A week ago, I confessed to my overconfidence in taking care of my three small children for a week without any help. Well, as it turns out, I was right. It’s been easy. Hectic and loud – but more or less easy. Seriously – I deal with all of the same chaos when my husband isn’t out of town. So the only difference this week has been that I haven’t have to clean up after him too.
All in all, I’ve been so busy that the week has felt like a few days. I’m either at home dealing with babies or at work dealing with babies. Both scenarios allow for very little brooding time. So I’ve barely had the opportunity to miss Chris. And the fact that things have gone so well eliminates any murderous feelings that I may have to deal with upon his return. There will be no baleful looks or put upon sighs from me. His homecoming will be full of rainbows and unicorns.
With one exception.
I am still feeling good about the week and getting through it with such flying colors…but in the end I had to be punished for my hubris. Whether I confessed it or not – I still felt it. And I paid for it tonight. So my Friday confession is really just a reiteration of what I confessed last week. And the gods have in fact punished me for this fatal flaw. Tonight. In excrement.
Oliver has been sick for the past couple of days. Just a bad cold – but he hasn’t been himself. He’s not eating, he’s weepy over the smallest of things and it’s hard to wake him up in the morning (if he was a single woman I would think that someone just broke up with him). But in general, he’s still been a good boy and I’ve taken it in stride.
It has been a long time since I’ve had to worry about leaving Oliver in another room unsupervised. He doesn’t try to swallow small objects or stick fingers in electrical outlets anymore. He’s my “big boy.” He’s going to be four in a few months and has been potty trained since last summer. Worst case scenario – he may wet his pants if he can’t make it to the bathroom in time.
And that paragraph above is the second part of my damning hubris. I thought everything this week was “easy” AND I assumed that my potty trained child could be left alone for 20 minutes while I put the twins to bed.
After all of that build up, I’ll just cut to the chase: I heard Oliver calling for me and assumed that he needed a tissue – or at worst, had an accident. It was in fact, the worst case scenario – but far, far worse than pee pee pants…
I came downstairs to find my son standing there, holding his hands up in what appeared to be two catchers mitts. That’s right – his hands were completely covered in something brown. And I don’t think I need to elaborate on what that substance was.
[Insert hyperventilating mother here.]
I THINK that he pooped his pants (something that hasn’t happened since last summer) and then decided to “check it out.” Honestly – I have no idea why he did it… But he obviously knew that it was a bad move since he sounded the alarm.
I then had to carry all 50+ lbs of him up the stairs at arms length in order to get him to a sink where I could clean him off. THANK GOD he didn’t touch anything before I found him. As it was, I just barely avoided passing out from the stench.
Don’t get me wrong – I have two year old twins who are not potty trained, and I touch poop daily. But I don’t have to remove layers of it from their hands. And when a child is pushing four years old, that’s no longer baby poop. It’s man poop. Just imagine if you had to wash poop off of a man’s hands. It’s beyond gross.
After emptying the full bottle of liquid soap in my efforts to decontaminate my son’s hands, I then used up a bottle of Fabreez air freshener at the scene of the crime.
Oliver seemed to be aware of my displeasure, but I could have done with a little more remorse on his part. I mean really – he’s lucky I didn’t hose him off on the back deck, which is steps away from where I found him covered in poop.
There are so many wonderful things about being a mom… This is not one of them.
I can’t promise that I won’t tempt fate again by gloating over my minor parenting accomplishments. But I will never again say that my child is potty trained. Not out loud at least. And if I absolutely have to, I will make that horn gesture with my hands and spit a few times. Don’t think I’m kidding! Hades has nothing on my poop scented basement.
