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Home » Categories » Home Life » Parenting » Chatty Son is Music To My Ears » Printer Friendly

Lisa Barker

Chatty Son is Music To My Ears

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Submitted Tuesday, October 23, 2007
Lisa Barker (455)
Lisa Barker

http://www.biblioreads.com

Sometimes when a mom chooses to stay at home, she worries that her education will go to waste.  Little by little caring for little ones kills off brains cells.  We cut everything at the dinner table into tiny pieces.  We’re doomed to forever speak in the third person.

And then your child turns ten-years old. 

He soaks up every detail of every subject that interests him like a human sponge.  And he informs you about those topics every chance he gets.  At first this makes the remaining years of parenting seem like three consecutive life sentences.

I’ve taken to calling my ten-year old Encyclopedia Brown.  Want to know about sharks?  Ask my son.  He knows the difference between each type dating back to pre-historic times.  I can’t remember the brand of orange juice I buy.

Want to know about the solar system?  My son can tell you about God’s work in such detail that you’d think he was God’s personal assistant when the world was created.  Yet, this is the same child that can’t remember to zip up his pants. 

But if you want to know exactly how to jump through the molten lava in the Mario game, he will tell you step-by-step.  I know.  Once we walked to the church and he didn’t take one breath the entire forty-five minute journey.  I can play Mario in my sleep, yet I’ve never once actually played the game in real life.

The secret is to look as if I am busy and enjoying what I am doing.  Sure enough, my boy will interrupt because he has something sensational to share with me.

Every stage of childhood is unique with its own challenges and blessings.  Sometimes my ten-year old and I simply annoy each other.  I nag because he has to do chores.  Ugh.  But more often than not, he’s my right hand man.  He wants to please.  He wants more responsibility.  He wants to soak up that praise more than any trivia he’s memorized.

So one day I slipped a love note in his lunch. It had been a particularly hard week and he’d made it difficult for me to ‘catch him doing good.’  So I told him how much I loved him and that I was sure that we could work through this time together.

My son floated on air once he read the note.

Sure, he can talk a leg off a donkey, but that endless chatter in my ear while I drive, walk or cook is the sound of a happy kid.  I don’t worry anymore about dying brain cells.  Encyclopedia Brown here is restocking my supply like there’s no tomorrow.

. . . . . . . . . . .
©Lisa Barker - Jelly Mom™ is written by Lisa Barker, mother of five and author of "Just Because Your Kids Drive You Insane... Doesn't Mean You Are A Bad Parent!" and is syndicated through Parent To Parent™. To publish Jelly Mom™, buy the book or leave comments, please visit http://www.jellymom.com. Sign up for the complimentary Jelly Mom™ weekly newsletter and receive a BONUS GIFT!






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Comments on this article: (2 total)


» left by Judi Lake (1,883)
Judi Lake
(1 year 357 days ago.)

Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
Lisa, I like your style. I really laughed when I read this - wonderful!
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» left by susan thom from nj (1 year 357 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
hi Lisa,
i really enjoyed your article. it was very candid, and funny. wait until your child is 17, 20, and 22! my 20 year old just got his neck pierced! attention grabber for a middle child. the holes will close up someday,
thanks for sharing.
best regards,
sue thom
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Article added to SearchWarp.com on 10/23/2007 6:07:10 PM.
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Lisa Barker


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