Filing This Away For When They’re Teenagers

Now that school is in full swing for Miss C we’ve changed our morning routine. Because I need to arrive at my office, which is about a 9-mile commute from our house, by 8:15 (8:30…cough) I head out the door for school with Miss C around 7:40 and then go to work from there. The hubby, who opens his shop at 9, is on his own with Miss A until he drops her off at daycare.

The hubby usually calls me after he’s dropped Miss A off and we chat about how the morning went with the girls.

He said Miss A was in an unusually good mood this morning and wanted to head on to daycare early. She was wearing a cute teal and fuschia skort outfit that had belonged to Miss C and was quite proud of her “new” clothes. I had fixed her hair before I left and she was wearing her favorite sparkly sandals. On the way to school he said she was singing and smiling from the back seat. She’s not always a happy camper in the mornings, so he noticed her unusually cheerful mood.

“You know you look great today, don’t you Miss A?” he asked, looking at her in the rearview mirror.

And then she chaimed in from the back seat, “Yes Daddy on one condition.” And then she paused and said, “Miss C is beautiful too.”

beach II


 Lately they fight a lot, but sometimes they pleasantly surprise me. I’ll hang on to those moments forever.

When You Least Expect It

Yesterday was the final day of the holiday school break for Miss C, otherwise known as “Ha, ha parents! You must deal with another Monday ALL ON YOUR OWN suckahs!” We were all a little worn for wear, like the back of your neck when you can’t quite get the itchy tag shirt to stop annoying you.

Miss C had her first dance class of the year and despite the fact that I read every book to be found in the waiting area to her, Miss A grew increasingly grumpy. She was that end of day weary 3-year-olds get that you don’t dare verbally acknowledge unless you want to be accosted with, “I am NOT tired Mommy!”

Finally class ended and we stood peering into the classroom through the observation window while all the little pony-tailed dancers in a blur of pink waited for a sticker from the instructor. And then Miss A officially lost it. “I want a sticker mommy, I want a sticker” I told her I would give her a sticker when we got home, but that didn’t pacify her one bit.

Miss C walked out just as Miss A flung herself to the floor in a heap of frustration and when I explained what was going on, Miss C didn’t hesitate to run back into the dance studio and ask her teacher if she could please have a fairy sticker for her little sister.

I was so proud of Miss C it made up for the numerous spats they got into over the holidays. That is, until we got in the car and they started fighting in the car on the way home.

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