By Jody Worsham
All rights
reserved for Diplomatic Immunity
My
eight-year-old purchased a Lego set with the Christmas gift cards he had received. I would have preferred that he purchase a
small country instead, but he wanted Legos.
When he got home, he piled all 514 pieces on a dinner plate and
proceeded to separate them out.
“Have fun!”
and I left to take the twelve-year-old to ballet class; then I would have
another Wal-Mart walk-about while I waited.
When we returned home, I found the eight-year-old with frustration
streaming down his face. With my teeth artfully
imbedded in my tongue “I told you not to get such a complicated toy” came out
as “I bet your sister can assemble that in no time. Want her to try?”
With the
pre-teen throwing dartful glances at me, I whisked the eight-year-old to the
kitchen for the universal magic cure-all…chocolate and Diet Coke. With caffeine and endorphins coursing through
his veins, he raced outside and up a tree while his sister assembled micro Lego
dots.
An hour
later, the eight-year-old once again came running in with anger streaming down
his face.
“She put my
Super Secret Police all terrain SWAT mobile together, then took three pieces
off and won’t tell me which ones they are,” said a little
future-hubby-without-a-clue. I bit my
tongue, again.
“Well I
spent a whole hour putting that thing together when I could have been doing
something really important like texting my bff" came from the future-wife-in-training.
My teeth attacked my tongue.
“Wid ooo ahwebble it an hi wee pieces wike he ed?” My tongue had doubled in size.
Translation: “Did you assemble it then hide three pieces
like he said?”
“Yes, but he
wouldn’t come down out of the tree to even look at it after I spent all that
time putting it together."
At that
point Dr. Hubby entered the playroom. He
spoke not a word but went straight to work and scooped up all the logo pieces
and turned with a jerk. Sorry, wrong
season...poem.
He placed
the logos in the center of the table and declared it the DMZ. Eight-year-olds to the north,
twelve-year-olds to the south. It didn’t
matter. The eight-year-old had already
lost interest and retreated to the tree and the twelve-year-old had gone to her room for
uninterrupted texting. I was in the kitchen
soaking my tongue in a glass of flavored alcohol and ice. Hubby followed close behind looking for his
universal tranquilizers: “Where’d you hide the Snickers? Not even any chocolate bars left? Who drank
all my Dr. Peppers? “
With the Lego
Truce in effect, I am once again going to Wal-Mart. I will
avoid the Lego aisle. I don’t think I
could resist the temptation. With my current frame of mine and swollen tongue, tomorrow’s
lead story on CNN might be “Wabbit Woman Wacks Wego aisle.”
3 comments:
Jody I feel your pain! But at least good blogs come from it!
Hilarious - to read. So glad that I wasn't the mom.
Last week I took the just turned 7 yr old to Barnes and Noble for his free birthday cupcake. After eating he ran to the toy section and stood looking longingly at the various Lego kits. I started to relent, but glancing at the price tag, with heart in mouth I said, "You just had a birthday last week. I think we can wait for another toy." Smile turned down, he said okay and walked away.
"Future husband in training - without a clue" was the best line in this very funny (based on a true story) post.
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