Family Journal: Saturday October 4, 2008

 

The video above is kind of a follow up to the previous “destructo” post. Ocean is shown eating at the kids’ table as she no longer enjoys sitting in her chair. Of course, we just purchased a new one. She is also heard saying her name, which is new.

Ocean is in the full-on “destructo” mode. Her favorite hobby is to take dirty diapers and papers from the garbage can and put into the toilet. She also enjoys playing with the toilet water, opening up any drawer and spreading its contents on the floor and throughout the house, and eating table scraps from the floor. I also caught her one time sucking on a earthworm in the yard.

She is adorable however and we love her!

Sports Girl Rant

I read this on the ESPN web site last night and had to copy it here. Bill Simmons is a sportswriter for the magazine and web site. He is really funny except at times I get lost with his American pop culture references. I was reading his column on his Week 5 NFL predictions and came across a bit from his wife. She occasionally writes in his column and it had me laughing aloud when I read it. Yes, I feel your pain Mrs. Simmons. We are going through the final “destructo” phase with Ocean.  

 

“There needs to be a word for babies that aren’t really babies anymore: Nine to 12 months, when they can’t walk or talk, but they can stay awake for hours, pull a shelf of books down on their heads and stick their finger in electric sockets. I vote for “Destructo.” Our boy hit the Destructo phase six weeks ago. He used to be the easiest, happiest kid! He could play with the same toy for an hour. He could sleep in restaurants or be smuggled into movies. No more. Now he gets his kicks from sticking his face in a dog bowl, or opening a drawer, pulling out all the clothes, then opening and shutting it until he slams his finger.

You don’t want to travel with Destructo. We flew cross-country two weeks ago and I am still drinking two glasses of wine every night to recover. OK, three. All right, it’s a whole bottle. It was just me and him on the way back. Think about holding a 25-pound fish that’s wiggling to get back into the ocean for six hours as the fish emits bloodcurdling screams and you’re stressing that everyone hates you. Does that sound like fun? The one silver lining was the 12 different times we went to the bathroom. Destructo really liked the sound the toilet made when it flushed so I kept flushing it even though I was probably harming the atmosphere. When toilet flushing is the highlight of any trip, you know you’re in trouble.

Some tips if you’re ever on a plane with me and Destructo. First, don’t empathize by telling me, “I know how it is, I just flew with our baby for 12 hours, although he slept the whole way.” Great! I’m glad your perfect kid slept the whole way and mine didn’t! UP YOURS! Second, don’t say, “Don’t worry about us, we’re used to this.” What does “this” mean? Being tortured? Just read your Vanity Fair and shut your piehole. Third, don’t keep glancing back sadly like you feel bad for me! Just don’t! Fourth, if he falls asleep, don’t walk by me and say loudly, “He finally fell asleep, huh?” Unless you want a dirty diaper stuck in your carry-on bag. Fifth, if you’re the pilot, don’t interrupt us every few minutes because you’re excited that we might get in four minutes early, or that we’re flying over the Grand Canyon when it’s pitch-black. You’re lucky that door was locked. And sixth, when it’s over, don’t pretend that Destructo was good as I’m holding clumps of my own hair in my hands and staring into space like a mental patient.

Here’s what you can do: If you’re the flight attendant, keep bringing me wine like the nice lady did throughout our flight. I don’t know where you are, honey, but thank you again! And thanks for not judging me as I stumbled off the plane like Heather Locklear. No jury would convict me.”