by Rachel Toalson | Stuff Crash Test Kids say
Me [holding up something indistinguishable. Is it food? Trash? A little of both?]: What in the world is this?
Husband: I’m not really sure.
8-year-old: I volunteer to eat that.
Me:
Husband:
8-year-old:
Me: Nope.
6-year-old: Mama, will you sign me up for soccer?
Me: …
Translation: Mama, will you sign your life away to me?
(Sorry soccer moms. It’s true.)
8-year-old: Did you hear that stomping noise?!!!
Husband: Yeah. Was that you?
8-year-old: Yeah! Last week I weighed myself, and I was 62 point something pounds! And today I was 63 point something!
Me:
Husband:
8-year-old: [grinning]
What Husband and I are thinking: I wish we were that excited about gaining a pound.
Me: There. I’m done with my makeup. How do I look?
6-year-old: Wow! You look beautiful! [singing] That’s what makes you beautiful. [chuckles to himself.] Yeah. Makeup.
Me: What? I’m not beautiful without makeup?
6-year-old: Wait. You’re beautiful all the time, Mama.
3-year-old: Mama! I don’t want to eat beans.
Me: Well! You’re going to have to eat beans. It’s what’s for dinner.
Husband: Yeah. It’s what’s for dinner.
3-year-old: Stop copying me, Daddy!
Husband: I’m not copying you.
3-year-old: Yes you are.
Husband: No I’m not.
3-year-old: Yes you are.
Husband: No I’m not.
3-year-old: Yes you are.
Husband:
3-year-old:
Husband:
3-year-old: You are, Daddy.
Husband: You are, Daddy.
by Rachel Toalson | General Blog
Six boys produce a lot of destruction around my house. Everywhere I look, there are nicks in bookshelves and unintended holes in the walls from errant hands or fingers or just curiosity, and there are cracked toilet lids and pictures frames that have no more glass and shattered lights that took an accidental knocking.
But the destruction, by far, hits toys the hardest. Mostly because toys are made of paper. Or something similar. They’re surely not made of anything durable, like steel. Or iron. Or cement.
I know, I know. If we had toys made of steel or iron or cement, we’d have bigger things to worry about, and besides, boys wouldn’t even be able to lift them, which might be my point.
I have no idea what goes through the minds of toy manufacturers when they’re building these complicated little things intended for boy play. I imagine it’s something like this: “Haha! Finally! Here is something they’ll never be able to destroy.”
The answer is always false.
My boys get pretty wild and rowdy when they’re playing, but, from what I’ve observed, it’s not any more wild and rowdy than their friends, including some girls. Kids play hard. It’s their favorite thing to do, and that means that many times, the toys they choose to play with are on their last life. Or maybe they never really had a life in the first place, because as soon as they came home and saw the boys, they gave up (remember the scene in Toy Story 4 then Woody and Buzz and Jessie watch the kids at daycare play with the old toys and you can just tell they’re terrified to be brought into the room? That’s what I imagine any toys coming into our house feel like, if they had feelings.).
So I’m just putting it out there, toy manufacturers: If you want to test whether or not your product is really durable—and I’m talking nothing-is-going-to-destroy-this durable—send it to my house.
Here are some things we’ve already tried:
1. Anything made of foam.
Once upon a time, my second son got a Thor foam hammer for his birthday. It was the coolest thing, if you talked to him. Two days later, it was about half its original size, with tiny little bite marks all over it, because his little brother thought it looked like a good thing to tear apart with his teeth. BECAUSE THIS IS THE ONLY THING FOAM IS GOOD FOR.
Trust me. We made light sabers out of pool noodles this summer, because we thought our boys would really enjoy some safe sword play, except it’s hard to sword fight when you’re focused on how many bite marks your light saber has. They kept getting me in the face, because I couldn’t stop staring, marveling at how quickly it had happened.
You know those foam protectors they put on the metal bars of trampolines so kids don’t get hurt while they’re jumping? Yeah, my little foamivores got those, too. Maybe they’ll learn their lesson next time a body part connects with a metal pole.
2. Anything made with a thousand pieces that don’t keep their pieces.
This would be things like LEGOs that get opened and dumped out and no one really cares about putting together that awesome Star Wars starship as much as I do. It would be things like puzzles, which are all packaged in a bag kids can’t open and neither can parents—so when it is finally, finally, finally wrestled open, the pieces go flying everywhere, and at least one of them is sure to disappear. Forever.
(I think toy manufacturers do this on purpose. Someone somewhere is laughing every time a parent sweats through trying to open something and a billion pieces fly everywhere. You know who’s not laughing? Me. Thanks for another anxiety attack, toy manufacturers. My kid just tossed a puzzle into my lap and asked me to open it.)
3. Mr. Potato Head’s butt.
This was just lazy designing, in my opinion. I get why it’s there—easy storage of all the pieces that make Mr. Potato Head Mr. Potato Head, but it’s just that Mr. Potato Head, at least in my house, has a very leaky butt, because every other minute my kids are asking me to put Mr. Potato Head’s butt on, except we don’t allow the word “butt” in our house, so it sounds more like, “Can you put Mr. Potato Head’s booty back on,” which is really kind of ridiculous and a little bit cute. I’ll put it back on, and then I’ll watch them fill it up with pieces and close it and then open it again, and, whoops, there went the butt flap again and all the pieces are spilling out and my kid is throwing Mr. Potato Head across the room, because it’s just so frustrating. I get it. It’s frustrating when you have a leaky butt on your hands.
4. Action figures.
These guys. I feel sorry for them. They lose limbs like we lose matching shoes. I’ve found Captain America with only one arm, but “at least he still has his shield,” the boys say. I’ve found Hulk without a head, which would be a very dangerous Hulk, if you ask me. I’ve found Iron Man missing a leg, but “at least he can still fly.”
All I know is I’m hoping they won’t come back to avenge their missing limbs, because I have no idea where they are.
5. Games.
Now, I love playing Apples to Apples and Ticket to Ride and Dominion and even Cards Against Humanity just like any other parent, and even when it comes to kids’ games, I love Battleship and Candy Land and Operation. It’s just that even though these games are super fun and most of my boys are old enough to play them, they come with two thousand tiny pieces. And they’re packaged in boxes.
This alone is a recipe for disaster, but put together, it’s a recipe for we’ll-never-play-this-again. The boys try to cram on the box lid, even though the Battleship board is still halfway open, and the box tears in half, and then the pieces are everywhere, and we have to break out the Duct tape, and even still, pieces go missing. Ever tried to play Operation without the liver and the heart and the funny bone? It’s not as much fun.
6. Anything that’s super cool.
The 8-year-old once got a microscope for his birthday, because he was really into science (and still is), but it lasted all of three days, because he left it out on the table once, and one of his twin brothers decided to see what would happen if he squeezed the tiny little light bulb. Easy enough to fix, except that when he crushed it with his tiny little hands, he also bent a piece that wouldn’t permit any other right bulb to be screwed in.
The 6-year-old once got a really cool bug catcher that broke the first time a fly got caught. (I know. That wasn’t his fault.) Another boy once got a frogosphere where you can raise your own frogs, and we didn’t even try that one, because we’re talking about live animals. After what these boys do to toys? No thanks. You just dodged a bullet, baby frogs.
7. Scooters.
It’s amazing how difficult it is to align the handlebars with the wheels on a scooter and how amazingly easy it is to mangle this contraption beneath the tires of a minivan when boys forget to put it back on the porch.
8. Stuffies.
If the 3-year-olds are left alone with a stuffed animal for any amount of time, they will defluff it, which is about as terrible as it sounds. Every now and then they sneak a little stuffy past my eyes and hide it under their pillow until I take a bathroom break from my post right outside their room, which is where I have to stay if there’s any chance that they will take a nap, and when I come back, I find a miniature throw carpets that have dog heads and lion heads and pink elephant heads with sparkly purple eyes.
In fact, this has happened so often recently I’m considering starting a business selling slippers made from old, defluffed stuffed animals. Because those little throw rugs look suspiciously like the material used for kids slippers. Might as well make a profit off my boys’ destruction.
All I’m really trying to say, toy manufacturers, is that you’re going to have to do better than this. Let’s see you make something cool that will not be taken apart in ten seconds and put back together all wrong, or maybe, worse, better than before. Let’s see you make something that can withstand cross-purpose playing (like puppet sticks that are actually durable enough to be used as swords—which will happen). Let’s see you make something kids can’t destroy.
I know it’s a daunting task, but judging by the price of that action hero castle they got for Christmas last year that was destroyed two hours later, I’m paying you about $25 an hour. You can do this. I know you can.
Plus, my boy just put a cool Star Wars light saber on his birthday wish list, and I still remember what happened to the last one. No one wants to see an 8-year-old on a war path to figure out who broke his favorite toy. Trust me.
by Rachel Toalson | Messy Mondays
So there’s laundry. And then there’s putting laundry away. One of these things doesn’t happen at our house.
I usually slave over at least eight loads of laundry every Tuesday–and that’s if the boys don’t put all their dirty clothes in the laundry, which they actually did this weekend, after we helped them clean their room and found six weeks worth of clothes on the floor. Not really. It was more like eight.
We hung most of them up, because I wasn’t about to put them all in the laundry, but some of them were obviously dirty, after a smell test performed by anyone but me, because you could not pay me enough money to hold up a boy’s sock–clean or not–to my sensitive nose. Well, maybe for a certain amount of money. How much are we talking?
Anyway, like I was saying, when the boys actually put all their dirty clothes in the laundry it’ll typically gain me an extra load or two.
It takes me all day to do laundry, because I don’t own a laundromat. And then it takes at least 45 minutes to sort it all.
I know, I know. Boys should be helping. And they will, eventually. It’s just that I usually only get to laundry when they’re in school, because when they’re home I’m so busy putting out fires and keeping them out of the refrigerator I can’t possibly juggle laundry in all that activity. I’m easily overstimulated. What can I say?
Also, I would kind of like to have my laundry done and not stalled out, which happens often when boys are invited into the laundry process. Mostly because we have the heavy-duty machines with a billion buttons, and if we know anything at all about kids, we know they like pressing buttons. So sometimes the towels get washed on delicate cycle in boiling hot water with enough water for a “tiny load” instead of the “gigantic load” it is. And sometimes, if I’m really lucky, the washer won’t even be washing like I think it is, and I won’t know until my phone timer goes off, telling me the load is done and I find that it is not, in fact, done, because someone pushed the start button one extra time, and it never got past the soaking stage, which just, essentially, added a whole hour to my laundry day.
So I just do it myself for now.
The way I fold laundry is I first dump it all out on my bed and then sort it into its eight different piles. My thought process behind this is that if those piles are blocking my bed, that means we can’t go to sleep until they’re put away. Husband, who is charged with the responsibility of teaching boys to put laundry away, because I’ve just spent my whole day washing it, doesn’t feel the same way, though. The piles are just things to be moved. And where he moves them is to the banister outside our bedroom door.
Here’s what the breakdown usually looks like from there:
Boy: Mama, I don’t have any sweat pants in my drawer.
Me [jugging the baby on a hip while I finish up frying eggs for breakfast because protein is king]: Okay. It’s probably in your laundry pile. I’ll come help you in a minute.
Boy: Okay. [disappears.]
[I finish up breakfast and get the plates on the table, set the baby in his high chair.]
Boy: [yelling from upstairs]: Don’t worry, Mama! I got some.
Me: [physically deflates]
I deflate because I know this is what it’s going to look like when I go back upstairs. Apparently, every single time we do laundry, the sweat pants, which are the only things my kids want to wear anymore, are always on the very bottom of the pile. Which means those sorted laundry piles don’t stay sorted laundry piles for long.
We’ve gotten so used to walking on clothes I don’t know what we’re going to do when someone decides to clean this up.
by Rachel Toalson | Stuff Crash Test Kids say
Husband: Where were you? It’s time for dinner.
6-year-old: I was getting my brother.
Husband: But your brother got in here five minutes ago. What were you doing for the other five minutes?
6-year-old: Staring at this girl.
Husband:
6-year-old:
Husband: Well.
Me: What did you do in school today?
5-year-old: My teacher went to Lulu’s to get some ice cream.
Me: Who was watching you?
5-year-old: One of my friend’s moms.
6-year-old: Yeah. All the teachers went for ice cream.
Me, to 6-year-old: Who watched you?
6-year-old: No one watched me. I was too fast.
8-year-old: Mama, I just wiped my nose, and a booger came off on my finger.
Me: Well, wait until you have a tissue to get rid of it.
8-year-old: Oh, it’s OK. I just dropped it in my backpack.
Me: Hang on. Let me get some forks.
6-year-old: Hey! I thought we always ate with our hands!
Me:
6-year-old:
Me:
6-year-old: Well, not always. Just with Daddy.
Husband: What’s wrong, buddy?
6-year-old:
Husband: Are you sad?
6-year-old:
Husband: Mad?
6-year-old:
Husband: Confused?
6-year-old:
Husband:
6-year-old: Try to make yourself a statue.
6-year-old, talking to his brother in the back seat: One time in Odyssey, I learned that God knows everything we’re going to do before we do it.
5-year-old: Yeah. He knows when we’re going to hit.
6-year-old: And when we’re going to draw on the couch.
by Rachel Toalson | Crash Test featured, Crash Test Parents, General Blog
(I’m going to get a little serious in today’s post, so feel free to pass on if what you came here for was humor. I’ll be back to my regularly scheduled program once I get this off my chest.)
There’s this school of thought that really bothers me. It shakes fingers at us and says that if we think parenting is hard or we feel like giving up on a daily or hourly or minute-by-minute basis or we, God forbid, wish our kids would be different, less difficult people for a fleeting moment in time, then we probably shouldn’t have become parents in the first place.
It’s a lie.
It’s a dangerous lie, too, one that keeps us locked in chains as parents, because that’s when we start looking around at all those people who make it look so easy, who make it look as though they’re enjoying every single minute of every single in-the-trenches hour, and we can think that we are somehow deficient in our parenting abilities.
You know what the easy part of parenting is? Making it look easy.
You know what the hard part of parenting is? Every other second.
Parenting is hard. You’ll never hear me say it’s easy. It’s hard because I work really hard at it. And, also, nothing worthwhile was ever easy.
I fail every single day at this parenting gig. Every single day. Sometimes that failing looks like yelling because the 3-year-olds just poured a whole package of brand new crayons out on the table and broke 26 of them in half before I could even get to them, even though I just got done telling them to leave the crayons alone until their brothers got home. Sometimes that failing looks like speaking more sharply than I intended to the 8-year-old because I just warned him not to swing the broom like that, and he decided to do it anyway, and he broke a light. Sometimes it looks like standing in a kitchen and crying without being able to say why I’m crying, just knowing there are two many voices and too many words and too many needs knocking all at once, and it’s overwhelmingly suffocating.
But I will never pretend I don’t fail, because it’s not true. I will never pretend that parenting my six boys is not hard, because it’s not true. The world is not served by facades and pretty little pictures and perfect little examples. The world is served by imperfection and being brave enough to bare it.
So, yeah, parenting feels hard to me. It’s not because I don’t love my children. I love them with a love that is great and deep and wild enough to gouge out whole parts of me that never belonged. They are precious and wonderful and most of all beloved.
Parenting feels hard because I’m trying, every day, to be better at it than I was yesterday. It feels hard because we’re all people and we’re all imperfect and we are living and growing together in ways that can grind and carve and shape. It feels hard because these are tiny little humans we’re talking about, tiny little humans who will one day become men and women, and we get to shepherd them into that, and it is a giant, humbling, magnanimous task. A privilege. But a mountain of responsibility.
I don’t take it lightly.
I would venture to say that if parenting feels easy every second of every day, if there is never a moment where we feel like locking ourselves in a bathroom for just a breath or 50 of them, if we never wish, for that tiny split of a split-second, that they would be different people, we are probably doing it wrong.
The best parts of life take hard work and dedication and perseverance, and the things most worth doing will, at any moment in time, feel hard. That’s how I know I’m on the right track as a parent.
Because, for me, parenting feels hard every time my 8-year-old forgets how he’s been taught to handle his anger and lashes out with hands instead of words, because he’s always been a gifted kid whose emotional development lags behind others his age and we’ve worked really, really hard trying to walk him toward a place of control and knowledge and healthy expression of all the emotions, not just the good ones, and sometimes it just feels like a losing battle. It feels hard when I remember what a brilliant and kind and loving little boy he is and how much good he has the potential to blast into the world, if only he didn’t have this one little thing. It feels hard when I see that school number on my cell, and I wonder if it’s him they’re calling about.
Parenting feels hard every time the 3-year-olds eat a tube of toothpaste and leave the evidence on the counter, because I have to choose not to yell and use my words in ways that will honor and teach and show grace and love even in this discipline moment that’s happened a billion times already. It feels hard when the 6-year-old wakes up on a school morning and barfs all over the Hot Wheels the 3-year-olds dumped out, not just because now it means cleaning all of that up, but also because no mother wants to see her baby sick. It feels hard every time the 5-year-old comes home from school and talks about how one of the boys in his class was mean to him on the playground, because then I just want to throat punch the bullying kid, but I have to talk to my boy about how the people who choose to bully often don’t know any better and need to be shown a better way of making friends, and he’s the one who will have to do it, because he will have to do this brave and kind and world-changing work.
Parenting feels hard when they forget who they are. It’s hard because I love so much, because I want to order their worlds just so, because I want to make their decisions for them, because I don’t want to sit by and watch those consequences break their hearts, but I have to, because it’s the only way they’ll learn and grow and stumble back to who they are.
Sometimes I don’t feel up to this task. Sometimes I don’t feel equipped. Sometimes I want to give up, but I also know that I’m a fighter. I persevere. I keep going. Which is kind of the point of all this parenting in the trenches—to show us what we’re made of. And you know what? I’m made of some pretty tough stuff.
So, no, I’m not going to suck it up, buttercup, because I have discovered something else in my eight years with these delightful little boys. Parenting is hard because I’m doing it right. Because I fail. Because they fail. Because we keep going, all of us together, along the road toward wholehearted living.
There is nothing greater in the world than this.
by Rachel Toalson | Messy Mondays
Words I never want to hear again:
“It’s a haunted house, Mama! We even made bloody fingers for snacks!”
What’s all this, you say? How I wish I knew. The best I can gather: some grand entrepreneurial idea, courtesy of the always-wants-to-make-money 8-year-old.
All I know is that I went to my bathroom for five minutes (okay, I was hiding in there longer than that. You just have to understand. It’s been SO LONG since I’ve gone to the bathroom without someone coming to comment on what color my panties are or pointing out the fact that I have no penis that I guess I just sort of got carried away. I didn’t even dare to wonder why no one was following me in. They were just waiting for their opportunity. And I took it. And this is what happened.)
When I came back downstairs I found a little shop of horrors. Let me just take you on a tour of this creation my sons somehow, remarkably, envisioned and turned into reality in record time.

These are bloody fingers. They’re not really fingers, of course. They’re just chopped up bananas, which was probably the closest thing to fingers the boys could find. On top of them you’ll find honey, jam and peanut butter. Yum.
This delightful snack is provided for the people who “visit our haunted house,” because my boys are good at hospitality.

This is…the obstacle course? The wannabe tent? The seating area that isn’t really a seating area? Your guess is as good as mine. Even after they explained that “people would crawl through this and we’d be waiting on the other side to scare them,” I don’t quite get how that could be scary. Mostly because I tried, and all they did was giggle the whole time, because I could hardly get my butt through the legs of the piano bench. The scariest part about it was considering how I was possibly going to explain to my husband that I needed help peeling a piano bench off my backside.

Here we have “The room where ghosts knocked down all the chairs.” Which I suppose could be pretty freaky, especially if those ghosts are 3-year-old twins and an 8-month-old baby. Remember the twins in The Shining? Kids are the creepiest. (Also, I’m pretty sure the bloody fingers must have splattered on the floor at some point when they were making them. Hence, the splatters you see beside the chair with a booster seat. Most definitely not blood, unless strawberry goodness flows through the veins of one of my kids. In which case I need to put a tap in that, because we go through a jar of jam every week.)

This is the “Haunting minion,” which I laughed about until I stepped into the bathroom and they turned out the lights and the toy started talking. This toy has never talked. I mean, it did, but its batteries ran out months ago, and if you’re a good parent you never replace the batteries in any battery-powered toy, because keeping your sanity is paramount, and you’re really doing it for their own good.
They almost had to pull me off the floor after that.
Then they took me up the stairs, made me close my eyes and showed me this:

I’m pretty sure I passed out for a minute, because I still suffer from post-traumatic stress every time I’m going down the stairs from that one time I fell down our stairs and nearly died.
I love how creative my boys can be, and I love that their little minds thought up something as elaborate as this haunted house, but we had to close up the little shop of horrors soon after they took me through it, because it was time for dinner and we needed the chairs. They were disappointed they didn’t make any money off the haunted house, but I explained to them that there are easier ways to make money that don’t require so much setup for very little payoff. I don’t think they were interested in hearing it.
Next time they have a grand entrepreneurial idea, I’m going to insist on seeing a business plan before the activation stage.