Continued from yesterday…
Yesterday I wrote a post about my son. My original intent was to copy and paste the email praising my wonderful son. However, as I thought about it – the email meant so much more because of the journey my son and I have made. At one point I wrote about “… the light in the middle of the tunnel.”
Today the focus shifts to Lucy… my darling 3-year-old daughter – with whom I share a very dark tunnel at the moment. Don’t get me wrong – I can see points of light… when she lets me just hold her, when she thanks me for cleaning her up because she had an accident, her genuine excitement over the smallest thrills (like hot cocoa with mom at the coffee shop), her smile, and the way she looks when she’s sleeping — so deceptively peaceful. That whole “sleep look” is not unlike a well-camouflaged bear trap. One has no idea what lies beneath…
Mothering Lucy has been different than Joel. I was able to get her to sleep in reasonable increments as a newborn, and by 9 months she was sleeping through the night. This was vital to the well-being of the entire family. She is child #3, so her ability to sleep through noises only generated by the bowels of hell is impressive. Similarly, her ability to replicate sounds only generated by the terrorized souls of hell is unnerving. Sometimes I’d swear only dogs can hear her.
While Lucy was pretty easy in her infancy (a comparative, here), she is making up for it as a toddler, now preschooler. HolyOhMyHeck. My stresses with Joel were physical – keeping him away from sharp objects, out of traffic, other people’s comfort zones… I remember lots of sweating as I followed my busy, curious little boy from shiny object to sharp object to moving train.
With Lucy – it’s emotional. She is becoming a master of emotional terrorism, and I am the diplomat who is supposed to bring her back to reality. ??? Like I am in any state of mind to keep others grounded. *falls on floor laughing at the irony*
My husband and I are starting to see the stranglehold she has on each one of us. Both Joel and Olivia will give over their most prized possession just to get her to shut-up. Last night, on our way home from soccer practice, Joel said, “Mom… I don’t want to go home. Lucy will be cranky. She’s always cranky at night.”
He’s right. And who has allowed her to “run the show”. Yours Truly *hangs head in shame*. It’s been my job to help Lucy learn how to communicate without using terrorist tactics. It has been my job to protect the other two from having to give into the tiny person who rules with an iron fist – or vocal chords which hit such decibels one’s skin just curls off all on it’s own. If WE don’t want to hear it, our skin most certainly does not!
In my defense, it’s not that I don’t try. I try every day. E.V.E.R.Y. D.A.Y. I give her choices, positive consequences, negative consequences, praises, time-outs… The problem is she kinda doesn’t care. She’s kind of like those dinosaurs on Jurassic Park who tested every area of the fence until they found the weak section. That’s mah Lucy!
But… here is where I have hope and think I can make it 5 or 6 years until I get to the middle of the tunnel. I remember that Joel kinda didn’t care about consequences at that age either. Lucy’s socks drive her bat-shit crazy too – just like Joel! There are little things I see in her that I remember seeing in Joel. I know that they are not the same people, but I am suspecting there are some personality traits they share. It has me thinking that she struggles with deep feelings that she cannot yet express… with Joel that translated into physical outbursts… with Lucy she turns to emotional outbursts and emotional manipulation.
I’ll finish with a happy note — with one of my most treasured memories that Lucy and I share almost daily… holding hands. But when we do, she often says, “Too tight Mom… too tight.” Which means she wants me to hold her hand tighter, which means despite my shortcomings and failures, she still trusts her mom.
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7 Responses to “Continued from yesterday…”
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Oh my, Lucy does sound like a *challenge* to be sure. I feel like she’s right here with me ready to burst into one of her shrieks that has you all running for the door. Good luck Jenny!
I can’t believe how big Lucy is getting! And boy it sounds like she is really playing that “baby of the family” card.
My oldest son (turning 10 in one week, can’t believe it) sounds like Joel and my youngest son (who’s five) sounds like your Lucy! It is a challenge and most of the time, I feel like I’m doing it all wrong! They are good kids but emotional in their way. I just hope the teen years aren’t as bad as I’m thinking!
Emotional Terrorist. Oh true. Kids can be so manipulative! Once Ruby had an absolute hysterical fit when I had to leave her home with a friend while I went to the doctor. She climbed onto the window sill in her bedroom and clawed and beat the window as though I had just thrown her to the lions. I cried all the way to the doc, called home when I got there to see if she was ok.. and she dropped the fit as soon as my tail lights were out of view. Emotional terrorist. Toddler jihad, I tell ya!
Lucy does have lovely moments, and she works no one over quite like her mother.
love you!
Hold her tighter, mommy – she’ll grow up oh so fast….
Baby of the family. Yep, I have one too. It’s a wonder we survived the toddler years. Now he is 11 and he captures my heart every single time he smiles at me. Bubba’s Sis is right. They grow up oh so fast. And I just haven’t found a way to stop this dang clock.
Oh,boy. So, that is two posts in a row that had me empathizing and tearing up.
I hadn’t realized it, but I am thinking that our youngest may be somewhat of an emotional manipulator. Completely different than the other two since birth, so just when I thought I had it all figured out, I learned I was Oh.So.Wrong.
And yet, I wouldn’t give up his kisses and hugs and pb&j grins for anything in the world.