Sunday, April 13, 2008

Mommy for a weekend

I actually secretly love it when my nephews call me Mom by accident: "Hey Mom, I mean, Betty..." It makes me feel needed.

Taking care of kids is a great mystery to me, and each time I do it I am left with many good reasons why I want to be a mother, and many good reasons I'm glad I'm not.

My favorite parts, in no particular order:

1. T. (9) kissing me goodnight. I'm pretty sure I'm not very good at tucking in, but he doesn't seem to mind.

2. D. (11) displaying beautiful little acts of kindness that he thinks no one sees.

3. Laughing in the backyard with T. as Izzy (the dog with the nice blue eyes) digs in a muddy hole, turning her normally-white fur to brown. Cleaning her off afterwards was a different story.

4. The random questions--T. asked two good ones today:

-"If you gathered all the saliva your mouth made every day of your entire life, do you think it would be enough to fill a bathtub, a pool, or an ocean?" (I told him that was a disgusting question, but I guessed a pool and D. guessed an ocean; it was apparently a question from Kadoo, and T. didn't know the answer.)

-"What makes the oxygen and gravity stay in the earth?" (I explained about the atmosphere and ozone, then about how the earth was so big and spinning so fast that it had a gravitational field--I hope I gave the right answers. I think I did, because he then said, "So we're always being pulled towards the center of the earth, but this is as far as we go?")

I really wasn't expecting to answer those questions when I got up this morning.

5. The moments of uproarious laughter. I still maintain that D. has the best and most contagious laugh I have ever heard.

6. The sneaky cleverness. Aside from both of them taking full advantage of me not knowing every single rule of the house (and me mostly being okay with that), D. wanted five more dollars to buy a game, and kept asking if he could do something to earn it. I suggested he take care of the dishes, and he toyed with the idea for some time, but when he learned that I meant even the dishes piled up in the sink with the bits of leftover food stuck on them he said, "but that's disgusting!" Hmm, ya think? I also suggested vacuuming, and he actually got the vacuum out, but he never progressed further to the actual performing of the task.

7. The religious moments. I love reading and explaining the scriptures to kids because no matter how crazy it gets during the day, when you start talking about the gospel they settle down and pay attention.

8. The great times when they are just playing together and are smiling and having a good time.

9 comments:

elegyrl said...

You my friend are amazing! I know you will be an amazing mom someday!! :)

ol' Bob said...

I agree with elegyrl.

We'll have to have a talk about physics sometime: gravity, centrifugal force, and so on.

Unknown said...

According to encyclopedia.com, people produce between 1 and 1.5 L of saliva per day. Taking the lower bound, and assuming an average lifetime of 75 years, this would be 27,375 liters of saliva, which is 7232 gallons.

A swimming pool that's 12 feet wide, 16 feet long and 5 feet deep will be about the right size to hold all that saliva. Yick.

And bob, feel free to check that math. I might be a little rusty.

Betty Edit said...

Yeah, well, bob, we all know about me and physics: learn to play the bagpipes, pass the class.

Mike, thanks for that lovely sleuthing. You could work the 100 hour board!

Betty Edit said...

...work FOR the 100 hour board. Brain is skipping words...

Kim Dubois said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
ol' Bob said...

Your anonymity may have been threatened here... probably not the first time.

Kim Dubois said...

Oops. Sorry. I'm a little slow.

Betty Edit said...

Fear not. It wouldn't take a great genius to figure out who I am anyway. :o)

And I think I got an A in that class, though I have no idea how (though I could guess). He must've done something to the curve, but I don't remember him ever actually telling me that.