Sensory Warfare
By Kellie Head,
ParentingHumor.com
My delicate senses,
callused with overuse from parenting six little thrill seekers, provide
clues of the kids’ fiendish activities. They have precisely honed each
of their five senses to aid them in plots to command and conquer the home
front. It’s imperative to stay one step ahead of them, or I would surely
join the ranks of the missing in action.
Their sense of hearing
is, at best, unstable, and seems to work in their favor, rather than mine.
If I drop a few coins, my 14-year-old daughter, Danielle, can identify
their value by the pitch and tone as they hit the kitchen floor. This same
girl, however, can’t hear the dog barking five feet from her while she’s
watching television. Presumably, “selective listening” is a genetic
disorder, since her father, who was sitting on the couch beside her, didn’t
hear the dog either.
David, 17, blares his
stereo at decibels rivaling that of a jet engine.
It isn’t surprising our Neighborhood Association established a
Noise Pollution Ordinance. When
his music (for lack of a better word) plays, the sound of the steel guitar
(often mistaken for the wails of a cat in heat) can be easily detected by
the sonar of a Russian submarine running drills off the coast of Bolivia.
Despite these deafening levels, his eardrums show no signs of damage. He
can pinpoint the sound of a giggling teenage girl in a different zip code.
Silence may be golden
while the kids are visiting Grandma, but at home it means guerrilla
tactics are in full deployment. The eerie quiet tips me off to the roguish
deeds of my preschoolers. A search for destruction typically finds them
teetering from a stack of books they have piled on a kitchen chair—no
doubt trying to locate the package of Double Stuff Oreo cookies I have
cleverly stashed behind several cans of Pork-‘n-Beans in the pantry.
Over the years, my
sense of hearing has evolved to maximum strength. I recognize the sound of
the toothpaste cap falling into the bathroom sink. I’m not sure how
marketable this skill is, but I add it to my Military Record of
Achievement, nonetheless.
Unlike my precise
hearing ability, I question the information my eyes relay to my brain, the
command center and backbone of my army. I knew a wire was crossed
somewhere, as I watched the three-year-old mount the dog and gallop
through the house chasing the cat, or the time my husband appeared to have
loaded the dishwasher. Surely, my eyes were playing tricks on me.
One Saturday afternoon,
following a grueling requisition excursion to the grocery store, I
returned home to find my house in immaculate order.
“It’s a mirage,” I
thought. “The summer heat has gone straight to my head.”
I sat down and waited for the optical illusion to pass, after first
double-checking the house number on our front door,
The spare set of eyes,
in the back of my head, comes in very handy.
Danielle remains mystified at my ability to “see” her hiding
the broccoli in her baked potato skin, while I stand at the kitchen sink
washing dishes. I’ll let her figure this one out when she has kids of
her own.
Hayley, our
seven-year-old damsel in distress, hates bugs. She spotted a creepy crawly
thing on the sidewalk the other day and commenced shrieking in terror.
I approached with caution; not wanting my arm ripped from its
socket by the huge, hideous beast that blocked our driveway. I stomped and
twisted—grinding the critter into the cement.
It put up a good fight, but the crow feather was no match for my
superior battle skills. Feathers, as it turns out, aren’t as fierce as
they look. Perhaps a trip to
the local Optometrist is in order.
A word of warning: If
you say to your children, “Don’t ever let me see you do that again,”
they will process this literally and simply do the dastardly deed when you’re
not looking. Instead, try: “If you do that again your face may freeze
that way.” It always seemed to work for my mom.
Like any good
bloodhound worth its’ salt, the kids use their sense of smell to track
down the scent of their prey (i.e., the aroma of chocolate chip cookies
wafting through the air). It’s amazing how many times the Frisbee
conveniently lands in the neighbor’s yard when she’s baking her prize
winning peach pies. Predicting the arrival of six pitiful kids with puppy
dog eyes, she now coincides baking day with the monthly delivery of manure
for her garden.
While the dead on
accuracy of the kids’ sniffers may be a gift, mine is a curse. I
implement the “close pin removal system” to empty the diaper pail from
the nursery. Also, when the
kids emit a dirty dog smell from playing outdoors all day, I hold my
breath until the vanilla scented bath bubbles override the odor. I won’t
even mention the sweat socks rotting away in my son’s gym bag or the
unidentified stench permeating from under the couch (I fear it’s the
remains of our guinea pig that went AWOL after the girls dressed him in
Barbie clothes).
Smell and taste work as
a team. If it looks nutritious and smells nutritious, chances are it’s
nutritious, therefore, the dog gets the Tuna Noodle Surprise and the
children’s precious little palates are spared the unpleasantness. Jamie’s
three-year-old taste buds aren’t very discriminating. He’d sooner chew
on a worm or munch on a bug than eat his peas and carrots. The 14-year-old
prefers chewing on her hair to ingesting anything with onions in it. The
diet industry should look into marketing this strawberry flavored shampoo.
When I was a child, my
mother chased me down to dispense whatever medicine the doctor doled out
for my tonsillitis. Tommy Porter, the geeky kid next door, carried the
neighborhood title for choking down the record three teaspoonfuls before
tossing his cookies on his father’s shoes (of course, Tommy ate paste in
art class, too). These days, bubble gum and cherry flavored medicine
entices my little darlings to fake the plague in an attempt to score a
dropper full of fever reducer.
Their sense of touch
(a.k.a. hand-to-hand combat) usually involves hitting, slapping, hair
pulling, scratching, poking, or jabbing. These fighting funfests may
resemble televised sporting events such as karate, Sumo wrestling, kick
boxing, and even mud wresting (any full body contact sport that can be
altered into a tag team event). I’ll make a note to cancel my cable.
The call to arms that
separates the men from the boys (or fathers from mothers) is the
under-the-bed retrieval operation. It never ceases to amaze me how that
big, strong provider of mine turns green at the thought of reaching under
the bed and stumbling across something gooey.
He adopts the “if it isn’t screaming for help, don’t send in
the troops” theory of militant maneuvers. I, on the other hand,
subscribe to the “eradicate it before it has a chance to breed” school
of thought. Either way, no
sane adult dares to touch anything fermenting under a child’s bed.
Praise be to the invention of rubber gloves and hot dog tongs.
Sensory warfare makes
me thankful for the cold and flu season. A severe case will, hopefully,
plug my nose and ears as well as block my taste buds (did I mention the
14-year-olds’ culinary delights?). When battle fatigue sets in, I find
myself daydreaming for an hour or two of sensory deprivation in a coma.
Better yet, maybe I’ll just go AWOL with the guinea pig.
Kellie Head is the
mother of six (seven if you count the husband), a freelance
humorist and the owner/Editor of ParentingHumor.com. She’s been
in the trenches and lived to tell the tale. Email Kellie at editor@ParentingHumor.com
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