• Beach Bits,  Bug

    Sundresses in January

    cool water

    Yesterday was Bug’s second day of preschool. She only goes on Mondays. Over the past week we talked about how much she did not like preschool and I pretty much gathered that she actually really liked preschool. She just didn’t like going there without me. All week she sang little songs and talked about how we should do exercises “like this” and then she would wave her hands around in the air. I figured it can’t be that bad if they are teaching her fun songs and exercises. It’s not like she’s stuck in a corner, ignored.

    So when Monday rolled around again we decided to give it another shot. Bug even seemed excited about going. She was definitely excited about going back to the playground. She wanted me to take her to the playground only and skip the “inside preschool” but I explained preschool doesn’t work like that. She seemed okay with it. She only screams and pitches a fit when she thinks I’m on the fence. If she can tell I’ve made up my mind about something she usually just sucks up her quivering bottom lip and makes the best of it.

    And that was that. She was fine all the way up until the very last moment when I handed her over to her teacher. Her teacher told me she likes to be held and part of me wondered if it was Bug wanting to be held or if it was the teacher liking to hold Bug. Either way, I’m fine with it.

    Bug willingly went to the teacher but I could see her big eyes welling up with tears and her bottom lip quivering. She didn’t cry. She just gave me that look that makes me want to give up everything and hold her like a baby for the rest of her life. Except she gives me that same look when I won’t let her eat cookies for breakfast, so I’m not completely disarmed by it. It was still hard though.

    When I went to pick her up, I left super early so I could spy on the class and maybe get a chance to talk to the teacher about her. But of course I got a phone call before I got there and I ended up stuck outside the building until pick-up time. When I finally I got inside, it was a crazy mess of parents and backpacks shuffling through so I didn’t get a chance to talk to the teacher at all.

    Thankfully a friend of mine also has her little boy in the class and she asked the teacher about Bug. Apparently Bug only cried a little bit but she did want to be held and ended up taking a little nap on the teacher’s shoulder.

    I’m really confused by this. We do wake up at the crack of dawn (5:45am is not unusual) and I do know that Bug gets tired around ten or eleven. But we usually have no trouble pushing through until lunch and then taking a nap at one or two. In fact, I can’t get Bug to take a nap at eleven if I want to. If we take a drive anywhere at that time she’s out like a light but at home she’s squirrelly and won’t lie down and be quiet at all.

    The only way I can guarantee that Bug will sleep is if I deprive her of anything interesting. She has to be completely bored before she will drop off. A darkened room with no access to her toys is the best way to get her to sleep. So why does she feel like sleeping when she is at school? I would think with all those other kids around, sleeping would be the last thing she’d want to do.

    I can see her pretending to sleep. She does that all the time. She loves making up her perfect bed with her perfect pillow and snuggling down with a teddy bear and telling us all to be quiet because she’s “sleeping.” But actually sleeping?!! That’s for the birds. Why would she sleep on the teacher’s shoulder? I’m totally baffled. If she did sleep, I suspect it wouldn’t be for very long. They are doing activities and there are other kids being loud. It’s not like she could pass out for hours is it?

    So tell me this: when we got home and it WAS nap time, why then would she NOT sleep at all? Isn’t she supposed to be tired and worn out from all the fun she is having at school? No dice. I was so frustrated yesterday. We lay down together for an hour and she wasn’t having any of it. She was bouncing around like a hyper kid doing everything but falling asleep. She’d rather contort her body in fifty directions than actually settle down and rest. Finally I just gave up.

    Could it be that she’s giving up naps altogether? We were just in the sticks this last weekend and I didn’t make her take a nap there because her cousins were at my mom’s house and that’s just cruel to make her take a nap while she can hear them laughing and having fun down the hall. Of course she was a crankmeister by the time five o’ clock rolled around but them’s the breaks of skipping naptime. We hardly ever skip naptime at home but we always do when we are out visiting friends and relatives.

    I guess I’ll know the answer today when naptime rolls around again and there aren’t any preschool snoozes to mess with our schedule.

    Since naptime was in the can I decided to let Bug have her day. It’s not like I can complain about not getting my “me” time since I spent three and a half hours at Starbucks that morning getting some freelance work done. I might have been slightly annoyed because I had more things I wanted to do without the help of a toddler, but I am a mom after all. I did sign up for this job willingly. So we decided to go to the beach!

    The weather has been beautiful. Freakishly beautiful. The Santa Ana winds have kicked up and the air has been dry as a bone. It’s been so hot I had to break out my summer sundresses again. Part of me really wants it to be winter for a change but I guess I can’t complain. Tough life when you have to go down to the beach and run around in the icy water because your apartment is too hot IN JANUARY.

    rakey rake

    looking but not looking

    While we were there I was sort of mumbling disgustedly to myself about how much I hate this freaky summer weather (and the fact that I seem to have some kind of sinus problem) but then I saw a couple out in the waves that reminded me of something.

    You can barely see them in this picture:

    low tide

    The girl was obviously pregnant. Her partner was taking pictures of her belly and the ocean behind her. It was very sweet. You could tell they were so in love with each other and their soon-to-be-born child. And it got me thinking…the tide was way out, the weather was freakishly hot, it was the middle of winter and I was sweating…haven’t I been here before?

    humongous beach belly

    I have! This photo was taken on December 7th, 2005 just weeks before Bug’s birthday. So here we are now in January, 2009 just days before Bug’s third birthday…maybe this weather isn’t so freaky after all. Maybe I’m just not very good at remembering it.

  • Bug

    Bug’s First Day of School

    first day of school

    Today was a big day for us. Bug went to preschool. We’d been talking about it for three days straight and she was very excited. She loves school. She sees it on television, and she’s tagged along with her older cousins to their classes. Every time we see a playground she begs to go. I felt like she was ready. She’s young still, barely even three, but she’s advanced for her age and very social. I thought it would be good for her. If anything it would be better than more hours of boredom in our living room staring at the boob tube.

    We discussed everything the way we do. She’s a talker and it’s not unusual for me to spend whole car rides discussing topics that you’d think would be way too complicated for her to understand. We talked about missing me and being brave. We talked about how there might be other children there who were sad and missing their mommies and maybe she could give them a little smile to cheer them up. We talked about lunchtime and snack time and craft time and playtime. We talked about the possibility that there might be big kids who might try to push her. We even covered how she didn’t really need a pacifier at school because she was a big girl. We went over and over everything. She seemed excited.

    When we got to the school, my excitement wavered way before hers did. I couldn’t find the classroom and accidentally walked into a different daycare program that didn’t know us from Adam. That didn’t bode well for my over-protective inner momzilla. But we did eventually find our way and since we were half an hour early (again my over-protective inner momzilla trying to be prepared) everything went smoothly. Too smoothly actually.

    I walked her to the classroom. I signed her in and when I turned around to give her a hug and say goodbye she was gone. She was clear on the other side of the room playing with a puzzle and another little boy. I said, “Come here Bug, give Mommy a hug!” She shrugged. Her body language suggesting, Can’t you see I’m busy Mom?!! I’ve got important things to do here! I told the teachers it was her first time at any kind of daycare and they were shocked. She clearly was totally fine with it. Finally after a hurried sideways hug from Bug, I left.

    It was weird. I was walking away from my kid who has been by my side for the past three years straight. I kept feeling like I’d left something behind, like my purse but even worse. I left slowly, walking by each window to make sure she was still okay. Of course she was. She didn’t even look up once.

    She’s been away from me with Gramma and her Auntie Heather of course, but this was with strangers that I didn’t know. The room seemed sterile and weird. I guess I expected it to be brighter and cheerier and with more sunlit windows. I know they have to keep things clean and this place was definitely very clean but there weren’t any obvious craft areas or little pretend kitchens to play in like I had imagined.

    I’ve talked to friends who have their kids in this program and they speak highly of it so I’m sure it’s fine but it was just, you know…not me. It wasn’t me being there doing what I would do. Of course I had a thousand fantasies of working for the preschool for a day and introducing them to all sorts of crazy whacky Brenda activities but Toby quickly talked me out of that with a few swift reminders that there are reasons I’m not a teacher and those reasons are politics and mean parents.

    So I left. I spent four blissful hours at Starbucks and got one single freelance job done. Time flies when you are working hard. I’d say I wasn’t even thinking about Bug but that would be a lie. I was worrying like crazy. But I had a big deadline today so the time went quickly for me.

    I left a half-hour early and showed up way before my scheduled time to pick her up. I thought I would spy on her and my worried heart could take a rest. I was wrong. This heart will get no rest.

    When I got there, right away I could tell things had not gone well. I could see her sobbing on the teacher’s shoulder, her little knobby mouse-ear ponytails quivering. It comforted me that the teacher was holding her and she wasn’t off in some corner crying but she was obviously CRYING! What happened to my brave girl?!!!

    As soon as Bug saw me, she reached for me, her cheeks streaked with tears, and wailed “Mommmmmmy!” My heart lurched. What had I done? My poor kid! I grabbed her and pulled the spare pacifier from my purse as quickly as I could. We had agreed earlier that she could have her pah as soon as I picked her up. I felt like it was the least I could do to hold up my end of the deal. It wasn’t part of my plan, of course. I thought this would be the beginning of Operation Phase-Out-the-Pacifier-I’m-a-Big-Girl-Now. But picking up a sobbing tear-stained kid wasn’t part of my plan either.

    “Oh!” the teachers exclaimed as soon as they saw the pacifier. “You should have given us her pacifier! That would have made everything so much easier.”

    I tried to explain to the teachers that Bug and I had an agreement but it wasn’t really the time for chatting. All the other kids seemed a bit traumatized by Bug’s wailing and I could see that they had their hands full. I wanted to get to the bottom of the upset but at the same time I wanted to get out of there as soon as I could and calm Bug down.

    We did exchange a few sentences. They informed me that I have a very intellectual child and we laughed a bit over that. I had a feeling that she would give them a run for their money with her constant chatter. I figured she’d either be the teachers’ pet or their worst nightmare. Apparently at one point she told them, “You have to go buy a car so you can take me home,” and they thought that was pretty funny. That’s my Bug. We argue all day long over everything so I’m not a bit surprised that she gave them a hard time.

    I’m not sure what went wrong. They said she cried off and on from ten until noon. That seems like a lot of crying. Maybe this is normal. The teachers said she seemed tired and even almost nodded off on one of the teacher’s shoulders. If she’d had a pacifier she probably would have fallen asleep but that’s not what I wanted her to go to preschool for. She does get up at the crack of dawn and even I notice that she starts to get grumpy around eleven for me, but we always push off naptime and she seems to get a second wind after lunch. She doesn’t usually take a nap until one or two in the afternoon.

    I’m not sure what to think. I don’t feel like she was traumatized. I know her cries, and she was definitely crying the drama-queen-I-didn’t-get-my-way cry and not the oh-no-the-world-has-betrayed-me cry. In fact, as soon as we were outside she was pushing herself out of my arms and wanting to go play on the playground. I tried to ask her what she didn’t like about preschool but she was way more interested in the duck pond nearby and was rattling on about feeding the ducks.

    All the way home I prodded her, trying to figure out what exactly set her off but all she would tell me is, “I don’t like preschool because I don’t like preschool.” She can be stubborn sometimes like that. I’ve been trying to journal with her every night, asking her about her day, and often she will tell me over and over, “I don’t know,” even though I know she knows plenty. It’s some sort of game with her.

    The good thing about having a talkative child is that she will tell me what went down eventually. Right now it seems like nothing really went down. Maybe that was the problem. Maybe she was bored. Maybe she expected to be around the big kids like her cousins. Maybe I can pull some strings and see if she can get into a class with older children. I sort of doubt that I can do that and she does have a friend that she knows in the same class so I’m hesitant to mess with what seems like a good fit. It’s too early really to say.

    She seemed to cheer up pretty quickly and we even talked about going back next week. I just don’t know.

    I think it’s my job to just worry until the end of time.