I
missed my daily window of opportunity to run errands, so I decided to go to the
store after I picked up the big kids from school.
First mistake: shopping with three
kids. I almost always regret this decision. The fear and dread that grips me is only squashed by the
cruel reality of not having French vanilla creamer for my coffee in the
morning. So, I lay down the ground rules:
Everybody,
stays with Mommy.
Inside
voices & inside feet.
The
better you listen, the faster we can get outta here.
These
are versions of instructions I repeat every time I attempt a grocery shop with
the little people... and it almost never helps.
Right
away, one of the boys is stomping in puddles in the parking lot and not paying
attention around him. My trepidation rises with every step towards the
building. Nonetheless, I promise a snack reward, if we all stick
together.
Placing
my two-year-old into the safety seat, I distract him with race car sound
effects to overcome any resistance. My oldest, chats away at my left ear,
waiting for my responses. I am having a hard time focusing. The five-year-old
stands on the side of the shopping vehicle, throwing it off-balance, or dangles
dangerously off the back, stressing me out. Walking with me, he runs ahead, and
in the shopping cart, he abuses his little brother.
Of
course, this makes the toddler scream. The chaos virtually erases my mental
shopping list, and I can no longer remember why I came here.
Oh
yeah, coffee creamer.
After
looking away for a second (I know), I turn around to find my third child lying
on the cold, hard floor screaming, crying, and trying to breathe all at
once. I rush to him, certain that this is finally the accident that sends
us to the emergency room.
Luckily,
only his lip is bleeding, but now I am a useless lump on the floor in front of
the freezer section, cradling my son and accepting free popsicles from a
stranger.
When
I regained the strength to stand up, I put my two-year-old back in the cart and
snap the buckle around his waist. I had forgotten that. Rookie mistake. No more somersaults
out of the grocery cart, thank you.
My
three kids and I finished our errand in mutual silence that day- they, with
their lime-flavored popsicles, and me, with my coffee creamer. All of
us, survivors.
2 comments:
When I had two kids and the littlest was a toddler, I let him stand inside the cart basket. So dumb. He vaulted himself head-first onto the cement Wal-Mart floor.
^ It's a true story.
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