Phase 1: "There’s
No One To Play With!"
This one always gets me. Dude. I endured three pregnancies just so I would never have to
hear anyone say that. Morning sickness, the world’s itchiest fucking stretch
marks, and feet that got just big enough that my kick ass cowboy boots I’d had
since college didn’t fit anymore. All so you would never know the feeling of
being lonely, and wanting the companionship of someone your own age on a rainy
day when there seemed to be nothing to do. There are three other children in
this household. Go find one of them and engage him or her in play. Because
guess what? I am not going to play
with you. Not Clue, not War, not Monopoly. Go find a sibling and ask them to play Clue or War or Monopoly
with you. There’s no one to play with, my ass. And no, you may not watch TV.
Phase 2:
"UGGGGGHHHH I Don’t Want To Play With
My Brother"
Yeah, see above. This gets a pretty high rating on
my Tough Shit-O-Meter. Go find him and STFU. Of course, this is the phase that
includes the most declarations that there’s nothing to do, and that they are so
booooooooorrrrrred. They are never amused to hear my stories about being an
only child and not even having anyone to not
want to play with. It’s usually these stories that drive them away and push
them into the next phase.
Phase 3:
The Picking Stage
Having been thrown together in an unwelcome
partnership, one child decides that, fine, I will amuse myself with this
sibling. He generally begins by picking at, pestering, or otherwise bugging the
child he’s been sent to play with. (I’m using the male pronoun across the board
here, because with three boys and a girl, in every combination of my children,
at least one of them has to be a
boy.) It might be toy taking, teasing,
or poking/prodding type behavior, but whatever it is, it causes the other child
to become highly agitated. It’s not quite what I had in mind, but it occupies
one of them. The other one spends the whole time yelling “STOOOOOOPPPPPPPUUUUUHHHHH!”
This phase lasts for anywhere from ten minutes to forever.
Phase 4:
The Playing Stage
At some
point, they make a peace of sorts, and work out an activity that’s amenable to
both parties. Lots of times the poking/prodding behavior becomes more mutual,
and they end up in wrestling matches, usually in my living room. This does not
thrill me for many reasons—the fireplace/hearth in the living room being a
perfect surface for head smashing, the lamps being perfect for knocking over
and breaking, the fact that they’re so fucking loud about it—and I end up
banishing them to the basement or outside. Still, playing is playing and I am
grateful for the consensual interaction. The only downside is that this phase has
an uncertain duration. They may play together nicely for an hour or more. Or it
may last only six minutes. In either case, it’s inevitably followed by…
Phase 5:
The Attempted Murder Stage
Sooner or later, someone takes a liberty in the
game. Someone oversteps their bounds, usually physically. These are boys (and
one girl with three older brothers) after all—it’s almost always a push or a
shove or a trip or some other form of perceived physical abuse. The victim
always swears it was, “on purpose!”
and, “for no reason whatsoever!” the
abuser always claims repeatedly that it was, “on accident!” Either way, the
victim inevitably accuses his sibling of trying to kill him. Oh yes, that’s
right—he was hoping that he’d step on your foot, injure a toenail that would
become infected, and cause your death by sepsis. Give me a fucking break. I’d
say 90% of the time, the initial injury inflicted is in fact an accident. It’s
a seven- or nine- or eleven-year-old who gets too enthusiastic in his play and
accidently hurts the other person. But that doesn’t stop them from moving to
the next phase.
Phase 6:
The Revenge + Tattling Phase
Now that one person feels they’ve been abused, the
gloves are off. They do what they can to harm one another, each feeling that
they’re entitled to retribution for the wrongs done them by the other. They
never try to hurt each other seriously (I would assume if they really wanted to
cause serious harm that they’d just beat each other with one of our many
baseball bats). It’s always small, stupid things. But with each offense comes a
tattle. “He hit me!” “He threw the
airplane right at my face!” “She
pushed me off the chair!” Oh for fuck’s sake. My reaction to this is usually to
dismiss them initially, then when they start getting to a point when they’re
mad enough that they might genuinely hurt one another, I’m forced to separate
them. And so, we transition to another phase.
Phase 7:
The Time Out Stage
Usually they get sent to their room in an effort to
put an end to Phase 6. It’s not really intended as a time out per se, because a
time out in my mind implies a disciplinary measure that forces them to stop
everything, sit quietly, and reflect on their choices. Sending them to their
room—where, yes, they have toys and books and other amusements—is intended only
to redirect them, and physically distance them from one another. Sometimes the
tactic will be dividing the four of them among the two parents, separating the
most recently acrimonious pair. My husband will take two of them to Home Depot,
for instance, and I’ll take two of them to the library. Either way, they find a
new focus, and are removed from the presence of the child with whom they were
most recently doing battle, even if it’s for only a short time. Eventually the
time out or errand comes to an end, and they are once again drifting through
the kitchen, pestering me while I’m trying to do important things (like write a
goddamned blog post, for the love of biscuits) and they start all over again.
“There’s no one to play with!”
Fuck. Me.
Note: I do play with them sometimes, of course. It’s not that I don’t
want to interact with my children. But roughly half the times when they ask me
to play, I genuinely can’t because some chore or task that is integral to
keeping our household functioning requires my attention.
2 comments:
HAHAHAH
I had my boys 11 years apart and they STILL managed to fight with each other.
They drive me INSANE with the fighting! And since I was an only child, I have no clue how to handle it, other than to separate them. ARGH.
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