestJet never cancels flights, you see. They just keep on delaying them. And then our food came. That’s about when the desperation started setting in.

The Price of Free Toothpaste: Mom Blogging and Brand Ambassador Programs

An expose on the Proctor and Gamble unpaid mom blogger ambassador program. This ruffled quite a few feathers, but I still think I was fair.

But even if, hypothetically, they were willing to pay me, I still would have had a decision to make. They were asking me to become a brand ambassador, to link my name with their brands and to proudly display their badge on my blog. They were asking for an ongoing relationship in which I would be a mouthpiece for their brands. So even if they were offering to pay me (which they weren’t), I would have done a lot of research and asked a lot of questions before deciding if that was something I was willing to do.

What is a Period Like After You Have A Baby?

I kind of hit it out of the park with this one. It was re-published by Jezebel and is my most popular post ever. Oversharing alert in effect.

“Hey guys, Mommy just has to go to the bathroom, so why don’t you …”

“I have to go the bathroom!”

“Oh. Well … maybe just let Mommy and Mary go in first …”

” I have to GO PEE!!”

“You said the P word!”

“And if you guys can just wait here …”

“Me too! Me too! EMERGENCY!”

And that’s how I wound up in a three-stall bathroom with all of my children, a back-talking vagina and way-beyond-capacity tampon that was practically crowning.

The Santa Story

Let’s wrap this up with some sweet mall Santa pictures of my kids. Oh well, it was a nice thought.

The parking spot was totally legit, it turns out. Ed was just worried about the half dozen squad cars that had come to a squealing stop right beside our car and the armed police officers positioned around the jewelry store directly across the street from us. The kids were back in the car while Ed and I crouched down behind it like something out of Law and Order.

“So I can park here, right?” I said.

Thanks for reading. Your pageviews comments and feedback mean the world to me. I love blogging when I have the time and resources to do it well. Let’s hope we can keep this little corner of the internet afloat for another year.

Image courtesy the Library of Congress Flickr stream.

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Merry Christmas!

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May your days be merry and bright.

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You Say It’s Your Birthday

You won’t find a series of birthday posts in my archives. My children won’t be able to go back and read about how they were starting to walk and speak on their first birthday. Nowhere do I write, “You are growing more and more independent every day and Mommy is so proud of you.” They will only be able to read about that time they landed in the ER and about my spectacular postpartum periods and about how I doubled over vomiting from heat stroke in front of them.

I do this for you, dear readers. Because of course I am proud of my kids, but … YAWN … So boring! I think just dozed off in the middle of that last thought. I do, however, actually celebrate their birthdays in real life. They get parties and presents and cake and we take pictures and post them on Facebook or just keep them in our phones until we lose them. Real life!

But today is my birthday. I don’t get much in the way of real life celebrations because, you know, BABY JESUS has a birthday coming up too. I also wouldn’t have it any other way because I am an adult and I don’t need to mark the passing of every year with streamers and cake or Jäger shots and lap dances. I definitely don’t need tea and crumpets. Nonetheless, I feel like marking the moment here.

I am 34 years old today which is not so old but also, everyone would agree, not so young. It’s my last victory lap in the 18 – 34 age bracket and, really, with three kids under my belt I guess it’s about time. I was feeling kind of introspective and thought I had a lot to say about this aging business. Now that I’m writing, however, I don’t know that there is that much to say. There’s only the same feeling I had when I turned 24, really, which was, “You’re not a kid anymore. It’s time to grow up and get shit done.” The promise of professional success that has always shimmered somewhere in the middle future, sliding just out of reach like a desert mirage of prosperity, is still there. Only now that middle future is getting shorter. In fact, it’s already here so I just need to pick up my game.

I got to be a friend’s plus one for the Lowest of the Low show at the Horseshoe last night which turned out to be a very fitting celebration. Attending a rock show is, after all, a very youthful thing to do. That it was The Lowest of the Low (a hugely influential Toronto band from the early ’90s) reunion show was even better. I was 15 years old when the band split up in 1994, so I still got to be one of the youngest people in the audience. And here were these musicians that are pushing 50 on the stage and they rocked it. And they looked good. And it was a lot of fun.

The old Horseshoe Tavern is also celebrating it’s 65th birthday this year with a freshly inked eight year lease.

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So here’s to another year of doing what you do and leaving the getting old thing to other people.

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Baby’s First Hospital Visit

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I have this recipe for traditional chicken cacciatore — the kind made with white wine and stock and lots of veggies and that’s not just chicken in tomato sauce. I had some drumsticks in the freezer that had chicken cacciatore written all over them. I would cook this dish the next time Ed was home early enough to take care of the kids before dinner. I was really looking forward to it.

And then it happened! Ed was on his way home earlier than usual about a week ago and I had thawed the drumsticks and had all the ingredients on hand. Operation cacciatore was on.

Everything was bubbling away on the stove, Ed was playing with Mary and the bigger kids were fighting. Just as Ed turned his attention to the bickering, Mary hurt herself somehow and began crying. He was able to comfort her, but when he put her back down to play, she leaned on her right arm and started crying again.

“I think Mary hurt her arm,” Ed said, bringing her into the kitchen.

“What? How? I’m sure she’s fine.”

He sat her in the high chair, right arm hanging limply at her side. I’m not the kind of mother who rushes her kids to the doctor for no reason. Maybe she banged her arm and it was a little sore. Let’s just give her some time, right?

I offered a toy to her right hand, but when she reached up to take it, she put her arm back down and used used her left hand instead. Then, with her left hand gripping the toy, I held out a small cup of raisins next to her right hand. She put down the toy and reached way across with her left arm to get at the raisins. Huh.

“She feels a bit warm,” I said, “Was she hot like this before?”

“A fever is a sign of a broken bone,” Ed said, iPhone in hand, “And doesn’t her hand look a little swollen now?”

I thought maybe it did.

“I think I should take her to Sick Kids right now,” he said.

But. But. My cacciatore!

“Fine,” I said. “Let me take her. She might to want to nurse for comfort. Let the chicken simmer for 15 minutes, take it out of the pot, reduce the sauce, return it to the pot, sprinkle with parsley and serve.”

I grabbed an apple and a yogurt cup for Mary and we were on our way. Strapping her into the car seat was not fun. She cried hard for the first five minutes of the trip and then nodded off.

The timing was good, though. Most people hadn’t had time to go home from work, discover their sick and/or injured children and bring them back down to Sick Kids emergency. We flew through triage and the next thing I knew a nurse was weighing Mary and examining her arm.

The nurse moved her hand up and down Mary’s arm, pausing at the elbow and Mary screamed. I mean, she SCREAMED. “I know, I know,” the nurse cooed. Then, looking at me, “Please go back to the waiting room.”

Wow, I thought, her arm really was hurt after all. Maybe she has a broken elbow. Good think Ed made us come down here.

That’s when I noticed Mary reaching for the board book I brought with her right arm. Weird. She was turning pages and pointing and laughing like a totally normal toddler. We were ushered into an examination room then and told to wait for the doctor.

So we waited. And waited. And, omfg, we were still waiting. I tried to send Ed a message updating him on our progress, but there was no cell service. I also tried to keep my now perfectly normal and active toddler from swinging off the blood pressure cuff or unraveling an entire roll of examining table paper. “Reach up to the sky!” She reached up and did this totally adorable tip-toe-with-head-tilted-back-move. “Clap hands!” She clapped hands. “Touch your toes!” Yep, you guessed it, toes were touched and she was perfectly fucking fine what the hell. I knew we shouldn’t have come.

I was trying to buy a couple minutes of peace by sticking a boob in her mouth when another nurse popped her head in. “Is she moving her arm now?” Um, yes … “Okay, that’s good. Just wait a bit longer; we want to make sure she has a full range of movement.” What? How did they…?

Like yogurt spilled on your best wool sweater, it took a while for the truth to seep into my brain matter, but then there was no getting it out. The elbow exam that had made Mary cry so hard it tugged on my own thread-bare heart strings was not an exam at all. Mary must have had a dislocated elbow and the nurse was actually resetting it. The crying, the sudden recovery: it all made sense.

Then why were we still here? Why didn’t the nurse tell me what she was doing? And why is there no cell service in this particular room? I looked down at the green sheet they gave me, the one they called “the injury prevention” form. Oh boy. I wasn’t born yesterday and I wasn’t raised by perpetually good, honest and optimistic people. (Okay, my mother is totally good and honest and optimistic all the time. I guess I take after my dad.) The answer to all those questions was suddenly the most glaringly obvious thing in the world.

I don’t have to spell it out for you, do I? I was clearly being held on suspicion of child abuse and I needed to make sure I held firm to my story. Injury prevention form, really? How did I fall for that? The nurse didn’t tell me she had fixed Mary’s arm because she didn’t want me going anywhere, OBVS. But this concrete encased room with no freaking cell reception was the icing on the child abuse allegation cake. For fuck’s sake, I didn’t even know how it happened. It looked bad, real bad.

At long last, a doctor came in to check on Mary.

“Oh, it looks like the nurse was able to reset her elbow. She has full range of motion and doesn’t need an x-ray after all.”

“So, er, her elbow was dislocated?”

“Yes, it’s a nurse maid’s elbow,” she said, “It’s very common. I see three of these a night. You’re free to go.”

“Oh!” I started fumbling around. “Don’t you want …? I mean, I filled out …”

“Oh, do you have that green paper? Sure, I’ll take that, I guess. Have a good night.”

And that was that. I gathered up Mary and our belongings and, stealing a glance over my shoulder, got the hell out of that hospital. When I got home, there was chicken cacciatore waiting for me.

* * *

The very next day, she got her hand stuck between the radiator coils at my parents house. My brother started to move toward her to help.

“NO! DON’T TOUCH HER!”

I ran over and gently eased her little hand out from the rad.

“I’m sorry, man. I just didn’t want you tugging on her arm.”

Because you’ve got to know that the next time that happens, I’m going down.

 

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Our Darkest Fears

We were in the car one early spring afternoon toward the end of Colum’s junior kindergarten year.

“We practiced lockout at school today,” he said.

Lockout? I was puzzled. Like a labour lockout?

“Are your teachers going on strike?” I said, even though that didn’t make sense either.

“No, it’s in case some crazy person with a gun comes to the school. We have to lock the door and hide under our desks with the curtains closed.”

“Oh! Lockdown!”

And then my synapses started misfiring. Why on earth was my four-year-old son being subjected to routine lockdown drills?! This is Toronto, Canada. We have gun control. There has never been a single shooting incident in a Canadian elementary school. The handful of school shootings that have occurred have been at the high school or college level and were almost all committed by students of the school. (In one instance it was a professor.) Surely the fear stemming from the possibility of an attack by a crazed gunman is more damaging than the vanishingly small odds that anything like that would ever happen at our school. Has the whole world become paranoid delusional?

I understand and appreciate having to buzz in and speak with the office staff via intercom before being let into the building. It was an annoyance when I was pregnant, but I also understand why adults aren’t allowed to use the school washrooms. I guess I even get why the kids have to buddy up whenever they need to use the washroom. (Although Irene does tell me, “Mommy, sometimes we don’t go pee. Sometimes we just dance and dance.”) But isn’t this going too far? Lockdown drills? Really?

And then I heard the breaking news out of Connecticut this morning. There was a shooting at an elementary school. An unknown number of children and teachers are injured and dead. It’s still early; nothing is confirmed. It looks like there were two gunmen and one of them (the shooter) was the father of one of the students. It’s an unspeakable tragedy. It’s horrific.

So I don’t know anymore. Maybe these lockdown drills help. Maybe they don’t. Maybe we do these lockdown drills because then at least we’re doing something. At the very least we can try to believe we are doing something to keep our children safe in a world seemingly full of lunatics. Maybe then we can sleep at night.

Maybe they’ll help, too, when I have sit down and explain what happened to my children. I don’t want to do that. I don’t think they need to know. But Colum heard about the Eaton Centre shooting from someone at school and that could very well happen again. So I want to be the one to tell them what happened. I want to be the one to reassure them that nothing like this could ever happen to them. It won’t happen to us, we say.

And then we pray like hell that we’re right.

Post Script: After thinking about it, reading this post by Jessica Gottlieb, thinking about it some more and discussing it with my husband, I have decided not to tell any of the kids about the shooting. We will be prepared to talk about it if anyone (most likely, Colum) comes home from school on Monday with questions. But with any luck, that won’t be necessary.

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English Muffin Mornings

Special thanks to Maple Leaf Foods for sponsoring this post and giveaway. CONTEST CLOSED.

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Our family breakfast. Oops. Too late, they're gone.

My son will eat almost anything I cook with gusto. He’s willing to try new dishes and will even reluctantly choke down bites of things he doesn’t like in the name of nutrition. I should probably brag about this and write a book about how to not raise a picky eater. There’s just one problem.

Breakfast is a nightmare. He won’t eat cereal. I mean, sure, he enjoys oatmeal, pancakes, waffles, french toast, bagels and eggs, so what’s the big deal? Listen, maybe in your family you wake up two hours early to shower and dress and have your coffee and make lunches and cook a nice, hot breakfast before waking up the kids, nursing the baby, changing diapers, getting them dressed and packing school bags. Maybe you do. I won’t judge. But I tend to stay up way too late, basking in the sweet, sweet quiet, and then wind up hitting the snooze bar four or five times too many.

Mornings around here are more of a tropical storm than a peaceful time for nutritive and emotional restoration. “Get dressed! No, pee first! Where’s your sweater? Where’s your bag? What’s this form? What?! That’s due today?! Eat, eat, eat! Forget it, let’s go. Coats! Boots! Hats! Where’s your other mitt? Run, run, run!” It’s really a wonder they aren’t in tears by the time they board the school bus.

Suffice it to say, then, that I love any sort of non-cereal breakfast food that is both fast and healthy. We usually end up doing toast or bagels or oatmeal, but I like variety. So I was super happy to try Dempster’s new and improved english muffins on for size this week. We’ve done english muffins before, but I tend to forget about them.

The Demspter’s come in plain, whole wheat and cinnamon raisin, and are nice and soft with lots of crevices for sopping up your favourite topping. The verdict: cinnamon raisin with butter is a quick-and-easy crowd pleaser. But clearly whole wheat is the healthiest. Spread it with peanut butter and serve with fruit on the side and a glass of milk and I can even feel good about rushing my kids out the door.

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For pure enjoyment, though, you’re not going to beat strawberry jam.

CONTEST CLOSED: Congrats to Cheryl and Susan Margaret!

Giveaway: Okay, let me have ’em. What other weekday morning breakfasts (other than cold cereal, alas) am I forgetting? Answer in the comments and I’ll draw two names to win four free Dempster’s product coupons each. Contest closes at midnight on December 23. Canada only.

I have received compensation for this post as part of the MLF Connects program. Opinions and words are still mine, of course.

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Stuff I’m Digging: Skinny Mom Jeans

I know it’s the holiday season and I should probably be blogging about tinsel and gingerbread (or, say, the gazillion PR emails about holiday crafting for the family that I get every day.) But you still need to get through the day during the holidays and I, for one, need a decent pair of jeans to do that.

Clothes are a big challenge for me. First, I have been either pregnant or postpartum for the better part of seven years, so it’s hard to say what my size really is. I’m sure I’m at a healthy weight now, but I can’t help but think that maybe if I watched what I ate at all or exercised even a little that I might drop another pant size or two. It could happen! It won’t happen now, but maybe after the holidays? Maybe?

Even if I did return to my pre-pregnancy size by some miracle, however, would I really want to dress like I did when I was a 26-year-old bartender? I don’t know! Maybe I do. Because I keep trying to dress like a grown up and that’s pretty much what I keep coming back to. Remember I work from home, guys. You’re lucky I even wear pants.

So I’ve been buying one or two pairs of jeans at a time and wearing them until they disintegrate. The only thing standing between my inner thighs and the cold November air for the past couple of weeks has been a few worn out strands of stretch denim and I knew the situation was getting dire.

I looked at the skinny jean options at one major retailer when a salesperson asked if I needed any help.

“I see these are all low rise,” I said. “Do you have anything with a higher rise? Something that would contain a bit of a mom belly?”

“Oh. I don’t know if I’m supposed to say this,” she said, “But have you tried the maternity jeans?”

Here’s a heads up for current and aspiring retail clerks: If you don’t think you should say something, don’t say it. I want some pants to contain three kids-worth of muffin top. I haven’t given up entirely. I’m not quite ready to live full-time in buffet pants that are designed to accommodate a whole other human. I bought nothing.

So after the magic of Santa in an office tower the other day, I managed to sneak away for few minutes of shopping. First, I wandered through the Sears women’s department because if I can’t wear pants designed for 14 year olds then I need to start dressing like I’m 57 years old instead. This is how my brain works.

I finally looked around and realized I was the only person in the department without snow white hair and made a break for it. I landed in H&M and sadly noted that all the  jeans and pants on sale were “low rise.” I made my way to the jeans section, expectations held in check, when I saw them. “Skinny High Rise Jeans.” Cue the angels singing.

I snatched up a pair in washed out blue and another in faded black and hit the fitting room. The angels were in full-blown party mode by this point. Jeans that were high enough to hold me together, forgiving enough to flatter and stylish enough to make me feel good about myself.

They were $50 and the one of the few things not on sale that weekend. I bought two pairs anyway.

Here they are. The best mom jeans out there as determined by my unofficial survey of two or three retailers:

Any other recommendations for post-baby jeans to share?