Love is Blind

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  • Potty Training Myself

     Teaching a toddler, my toddler in particular,  to pee and poop on a toilet has always been something that I didn’t particularly look forward to.  You can call me lazy, awful, horrible and a shitty parent all you want (no pun intended) but I just never got super excited at the thought of potty training GiGi.  First of all, the word “training” instantly brings me thoughts of the Olympics, or animals who do tricks, both of which are quite cool but not exactly the image of my child on a potty seat.  The idea of my daughter learning to go to the bathroom outside of her pants isn’t first on the list, however screwed up that is.  So, the wording alone puts me off, never mind the actual possibility of my child giving me more fun messes to clean up in the future. (****And on a side note - if they call it "potty training" does that make me the coach?  If so, where are my whistle, jersey, and both head and arm sweatband?  Do we need a sponsor?)

     

    I want her to have the independence that comes along with going to the bathroom alone, really I do.  I also love entertaining the idea that my wallet will be fatter from spending less money on diapers, etc.  With anything that my babe does, it’s on her schedule and at her pace, this much I’ve learned.  Family and friends and lovely sites have talked about toddlers+bathrooms=challenge.  It was inevitable that being a first time mother I would try to pick up some tips on what might make sense for potty training bathroom Olympics protocol.  One week GiGi had this epiphany that peeing in her diaper is something far too exciting to keep to herself, and when she shares that news with me I change her diaper.  Voila!  Picking up on what she was layin’ down, I began the whole potty training thing with the deluxe clone of a big potty that comes in the delightful shade of baby blue and produces stickers when she flushes and music when she is both trying to go potty and when she actually goes.  Sensors, stickers, music, and a flip up toilet seat…what’s not to love right?  Right.   GiGi played with the potty constantly. Played as in the past tense of play.  I opted for a potty seat that fits on the “big girl potty” and removed the deluxe toddler potty because the only use we were getting out of that was a make shift ipod (or would that be ppod?) and a removable pee holder that my kid would suck on.  Don’t worry, it isn’t as gross as it sounds. If she had actually sat on the seat with a bare butt to pee instead of giving the seat a little ass-drive-by,  then I would have freaked out a little more.

     

    GiGi is the proud owner of a princess pink designed potty seat that I couldn’t care less about and she doesn’t understand at all (fyi: we have stricken the word PRINCESS from our vocabulary here.  Unless there is one shaking your hand at Disneyland or you’re referring to a Disney song sung by one).  She has a little step to help her off of the potty and a few other items to assist in potty time.  Being that I am doing this whole “training” thing and the last that this situation arose I was a kid myself and on the learning end of it – I don’t know jack about what I’m doing.  Peeing and pooping and loving GiGi are all natural things so I figure I’ll just wing it.

     

     

     

     

    (Potty Animal)

     

    I know that I have, thus far, created a potty monster.  She is getting awfully demanding in the bathroom although Im sure if she had better-than-terribly two- manners it would just seem ritualistic and normal.  Anytime she is set on the potty, she screams “water!” and “bookie! Fish!” which means, “Hey mom can you please fetch me a little cup by the toothbrushes and fill it with water and then grab my Dr. Seuss One fish two fish Braille book?  Thanks, you’re a dear.”   If the previously stated needs are not met, then I get to deal with potty boss and her wicked refusal to pee.  I try to shutdown her crankiness, and appease her wishes, since I am the one who created this standard of potty training.  When I originally started taking her to the bathroom, I brought her a book for double reasons.  1.) maybe she would sit longer with a book she loves, and, 2.) who doesn’t like something trashy to read on the toilet?  I’m sure most people don’t find Dr. Seuss trashy, and on the whole I don’t either, but how responsible is it to have a fish driving a car in the water?  And counting too?  Sounds like a sobriety check to me, don’t you think (coughcoughLindsayLohanoftheFishWorldcough)?  Im just saying its like a toddler version of In Touch magazine….ish.   

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  • "I Told You So"

     

    I love my daughter.  Mushy, sappy, hugging, gushy, smushy love.   There are so many different things going on right now and she is being a gem through it.  She is currently sitting on the floor kissing her mp3 player while I finish packing for Disneyland.  We leave today and although I am running around like a whack job, tossing shit in my suitcase that I really don’t need (applesauce, finger nail clippers, 462 hair things), finishing our Merry Halloween cards, and writing blogs, she sits there and plays with an occasional outburst of “BOO!” which sounds more like “BAAAH!”

     

    I am amazed at the amount of energy I have now that I can sleep through the night.  Yes, you read me correct, through the night!  Thanks to GiGi’s co-creator and my sister, I was able to keep up with the “no water – no way – no how – not after you fall asleep” rule.  If you remember by dilemmas of yesterday, err yester-lastweek, you can understand that I have had some issues with GiGi and her bed wetting issues. 

     

    The one thing that is hardest for me as a parent is admitting when I am wrong about something.  That’s not to say that I won’t admit when I’m wrong, but I don’t like to.  I sometimes get spazzy about things that GiGi does or likes because I want so much for her to be comfortable and happy, like most parents want for their kids.  So much of what makes her tick is a mystery for me.  When it came to giving her water at night, I just assumed that It was something she needed.  The heartbreak on her face when I denied her a 3 am beverage was too much for me.

     

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  • Owning the Pool: GiGi's Summer Rules For Toddlers

     

    According the Guide for Easy Living – GiGi Edition, there are a few simple rules every person just barely able to walk under the kitchen table should know.  These rules will grant you a summer filled with sugar you would otherwise never get, splashing in the water for hours, an “ok” to scream as loud as you want, and a wide variety of chances to pee on anything outdoors that will hold still.  Sometimes, things that move too!  Just take a look at the list below and be amazed at how simple it really is to have great summer and get your parents excited about it too.

     

    1.) 1.)    ALWAYS, and I mean ALWAYS act more amped than you really are over the little stuff.  Like, for example, when your mom or dad puts your dorky little swimsuit on that they think is the cutest thing they’ve ever seen - act happy.  Better yet, wave your arms in the air and squeal. Trust me; this sets the tone for an awesome time.  I know, I know… you can feel ruffles on your ass or you’re missing a shirt. Look, kids, trust me, this makes the big people go ape shit.  It’s an opportunity for them to take pictures of you and as long as you do this, they won’t care about the other rules I’m going to let you in on.  Suck up the flowers, ruffles and bikini top that covers all zero of the non-existent boobs you have.  It pays off in the long run.

     

    2.)   2.)     When you’re in the water – SPLASH!  Try to only splash when someone is getting close enough to take your picture though. That is really fun.  The best is when you pretend like you’re going to fall backward while sitting on a step or something equally scary, and your mama’s camera falls into the pool.  She will start to cry and curse the water and make all kinds of weird noises.  It’s kind of funny, so you will want to laugh at that point.

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About the Blogger

Love is Blind

Megg Lasswell in Oakland.

This single mom moved home at age twenty-seven to raise her blind toddler, leaving city buildings behind and trying her best to embrace farm life outside Oakland. She is working on her first book in between indie-rocking out with her daughter GiGi and teaching her the simple things in life.

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