There is no doubt about it. I am McMama. It’s not that I’m Irish or
anything, though legend has it 1/16th of my blood runs green. The title is
determined by the wee voices I hear on a daily basis. Not the ones
inside my head, but the ones that emerge from the mouths of my sweet angels
whose growls and barked orders for various food items give me pause to
wonder. Am I really the fast food restaurant they think I am? Do they
see the Golden Arches when I draw near? Do they mistake me in my
red-rimmed glasses for the head-set wearing twentysomething they see at the
drive-thru window? I am not certain.
A typical day at the Hohlbaum residence goes like this. We are dragged
from our slumber with the first food order of the day. “High Matz!”
sounds the wake-up call. It is my two-year-old son’s word for hot
chocolate. We lift our tired heads an inch off the pillow to see if his voice
was real or imagined. It is just long enough to hear the repeated war
cry before something very serious, very ugly is about to happen. We run
for cover (or rather, my husband runs to the microwave to heat up the
milk in record time). It is 5:03 a.m.
Another order is placed around 6:30 a.m. when Sophia tiptoes up the
stairs to our bedroom. We hear her whisper what she imagines to be a dream
breakfast: two pieces of toast with Nutella and some apple juice. My
head, which feels as if it has barely been placed back down an inch into
the cool contours of my pillow, rises once again. An eye opens, then
another. She is not a mirage. She is my daughter, and she is hungry.
We manage their first breakfast in relative silence. I usually work for
an hour on the computer while my husband struggles to remain awake. By
8 a.m. he leaves the house for work. I try not to call out “Lucky
Duck!” as he scampers to the safety of his vehicle. The children and I wave
to my husband: both regretfully, and all for different reasons. We get
one-half hour into a craft activity, and the hunger alarm rings again.
A second glass of juice and a toast are ordered. They appear, as if by
magic, with the right jam, spread just so, and a touch of fruit to
garnish the plate. Whatever is rejected usually lands on the floor.
By 10 a.m. I am out of ideas to entertain the children. We strive for
intellectually stimulating activities until about mid-week. That’s when
all resistance evaporates, and I flip on the TV. My husband and I have
set a house rule: no TV before 10 a.m. But after that, it’s no holds
barred.
With deadlines looming and book proposals lurking in the back of my
mind, I am as guilty as they come. I arrange playdates when I can, but
there are days when the TV is the best babysitter I know. One time a
neighbor stopped by twice in one day. Both times the TV was on (and really
only for a total of 90 minutes, but she didn’t know that!). There I was,
standing in my slippers, caught red-handed with my children sitting
directly in front of the tube with their mouths open. And you can bet your
sweet potato in the span of those one-and-one-half hours that my
children ordered the equivalent of a gourmet meal. Too bad my office is on
the second floor, and the kitchen is right next to the TV room. I got up
each time and fulfilled their wishes. Just call me McMama. And yes, I
want fries with that!
-----------------------------------------------------
Christine Louise Hohlbaum, American author of Diary of a Mother:
Parenting Stories and Other Stuff, has been published in hundreds of
publications. When she isn’t writing, leading toddler playgroups or wiping up
messes, she prefers to frolic in the Bavarian countryside near Munich
where she lives with her husband and two children. Visit her Web site:
http://www.DiaryofaMother.com.
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