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Dressing a toddler, whomever she is today
Written by: David Leonhardt
Some things we take for granted.
Like getting dressed. Unless we are paraplegic, an absolute
klutz or have just smoked far too much cabbage, getting dressed
is a cinch.
Sure, if you happen to be the winner
of the 2004 Imelda Marcos Shoe Collection Trophy, you might
have trouble choosing just the right shoe for the occasion.
But actually slipping your foot into your selection should be
a cinch.
The only time getting dressed should
pose a problem is on April Fools Day. Underwear is pretty hard
to put on when it is drenched in water. Harder still when it
comes straight out of the freezer. And even harder when wrapped
around last year's frozen Christmas cake. But that still leaves
364 days of easy dressing.
Some things we just take for granted...until
you become a parent.
"No!" Little Lady screams
in mock rage.
Just come back here so I can pull
up your pants and slip on your shirt.
"No!" the toddle repeats
in defiance.
Did you know that there are some
things you can do at 30 miles per hour? Putting a shirt on an
agile toddler is not one of those things. Around the chair.
Over the back of the couch. Under the table. Into the bathroom.
SLAM!
Ouch. Make that: into the bathroom
door.
"No!"
Please, Little Lady, let me put
on your shirt.
"I'm not Little Lady. I'm
Baby Swan."
OK, Baby Swan. Let me put on your
shirt.
"You're Papa Baby Swan."
OK. You're Baby Swan. I'm Papa
Baby Swan. Just let me put on your shirt.
"Now I'm Tutter."
Tutter is a mouse puppet in a children's
show she watches. OK, Tutter, let's put on the Tutter shirt."
"No. You be Tutter."
OK, I'll be Tutter. I'll be whomever
you want be to be. Yesterday I was Big Spider. The day before
I was Spider Web. I remember being a crocodile, a monkey and
a detective. I have no idea who I am anyway, so I might as well
be Tutter.
"Are you Tutter?"
We hear a lot about the "terrible
twos", but we don't hear much about the identity crisis
years. Speaking with mothers down at the play center, it seems
many kids go through this phase.
"I saa-aid, are you Tutter?"
You probably did, too. Ask your
mother if you ever went through a phase when you were always
pretending to be someone else...so much so that you were almost
convinced it was real.
It's bad news if your mother's
eyes gloss over nostalgically and she answers, "Yes dear,
I remember when you were quite convinced you were an African
dung beetle."
It's worse news if she adds, "I
think the pre-teen years were the hardest. We had no idea how
to explain the birds and the bees to a beetle."
But the worst news is if your mother
sighs and says, "I remember well. Your father and I are
still hoping it's just a phase you're going through."
The best of us go through identity
crises now and then. I am The Happy Guy. I am also a writer.
And a search engine optimizer. And a husband. And a homeowner.
And a father.
But not this morning. This morning
I was a very tired and frustrated Tutter mouse puppet...with
generously distributed bruises to prove my credentials.
"No!"
Aw, c'mon, Baby Swan. This is your
Tutter speaking. Please come out from under the staircase.
"No. You be Baby Swan."
I suppose that at her age, she
can probably get away with going topless. But sooner or later
she'll get hungry. And when she comes out to feed, I'll get
that shirt on Baby Swan. Or Tutter. Or whomever that toddler
is today!
ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
David Leonhardt publishes The Happy
Guy humor column:
http://www.thehappyguy.com/positive-thinking-free-ezine.html
And A Daily Dose of Happiness:
http://www.thehappyguy.com/daily-happiness-free-ezine.html
Read more articles on humor:
http://www.thehappyguy.com/humor-articles.html
Or on personal growth and self-actualization
http://www.thehappyguy.com/self-actualization-articles.html
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