by Rachel Toalson | Stuff Crash Test Kids say
Husband: What is something you enjoy about being in a big family?
8-year-old: Not having a lot of attention?
Me: Wait. You enjoy that?
8-year-old: I was being sarcastic. Watching something on TV when you guys try to clean.
Me:
Husband:
8-year-old: That’s what I enjoy about being in a big family.
6-year-old: I would rearrange our whole living room.
Me: Oh yeah?
6-year-old: I would put the couch here and the loveseat here and the big chair here.
Me:
6-year-old: And then, in our kitchen, I would put the table here and—Wait. Did we win that? [pointing to the dishwasher.]
Husband: No, buddy. That came with the house. We’ve had it for nine years.
6-year-old:
Husband:
6-year-old: Huh.
5-year-old: What’s 10 plus 10 plus 10 plus 10 plus 10 plus 10?
6-year-old: I DON’t KNOW! There can’t be that many—wait. Thirty!
Me:
6-year-old:
Me:
6-year-old: I’m really good at math. That’s how I know.
5-year-old [to 6-year-old]: I’m glad I’m not sitting by you because we would fight.
6-year-old: We’re not twins.
Me [Singing]: Everything is awesome!
6-year-old: Actually, everything isn’t awesome. Death isn’t awesome.
Me:
6-year-old:
Me:
6-year-old: Death is definitely NOT awesome.
by Rachel Toalson | General Blog
You know that scene in Cinderella where she’s in the kitchen trying to get things ready for the day, and on the wall there’s this collection of bells ringing incessantly, signaling that people who are depending on her (mostly because they’re lazy) need things? Every morning, my kitchen fills with its own chorus of little bells, too, except those bells are walking around in the form of two 3-year-olds, a 5-year-old, a 6-year-old and an 8-year-old, and I can’t just simply leave the room to get away from their clanging, because they have legs and will follow me to the edge of the world without asking any questions about where I’m going.
“Mama!” the 5-year-old will say in the whiniest voice I’ve ever heard (and that’s saying a lot. I’ve really cleaned up my act.). “I can’t find my shoes.”
He’s not even out of bed yet, so I’m pretty sure he hasn’t even attempted “looking,” which I put in quotations because “looking” for a 5-year-old consists of sometimes seeing what’s right in front of his face, sometimes not. He just tripped over one of those missing shoes, and he still hasn’t found them.
His bell is followed up closely by one of the twins saying, “Mama, my brudder beat me down the stairs.” If only I could turn back time.
Followed, almost in the same breath, by his twin brother saying, “Mama, I firsty. I need milk, Mama. Mama, I need milk. I firsty, Mama” without even the slightest pause so that I can let him know that his milk is already on the table if he would just “look.”
“Where’s my blue folder?” the 8-year-old will say, even though I’m not the one in charge of his blue folder and there’s a designated place for it and I can see it sticking out from that designated place right his very minute.
“Oh! I forgot (fill in the blank),” the 6-year-old says on a regular basis. Usually that fill-in-the-blank looks something like forgetting that he’s VIP student this week and he needs to bring a poster with pictures of himself and his family on it so that all the other students will know who he is and what he wants to be when he grows up. Or forgetting that he’s supposed to have his book club book finished today, and he still has 75 pages to read. Or forgetting that there was a birthday party he was invited to this weekend, and he didn’t get to go, and how can we possibly keep track of all this? (To be fair, some of this isn’t even his fault, it’s our fault for failing at school. I haven’t signed a folder in weeks, and it’s only November.)
Get me a drink, I hungry, I can’t find my shoes, where’s my library book, please hold me just because, help me, carry me, push in my chair, where’s my folder, sign my papers, I’m cold, I’m hot, I’m hungry, I need my vitamins, bring me my blanket, where’s my backpack, can you turn on the light, I need more toilet paper, I want more, More, MORE.
With all these children and all their constant demands, sometimes I start feeling a little like Cinderella, except I’m a mama. Cinder-Mama. It’s like the fairy tale I always wanted, except it’s not.
Brush my hair, wash me off, wipe my bottom, what’s ten plus ten, I want my color book, the baby’s getting into the crayons, button my pants, tie my shoes, help me up, kiss this hurt, when’s dinner, can we go to the store because I have two dollars to spend, I need a snack, I can’t open the toothpaste, aw, man, it’s the minty toothpaste, I like the strawberry toothpaste, what are you doing? going to the bathroom? You don’t have a penis, where does your peepee come out?
There is something inherent in a mama that hears a need and that wants to meet it, desperately, right this minute. But the thing is, if I try to meet every single need in my house, I will go a little crazy.
Because one minute the 5-year-old will need someone to show him how to tie his shoes, again, and, at the same time, the 6-year-old will want help pouring the milk, because it’s a new gallon and I’m really thankful that he’s asking because the last thing I want is a whole gallon of milk dumped out onto the floor, but there’s no way in the world that I can be in two places at one time, and so one of those needs is going to have to remain unmet until I can manage it.
I tried to be in two places at once one time, and I ended up feeling resentful and angry that they would ask me to do so many things at the same time even though there was only one of me and six of them. So I had to take a step back. I had to breathe. I had to say it was okay that I couldn’t meet every single need the first time they asked. Or even the fifth time they asked. Or ever, sometimes (they did, after all, wish they could have gone to that party they missed. I was Cinder-Mama, not Fairy GodMama). It was good for them to learn how to wait. It was good for them to learn to do things for themselves. It was good for them to realize they were fully capable of doing what I could do.
So they started tying their own shoes, because they figured out they could do hard things. They started pouring their own milk, even if it was a brand new gallon, because they knew they had permission to screw up and spill, as long as they cleaned it up. They started writing their own events on a calendar and waiting to be hugged and kissed and taking responsibility for their own backpacks and shoes and school folders.
They don’t always remember, of course. There are mornings when it still sounds like there are shrieking bells wrapped around my ankles. There are days they forget “mama” is not synonymous with “servant,” but they are learning, day by day by day, that they are fully capable of handling the world on their own.
No more Cinder-Mama. Except for my indescribable beauty, of course.
by Rachel Toalson | Crash Test featured, Messy Mondays
It used to be so easy. It used to be that when we put something away, it stayed put away. It used to be that I could control the crawling space where my kid would scrutinize every piece of lint or dirt or dropped food, and there was nothing because HE WAS THE ONLY ONE.
Now, when I get down on my knees to do girly pushups and stand back up, there’s all kinds of crap stuck to my skin. Popcorn kernels. Tiny pieces of confetti-like paper. Mostly hair. It doesn’t matter if I just vacuumed 10 seconds ago, I will never be disappointed by the grossness that sticks to the sweat on my kneecaps. Someone in my house sheds like a German Shepherd, and it’s probably me.
And it’s not just those things that are burrowing down into the carpet that resurface when I decide to make an effort and work out (beyond chasing kids, of course), but it’s also the things my kids leave on the floor. When there was only one kid, we were able to manage this. When he took off his jacket, we could help him hang it up where it went. When he decided he didn’t want to wear socks with his tennis shoes, we could make sure those smelly socks got in the hamper. When he wanted to draw a picture of a flying elephant, he put the supplies away.
The problem is, now there are five little boys tearing off their socks and digging things out and forgetting they ever knew how to put things away. And shedding. Apparently.
The other problem is, Littlest One is crawling. That means when he finds dirty, smelly socks on the floor, they go in his mouth. When he finds important school papers spread on the floor, they go in his mouth. When he finds balls of hair they go, you guessed it, in his mouth. Which means we vacuum pretty much every day. Which is probably what we should have been doing in the first place, but who wants to clean a house where seven males live? Not me.
As you can probably imagine, vacuuming every day does not take care of this problem completely. Vacuums don’t suck up things like the insides of a stuffed animal the 3-year-olds thought it would be funny to de-fluff. It doesn’t get rid of dirty underwear no one claims. It doesn’t get rid of colored pencils.
What typically happens when you have more than one kid is that the 3-year-old will decide he wants to color, so he’ll get out the crayons and the colored pencils and his coloring book, because of course you keep all of that where he can reach it easily, because art expression is important in your house, and it’s a better alternative to butter-knife sword fighting with his imaginary friend, which has often been his preference but is definitely not allowed in your house, and then when he’s finished coloring 30 seconds later because he has the attention span of a squirrel, he goes straight for the trains even though the rule in your house is “one thing out at a time.” So then you have The Cleanup Fight, which usually just means a 3-year-old angrily swiping everything that was previously on the table onto the floor, screaming that he is “NOT GOING TO CLEAN THEM UP AND YOU’RE A MEAN BOOTY-FACE” and then collapsing into a pile of noodles right beside the tantrum mess, hopefully scraping his back on one of those colored pencils, so you can bring the point home that “that’s what happens when you.” And then he’ll say he didn’t get them out and he never colored with him, “nuh-uh,” he didn’t, and while you’re reminding him that you were just beside him while he did exactly what he’s saying he didn’t, because you’ll argue to the death with a 3-year-old, the Littlest One will pick up one of those pencils, slobber on it and then try to get it in his mouth. And because his aim isn’t all that great yet, he’ll end up with a mural all over his face.
He was super happy about his first taste of art. And by first taste of art, I mean his first literal taste of art.
I cleaned him off and turned my attention back to the 3-year-old, who was still lifeless on the floor, pretending like he was “too tired to clean up but not tired enough to lie down for his nap early.” The 9-month-old promptly zeroed in on an old diaper that had been left by Husband on the floor.
The moral of that story is: It’s not just kids that complicate things. It’s also husbands.
The other moral of the story is: Clean up your 3-year-old’s messes.
Not really. Because if you do it for them, how will they ever learn to clean up for themselves? And you’re not doing the world any favors sending a kid who doesn’t know how to clean up out into real life, because he’ll never learn it if not here in your home, and if you’re too lazy to teach them something as simple as cleaning up even when they don’t feel like it, then you shouldn’t have had kids.
Or something ridiculous like that.
by Rachel Toalson | Stuff Crash Test Kids say
Katy Perry’s “Firework:”
Baby you’re a wheel of death
You have stinky breath
You make me go “Ew ew ew
That smells like poo poo poo
Capital Cities’ “Safe and Sound:”
I can throw you up
I can throw up on the toilet seat and toot like a birdie tweet
You can be my luck
Even if the sky is going round I know that we’ll be poopy pound
Poopy pound
Poopy pound
Calvin Harris’s “Blame It On the Night:”
Blame it on my peepee
Eee eee
Don’t blame it on me
Don’t blame it on me
Blame it on my peepee
Eee eee
Don’t blame it on me
Don’t blame it on me
Owl City’s “It’s Always A Good Time:”
Whoa-oa-oh
It’s always a good time
Tooooo pooooop
We don’t even have to try
It’s always a good time.
Village People’s “YMCA:”
Young man
I have a disease
I said young man
I am going to sneeze
I said young man
You don’t want my disease
It’s a ba-na-na allergy
by Rachel Toalson | General Blog
Husband and my older boys have lately been trying to cram in some viewings of old Star Wars movies before the new one comes out. It’s important, Husband says, to introduce them to Luke and Yoda and Hans and, most of all, The Force.
I see his point. I mean, I remember watching all the Star Wars movies as a kid and enjoying the story, because it’s a good one, and even thinking that maybe, just maybe The Force was real, and I could one day do what Luke Skywalker did, if I could only find a light saber.
It’s just that when he says it’s important to introduce the boys to The Force, I take exception. Because my boys are already well-acquainted with The Force. It’s what they use to
1. Get their clothes in the laundry hamper…or not.
I know, I know. All the times I’ve come across their renegade pieces of clothing, smashed right up against a laundry hamper, it’s just because they’re still not that great at using The Force to get their clothes inside it. They just need a little more practice. That’s all. And when I come across a shirt or some pants or missing underwear on the couch or their bedroom floor or in the bathroom sink, it’s probably because one of their brothers did an arm fart in the middle of their putting-away-my-clothes-by-using-The-Force practice, and that’s why their aim is so far off. Fewer distractions, they need.
2. Put their dirty bowls, silverware and plates in the sink…or not.
It doesn’t matter if they’ve had three times every day for the last eight years to practice this skill, it’s just a really tough one to learn. I can understand that. Some things take time. Lots of time. I realize they really, really, really want to get those bowls and silverware and plates in the sink, but The Force isn’t strong enough to even pick them up off the table. Maybe The Force doesn’t work as well when it comes to wood and food. Force interference, they are.
3. Turn off lights…or not.
I get that this is a tricky thing to do, that flicking a finger from across the room to turn the light off in the last room they left. I’m sure The Force employs some intricately designed movement that requires motor skills my boys don’t have yet, because every time I pass their rooms at any time of the day, the light is blazing and no one’s home. When I point out the left-on light, they act like they forgot, but that’s just a ruse, because boys don’t always like admitting to what they can’t yet do. Better honed motor skills, this requires.
4. Set the table…or not.
I’m sure this goes back to The Force not working when it comes to things like wood and food, or forks and spoons and plates, because every time I ask one of them to set the table so I can finish up dinner, I turn around to put all those pots and pans on the table, and there are no plates and forks and spoons with which to eat, and they’re all in the living room reading or building a block tower or banging out an original melody on the piano, as if they thought this job was already done. Different kind of Force, this entails.
5. Shut the door…or not.
You would think this might be the easiest of them all. Go out the door, pull The Force along with you. Come inside, fling The Force behind you. But I guess I have some young Padawans who haven’t quite made it to Jedi status, because most of time, when they’re coming in or out, they don’t even seem to notice the door standing ajar and all the flies following them in. I wish there were a Force that could beat the flies, because they seem to love our house. So much so that the 6-year-old wrote an essay in school about how if he had a pet, it would be a fly-eating frog, so it could catch all the flies his mom hates. Which is why I really want my kids to master this closing-the-door-using-The-Force, because we don’t need kids’ teachers to know about things like that. More Physical Force, I demand.
6. Wash their bodies…or not.
I really wish I could help them here. If only words could pull enough of The Force with them to lather up the kids in the bath. Because “make sure it’s the first thing you do” is the same thing I say every single night when they get in the bath, and when that timer clangs and I tell them it’s time to get out, their hair isn’t even wet. I know they’re really trying to use The Force in between driving that car up the sides of the bath tub and pretending like they’re swimming in deep water. It’s not an easy thing to tell them it’s just not working, but somebody’s gotta do it. Intensified training, they need.
7. Put away the laundry…or not.
Oh, wait. That’s me. This is the one time The Force actually works for my boys, even if it ends up piling underwear in a closet and shoving hang-up shirts in the pajama drawer and crumpling jeans in the underwear drawer. I don’t even care. At least The Force put it all away. Better than I’m doing, it is.
Well. Now that I’ve written all of that out, I can better understand where my little Padawans are coming from. They just need a more skilled Jedi Master to help them hone their powers and teach them the intricate subtleties of using The Force.
Since it’s clear that The Force doesn’t work for Husband, either, I guess that means I signed up to be their Yoda. To work, I go.
by Rachel Toalson | Crash Test Parents, Messy Mondays
I know, I know. They’re so cute and cuddly. The first time they smile and the first time they say your name and the first time they reach toward you and you know you’re surely and certainly loved, even without words, those are the best moments of life. The best moments of baby.
It’s just that I feel like it’s my duty to warn you: THERE ARE A LOT OF OTHER MOMENTS WITH BABY, TOO.
Take the picture above. That happened a few weeks ago, right after I dropped my older boys off at school the one morning Baby happened to be in a stroller instead of strapped to me with a Baby Bjorn (and thank God for that, because…). I know we could all say I dodged a bullet with that one, because at least all that didn’t land on me, but what you can’t accurately see from this picture is HOW MUCH PUKE THERE IS. And how many crevices an infant seat has. And how much of it ended up on my hands.
After I thought fast and made up a racing game to play with my 3-year-old twins, who, impressively, ran the entire half-mile home, I put Baby in a bath, cleaned him all up, let him play in his little activity seat and then set to work on that car seat. At first I tried using a towel, but you just have to understand. There was so much. So much. So I took it out back, sprayed it with the water hose (It took a full 15 minutes to get all that puke out. So much.) and let it dry in the sun, which was probably better for it anyway.
And then, more recently, there was this:

Maybe you can’t tell as well from the picture, BUT THAT’S POOP. Because what’s in a baby’s diaper doesn’t always stay in a baby’s diaper, unfortunately. This little stank accident happened without my even knowing. I happily carried Baby upstairs, like I always do, without a clue that every time his cute little butt bounced on my arm was another opportunity for that nastiness to break out onto my skin. Once I put him down in his crib to go get a diaper, and I found this.
It was all up his back, all in his shirt, all over his legs, all over me. What’s weird is that it didn’t smell. Or at least not enough for me to notice. Or maybe it’s just because my house smells like a swamp anyway, because boys aren’t great at flushing the toilet.
Just after snapping this picture, I pontificated aloud to my twins about how this was an impressive smear and, astonishingly, a first in these years with six boys. They didn’t listen until I came to the word “poop.”
Twin 1: Let me see it, Mama.
Me: See?
Twin 2: Ewww!
Me: Want to smell it?
Twins, simultaneously: Yes!
Me:
Twins:
Me: Um. No. I was just kidding.
In spite of all the gross things that could possibly happen (and there are definitely more than these. We haven’t even broached the subject of snot.), I totally think babies are worth it. I would clean up a thousand of those for one of these:

I bet you would, too. Just don’t ever say I didn’t warn you.