Kids
Re: Kids
ill preface this by saying that I love my kids, and I wouldn't trade having them for anything in the world.
But by God, today.....
wifes been sick all week...It finally caught me today. Shes still sick so as soon as I get home I get handed the kids (fair). But....I feel like I got hit by a train, and I just stoked the fire and got it roaring hot even though its 70 in here because I'm freezing.
Tonight, of all days, I would let them veg with their iPads/screens whatever. Tonight, of course, is the night they dont want them at all and I'm currently trying to hold it together as toy dinosaurs take over a barbie village.
If there was a cliff I had energy to get too,, I'd run off it. lol.
But by God, today.....
wifes been sick all week...It finally caught me today. Shes still sick so as soon as I get home I get handed the kids (fair). But....I feel like I got hit by a train, and I just stoked the fire and got it roaring hot even though its 70 in here because I'm freezing.
Tonight, of all days, I would let them veg with their iPads/screens whatever. Tonight, of course, is the night they dont want them at all and I'm currently trying to hold it together as toy dinosaurs take over a barbie village.
If there was a cliff I had energy to get too,, I'd run off it. lol.
Just Ledoux it
Re: Kids
I feel your pain. Between the usual crud that comes in and out when you have kids in school, to separate Covid bouts for Mr. and Mrs. Fish, to the holidays, to snow days, and so on, I'm not sure I've had a normal work week since fucking Columbus Day.TDub wrote: ↑Wed Mar 16, 2022 8:25 pm ill preface this by saying that I love my kids, and I wouldn't trade having them for anything in the world.
But by God, today.....
wifes been sick all week...It finally caught me today. Shes still sick so as soon as I get home I get handed the kids (fair). But....I feel like I got hit by a train, and I just stoked the fire and got it roaring hot even though its 70 in here because I'm freezing.
Tonight, of all days, I would let them veg with their iPads/screens whatever. Tonight, of course, is the night they dont want them at all and I'm currently trying to hold it together as toy dinosaurs take over a barbie village.
If there was a cliff I had energy to get too,, I'd run off it. lol.
Re: Kids
First trip to the emergency room as a parent. The youngest bit a decent sized hole in his tongue at the bounce tag place. No surprise that he required a visit of this nature before his older sister. She is catious, him not so much. tough little fucker barely cried. But stuck his tongue out to show me and I was like "oh shit".
Re: Kids
We had several when the kids were young.
2am, Mrs 99 is at work. Major snowstorm going. Youngest is having issues breathing. I call Mrs 99 at the hospital and ask her what to do. She askes what is that weird sound in the background. It's the kid. "Get that kid to the ER now, moran."
After a couple of hours and some breathing treatments, they tell me it's the croup.
2am, Mrs 99 is at work. Major snowstorm going. Youngest is having issues breathing. I call Mrs 99 at the hospital and ask her what to do. She askes what is that weird sound in the background. It's the kid. "Get that kid to the ER now, moran."
After a couple of hours and some breathing treatments, they tell me it's the croup.
Defense. Rebounds.
Re: Kids
Breathing shit is scary when they are little.jhawks99 wrote: ↑Thu May 05, 2022 12:48 pm We had several when the kids were young.
2am, Mrs 99 is at work. Major snowstorm going. Youngest is having issues breathing. I call Mrs 99 at the hospital and ask her what to do. She askes what is that weird sound in the background. It's the kid. "Get that kid to the ER now, moran."
After a couple of hours and some breathing treatments, they tell me it's the croup.
Tongue bites not so much, but wanted someone who knows what they are doing to look at it. Especially because I pay so much for insurance so might as well use it.
Re: Kids
I was pretty much sick free the 2 years of working exclusively from home due to Covid. Now that I’ve been going in the office a few days a week for the last month or so, I’ve had a stomach bug that lasted for several days and the last few days I had a throbbing headache and just general tiredness. Feel better this morning since I went to bed last night at 8pm and basically slept 10+ hours w/o waking up once. I hate being sick, I get so damn grumpy.
- CrimsonNBlue
- Posts: 17405
- Joined: Thu Nov 15, 2018 11:30 am
Re: Kids
Well the US sure has done a bang up job of tempting millennials to reverse that record low birthrate trend over the last 2+ years.
Re: Kids
I'll admit, I own more guitars than I should, or than my ability warrants.
But the problem is, I was showing off one guitar to a buddy (who has kids), and lamenting on how I shouldn't have spent so much on it, when the buddy replied, "bro that's about 2 weeks worth of daycare."
But the problem is, I was showing off one guitar to a buddy (who has kids), and lamenting on how I shouldn't have spent so much on it, when the buddy replied, "bro that's about 2 weeks worth of daycare."
- CrimsonNBlue
- Posts: 17405
- Joined: Thu Nov 15, 2018 11:30 am
Re: Kids
Maybe I am naive and wrong and there are a bunch of millionaire daycare owners/providers out there, but seeing the rates, I would think they are all around us.ousdahl wrote: ↑Fri May 27, 2022 3:40 pm I'll admit, I own more guitars than I should, or than my ability warrants.
But the problem is, I was showing off one guitar to a buddy (who has kids), and lamenting on how I shouldn't have spent so much on it, when the buddy replied, "bro that's about 2 weeks worth of daycare."
Re: Kids
I'm guessing I'll need to be the bearer of pretty bad news for my oldest kid (he's 15), some time this week. Specifically, I think we'll learn that he is getting cut from the most competitive team he's on (and has been on for several years). The team is probably the single biggest social and competitive thing for him - it's a year-round thing.
Curious as to others' experiences with situations like this. I am guessing he'll be pretty blindsided (he shouldn't be, we've been warning him for weeks/months that he wasn't taking things seriously enough, but: this is teenagers), and I'm figuring he won't really HEAR anything we say until the shock wears off.
Big picture, what I want to communicate is:
* This won't be the last time he wants to do something where there are not enough spots for everyone.
* What will make us proud or disappointed is how he responds to adversity, not the existence (or non-existence) of adversity.
* When something is important to you, the only reliable way to protect yourself from disappointment is to put yourself in a position of knowing you did everything you should have done. If you do that, and things still don't go your way, you will find it much easier to let go of the disappointment than if you need to wonder if you left opportunity on the table.
* This doesn't change any long-term goals or opportunities - but it means (vis a vis this sport) that he either needs to take ownership in getting better, or recalibrate the time/attention to something else that serves his goals (short-, medium- and long-term).
We don't push our kids into any particular activity, but it's a requirement that they be involved in something. I don't personally care if that's sports or volunteering or debate or a job or student government or what. But you don't get to do nothing.
Curious as to others' experiences with situations like this. I am guessing he'll be pretty blindsided (he shouldn't be, we've been warning him for weeks/months that he wasn't taking things seriously enough, but: this is teenagers), and I'm figuring he won't really HEAR anything we say until the shock wears off.
Big picture, what I want to communicate is:
* This won't be the last time he wants to do something where there are not enough spots for everyone.
* What will make us proud or disappointed is how he responds to adversity, not the existence (or non-existence) of adversity.
* When something is important to you, the only reliable way to protect yourself from disappointment is to put yourself in a position of knowing you did everything you should have done. If you do that, and things still don't go your way, you will find it much easier to let go of the disappointment than if you need to wonder if you left opportunity on the table.
* This doesn't change any long-term goals or opportunities - but it means (vis a vis this sport) that he either needs to take ownership in getting better, or recalibrate the time/attention to something else that serves his goals (short-, medium- and long-term).
We don't push our kids into any particular activity, but it's a requirement that they be involved in something. I don't personally care if that's sports or volunteering or debate or a job or student government or what. But you don't get to do nothing.