Last
night, Steven told me that the earth is turning all of the time even though it
doesn’t seem like it is moving. I said, “I think it just stopped.” He said,
“no! it didn’t! it never stops!” Then he was telling me that I do something all
the time. He said, “24 hours a day! And 24 hours a night!” Mom was surprised to
hear that we are having 48 hour cycles now. Leave it to Steven to change the
laws of the universe.
In his bath, he said
that he wanted to show me something. Sometimes he says that just to get my
attention and them spends 10 minutes thinking of something to show me. So I
washed his hair while he was thinking. He told me that now I had ruined it. He
asked if there was soap in the water. I said that there probably was. He said,
“Well wash it out!” As soon as I figure out how to wash the soap out of the
water, I will comply.
He dumped about 2
bottles of bath gel into the tub and called me in to show me all of the bubbles
he made. He was so proud of making those bubbles that I let the fact he used up
all of the bath gel sort of slide as he pointed “look at this big bubble! I
just used the rest of that one and that one and part of that one (pointing to
the now empty bottles)”
Parker fell asleep right
as we got to the waffle house. I parked the truck at the window so we could
watch him as we ate. One of the parker rules is “do not wake the baby” which he
pronounces “WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAH!” After about 15 minutes,
Steven scolded me, “parker is probably out there crying this whole time! You
need to go check on him.” So I did. And of course he was sleeping soundly. When
we got back in the car, the sound of closing doors woke him. So Steven said,
“see! I told you he was awake!” I just don’t know how we could raise this baby
without Steven’s input.
He kept asking for an
‘ice mothra’ among other “needs.” (Imagine that: Steven asking for toys. That
never happens, right?) I told him that I spent more money on toys for him than
I could really afford and that he would have to wait until I had more money. He
solemnly handed me his $5 bill to help me out.
I kept telling him to
get up yesterday morning. I finally got frustrated and asked him what would get
him out of bed because I was tired of fighting. He told me to go bid on an ice
mothra and let him know when I won and then he would get out of bed to come
look at it. Getting him up for school would get awfully expensive. So this
morning I tried the tickle method.
He wanted a ‘to-go’ box
for his unfinished waffle last night. He wouldn’t speak up and tell the waiter.
Could it be that Steven is getting shy in his old age? So he sat there with his
hand raised in the middle of waffle house expecting the waiter to call on him.
Didn’t happen. After about 6 tries, he finally said, “Excuse me” and the waiter
promptly got him a ‘to-go’ box.
When the waiter brought
the bill, I put out the money along with a tip. As the waiter picked it up, I
said, “I don’t need any change.” Steven looked at me in surprise and said,
“Well I want the change!” I shushed him and told him that you give the waiter a
tip when you pay. He asked why and I him told that it is for the service. He
said he wanted a tip. I said, ‘what have you done for me?’ “Well, I got lots of
pink checks at school for being good. And you didn’t even get me a toy every
time!” Such a neglectful mother. Poor deprived child! I don’t know how he
survives.
When ordering at the
waffle house, Steven said he wanted “a waffle and twenty pieces of bacon.” The
waiter laughed and said he was crazy. When Scott got home from class, he cooked
a whole package of bacon for Steven since the waiter ‘adjusted’ Steven’s order
to 2 strips of bacon. So Steven munched on bacon for breakfast and had a
gingerbread man for ‘dessert.’ The gingerbread man was of course screaming,
“run, run as fast as you can…” as Steven ate his limbs.

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