My parenting has reached an all-time low.

At least according to my daughter, it has.

I think Super Nanny would actually be proud.

Kate has always had a, ahem, dramatic side, and since she’s gone to kindergarten it’s gotten worse… especially at bedtime. She used to go to sleep like a dream – books, prayers, hugs and kisses and we’re outta there. But for the last month or so, it’s taken us hours to get her to actually go to sleep. She always needs one more drink of water, one more hug, one more stuffed animal.

And the mommy guilt? She lays it on thick. She cries and says she misses me, which hits this working mom where it hurts. So I stay and give her one more drink of water, one more hug, one more stuffed animal. And she knows that.

I had a long talk with some of my best mom friends on Friday, and they confirmed my suspicions.

Girlfriend is playing me like a fiddle.

So I decided that it’s time to get hardcore with her, because not only does it drive me batshit crazy frustrate me, but it needs to stop so she can actually get the sleep she needs.

Fast forward to tonight… we went through the bedtime routine and everything, and then I told her I was going to chat on skype and write a blog post bed. I hugged her and kissed her, covered her up, turned off the lights and shut the door.

And that’s when the drama began.

She fuh-reaked out. She cried and yelled and screamed and then she brought out the big guns.

“My mommy doesn’t love me!”

“I’m sooooo saaaaad because my mommy won’t listen to me and she doesn’t love meeeeeee!”

“I misssssss myyyyyy mommmmmmmyyyyyy!”

She tried to comfort herself. “Don’t cry, Kate, it’s ok.” And then she got practical and started worrying about the future. “How am I going to take care of myself??? How am I going to earn money??? My mommmmyyyyy doesn’t looovvvvvee meeee. She treats me like a dumpster”

At this point I’m transcribing her antics to the girls on Skype, and they’re begging me to get out the video camera. I asked them if it would ruin her life if I blogged about it, and Tricia kindly said, “Does it matter? Sounds like you’ve already ruined it.” Point taken. Blogging it is.

After much coughing and trying to warn us that she couldn’t even breathe, “Can you hear me?? I can’t even say a word!” she came out of her room. I used the Super Nanny method and took her straight back to bed and said “Goodnight, darling” and then left.

She half-heartedly tried to give me another guilt trip, but by that time I think she’d figured out it wasn’t going to work.

All is silent in her room now. I think she’s asleep. Either that or she’s quietly planning my untimely demise.

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70 Years and Counting

Grandpa & Grandma cutting the cake

This weekend I had the privilege of celebrating my paternal Grandparents’ 70th wedding anniversary with my family. Seventy years!? That is just plain hard for me to fathom. I mean, I clearly remember their 50th anniversary party. Which means I am old, and they are ancient. But I must say, those two old people LOVE each other. And it is beautiful to see. My grandparents have a great story, and I thought I’d let their son (and my favorite famous blog commenter), my Uncle Paul, tell it to you.

___________________

On September 16, 1939, Charles Marvin Brads married Della Victoria Higgins in the parsonage of the Lexington Presbyterian Church in Lexington, VA. She was 20, he was 17

FDR was in the White House and Hitler had just started WWII in Europe. Through FDR, WWII, (Jenny’s note: during WWII, my Grandpa went to war in the Pacific, and my Grandma got a babysitter for her two kids and went to work in a gunpowder factory – a true “Rosie the Riveter” – a family in true service to their country!) the New Deal, Harry Truman, the Atom Bomb and devastation of Japan’s Hiroshima, Ike, Mamie, Pink, the Cold War, JFK, The Cuban Missle Crisis, LBJ, The Great Society, Social Unrest, Nixon, Watergate, Ford, Carter, The Iran Hostage Situation, The Reagan Revolution, Bush I and a thousand points of light, Bill Clinton, White House Scandal, Bush II, 9-11, and onto an Historic Election of the first President of African Descent, this marriage has lasted. Countries have come and gone, leaders of come and gone, even the Berlin Wall, came and went, but they still last. It ranges somewhere between a miracle and and Act of God. I’m going with the latter.

I never questioned the love of my parents for one another. Every morning before Daddy took us to school, he would look at Mother and say, “Brown Sugar, give this old boy a kiss he’ll remember all day long.” And she would. A sweet memory, one I cherish, and one that reassured me daily that I lived in a safe home where love abounded. I’m sure it wasn’t all a bed of roses, but I know that through drama, trauma, illness, heartbreak, and sometimes even anger, the love lasted and lasts.

Mother was a devoted mother, devoted wife, and devoted Christian. She did all in her power to show hundreds of people what true love was, in every form. Daddy, though more stern, and far more unbending, told me he loved me, something that fathers often have a hard time doing. And though I know both of them didn’t like me on occasion, I know they loved me and love me still.

It’s because they loved each other so, and knew that the five of us were the product of their love and that God had given each of us to them for a purpose.

They taught me the meaning of the word sacrifice. They taught me that though they had to learn to love each other and then fall in love with each other, they loved me before I was born.

Daddy told me once that my name, Paul David came to him the night before I was born when he was reading the Apostle Paul’s writings where he quoted King David when David was talking about justification. He said, “I got the idea for your name, and Mother agreed from reading Paul’s quoatation of David in Romans, Chapter 4 Vs 6-8. He was quoting Psalm 32:1-2. (God imputed righteousness, We didn’t earn it, He forgave our iniquities, He covered our sins with he blood of Christ, And the Lord will not in the future tense, impute sin. Our sins may get us into lot of trouble here and every act, thought and deed has it’s own built in consequence, but they will never be on our account in heaven.)”

This is the home in which we grew up. This is the love we saw, and this is the love we learned.

It’s no fluke that your Mother and Father have been married for 41 years, or Diane and I for 32. We had great examples.

Five children, eight grand children, and 14 great grandchildren later, they still love each other. And they love all of us.

It’s a good thing!

70 years and still smiling

_______________________

It’s a great thing. I am so blessed to be part of this family. We’ve had good times and bad times just like every family, but there’s always been a lot of LOVE.

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Weekly Winners – All Sophie Edition

If you’re Sophie, one of the side effects of your big brother going to kindergarten is that Mommy now has only YOU to focus her camera on all day. So, i took a lot of fun shots of Sophie this week that I wanted to share. I love my beautiful sweetheart girl!

All lit up
highlights

Blue Bucket Hug
blue bucket

Taking a break from play
chillin' at the park

Ready, set, whee!
wheee!

Sweet face
sweet face

Pretty for a Party
beauty

Well, that’s all I’ve got this week! Thanks for indulging my Sophie-centric worldview. 🙂 For more great photos, check out the Weekly Winners HQ at Sarcastic Mom.

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