What the Heck? Wednesday: Please Let Me Out!

For the past week or so, I truly feel as though I’ve become a prisoner in my own home. Don’t get me wrong, I love my house and I actually love being at home most of the time, but throw in a kid with a fever and a hacking cough, and then throw in the terrible head cold that I caught from the little guy doing most of that coughing directly in my face, (poor little thing just wanted to sit in my lap the whole time he was sick, and I really didn’t complain at all because I’ll take cuddles whenever I can get ‘em) and you’ve got yourself one seriously cooped up woman.

I had been looking forward to last weekend for months. Every year, on whatever weekend falls around January 24th, my mother and I meet in Pittsburgh (my hometown) and stay with my grandfather for the weekend (he’s 89 and in a band…totally cool dude) and we go out for dinner at The Capital Grille to celebrate what would be my grandmother’s birthday (she passed away when I was 12). You really can’t beat a steak dinner at The Capital Grille (that is, unless Del Frisco’s ever comes to Pittsburgh), but even more so, you really can’t beat a weekend of hanging out with all of my family who still lives there. One thing is certain, whenever I take a trip to my hometown, I pretty much laugh from the minute I get off the plane until the minute I get back on the plane to come home. I seriously think that someone in Hollywood could write a sitcom about my crazy Polish/Slovak family. They’re awesome. And I just couldn’t wait to see each and every single one of them. And because of the fact that my sinuses were so clogged up that my right eye was practically swollen shut, I had to cancel my trip for fear of my head exploding on the plane. And I missed that dinner at The Capital Grille. And I missed seeing my family. And I missed out on a whole lot of laughs. Guess there’s always next year. What the heck?

On the one occasion where I did manage to make it out of the house last week, I got pretty psyched because Puffs tissues with lotion were 4 for $5 at the Big Y. I seriously don’t think that I’ve ever blown my nose more in my life than I did with this particular head cold. I think I went through a box and a half of Puffs in one day alone! At one point, I went to reach for one and realized that the box was no longer on the half-wall between our kitchen and family room where I’d left it. I started scanning the room, and that’s when I heard a sort of “shuffling” sound back in the kitchen area. I turned around, and my little man had taken my box of tissues, plus another empty box (yes, it was sitting on my counter and I hadn’t bothered to throw it away yet, and yes, it had been sitting there for a couple days), and was wearing them on his feet and saying that he was going ice skating. I realized that if the boxes were on his feet, then that meant the tissues had to have gone somewhere. I was right. He’d taken each and every single one of them out and they were lying on the floor in my dining room. And I had only used like two or three out of the box before he did it. What the heck?



(Don’t worry, my floors are relatively clean and I picked up those tissues and used every single one of them).

In the past couple days, things have really seemed to be looking up. Everyone is on the mend and I think this cold is finally exiting our house (or at least I hope it is)! I was so glad that my little guy was able to go back to preschool yesterday after missing all of last week. I was just so happy that he would finally get to play with his little friends again and do all sorts of fun projects. Ok, you’re right…the real reason I was happy about him going back to school is because I’ve grown accustomed to having a two and a half hour break twice a week and I really just needed a little time to myself. Everything went smooth as could be yesterday morning, and then I picked my son up from school and brought him home for lunch. (Ok, so I stopped and picked him up a Happy Meal on the way home, but whatever. Don’t judge. At least I fed the kid).

Somewhere around 1:30pm, the little guy announced to me that he needed to go poop. I followed him into the bathroom, sat him down on the seat…and that is when the screaming started. The poor thing managed to squeeze out a couple of teeny-tiny rock poops, but unfortunately the mother load was still in there, packed tight and totally stuck. I helplessly watched as my son tried with all his might to push that thing out of his little tush, but it was just way too big and it was hurting him way too bad and he just kept screaming and I honestly wasn’t sure what to do. This had happened to us a couple of times before, but both times he was a lot younger and didn’t really notice when I jammed a suppository into his butt for relief. The kid has definitely wised up since then. I looked at him and calmly said, “Mommy is going to run upstairs and get something that will help you, honey.” He looked right back at me and yelled, “NO MOMMMMMYYYY!! I don’t want you sticking your finger in my butt!”

Let’s be honest. I wanted to help my kid, but I really didn’t want to stick my finger in his butt either, and I knew that there was absolutely no way in hell that he was going to let my finger get within one foot of his rear end. I wound up just taking him off the toilet, pulling his pants up, and then taking him over to the couch where he proceeded to lay face down because he “didn’t want the poop to come out.” That’s when I realized that we were going to be stuck in this house for the rest of the day until the king of all turds made its exit. I had officially been taken hostage by a gigantic poop. What the heck?

I immediately started pumping my son full of apple juice and the apple dippers from his McDonald’s lunch in the hopes that the fiber would help him break loose. We made a couple more trips to the bathroom, complete with more screaming and no relief. And then I called my mom for support. And that’s when she informed me that FedEx would be showing up at my house that afternoon with a big box full of Valentine goodies for her grandson. And then the doorbell rang while I was still on the phone with her and my little guy jumped off the couch and ran to see who it was. And then he opened the door and saw that big box on the porch and just knew that it was something for him. And then I opened the box for him and he started opening all of his treats from Grams. And my mom was just so excited that the box came while I was on the phone with her so that she could hear his reactions to all of his presents. And then she had the pleasure of hearing the screaming that I’d been listening to all afternoon.

It turns out that the box arriving was exactly what my son needed to start running around and jumping up and down, which got his mind off the stuck poop. His excitement shook everything loose, and after watching him turn purple and holler like hell on the toilet while grabbing the little handles on his potty seat, and after coming back to reality after the flashback this gave me of myself in the labor and delivery room almost four years ago, I finally heard a nice big “kerplunk!” and a splash in the bowl. Thank GOD.

Later on that evening after the hubster got home, he took the little man upstairs to give him a bath. A couple minutes later, one of our neighbors stopped by to pick up some gift baskets that I am donating for a raffle at a benefit that he and his wife (one of my very good friends) are attending this Saturday. My husband looked over the railing in our foyer and yelled hello to our friend and our friend waved and yelled hello back to him, and to our son. Our little stud then peered down at him through the bars of the railing and said, “Mike! I had a big stuck poop today!!” What the heck?




Excuse Me? You Want me to do WHAT?

Well, I guess it was bound to happen sooner or later, but I definitely didn’t expect the little present that my son gave me last Friday night. The hubster and I were happily enjoying two delicious cuts of filet mignon and some grilled asparagus, when we heard a little voice perk up from the living room. “Mommy! Daddy! Look what I found!” I glanced over to the other side of the couch where the little man was standing, and he was holding what appeared to be a dried up ball of playdoh in his hands. I was a bit suspicious as to why he found this playdoh so interesting, so I went over to investigate. I picked it up (with a napkin, of course, because after almost 4 years of parenting a boy I’m not a complete and total idiot) and gave it a good sniff check to confirm its origin. My suspicions were correct. It wasn’t a piece of playdoh. It was indeed, a turd.

I immediately burst into uncontrollable laughter when I looked at my son to inquire where this particular turd had come from, and he looked at me and said, “From my bum!” (DUH! Stupid Mommy)! It was a pretty tiny little turd and it seemed like an isolated incident, so I threw the poop contaminated napkin away, washed my hands, and went right back to eating my steak. Not two minutes later, the little man started to walk into the kitchen and another tiny little turd fell out of the pant leg of his jeans. At this point, I decided that I probably needed to check things out a little more to make sure that there were no more turds lurking around in his britches. I stripped him down and everything seemed clean and clear and turd free, so again, I went back to eating my steak.

I’m still kind of puzzled as to what in the hell is going on with my little man’s butt these days, because for some reason, it seems to be the topic of conversation at the dinner table every night. I’m pretty sure that the poop incident was due to the fact that he was in the middle of looking at a book and just didn’t feel like going to the bathroom, so he tried to hold those turds in with all his might and a couple just happened to escape. He hasn’t pooped himself in ages, so I’m hoping that this isn’t some new trend that is starting. The butt scratching, (actually, digging to be exact) however, is another story.

Earlier last Friday afternoon, I wound up bringing my son to the doctor to get him checked out because he’d developed a bit of a nasty cough mid-week. I wanted to have it looked at before we headed into the weekend. Turns out, it was all in his throat and nothing that a little Tylenol Cold and Cough wouldn’t help, so that was a relief. After the doctor was done examining him, he looked at me and asked if there was anything else I wanted to talk about before I left. I thought about it and decided that since the butt-digging had been going on for a good couple of weeks, it was probably time to see what the doc had to say about it. Needless to say, this is a conversation that I never imagined having with my son’s pediatrician. Our doctor/patient relationship went to a whole new level following that discussion. It went something like this:

Me: “Um, well, yeah…there is one more thing that I wanted to ask you about. Lately the little guy seems to have one hand constantly down his pants and is sort of digging around in his little tush area.”

Doc: “Well, he is a fidgety kid and he may just be looking for something to do and somehow he got into the habit of sticking his hand down there. Let me ask you, do you notice this happening at night or during the day?”

Me: “It’s pretty much during the day, but like ALL day.”

Doc: “Well, there is this little thing called pinworm that kids can contract. Is he in day care?”

Me: “No, but he does go to preschool two days a week.”

Doc: “Yeah, it can be contracted at preschools too. He may have it, but it is very hard to prove and usually parents complain about the constant scratching happening at night. It usually keeps the child up and he can’t get to sleep. Have you noticed that at all?”

Me: “Nope, he’s been sleeping just fine.”

Doc: “Well, I really don’t think he has it, but if you are concerned about it, here is what you need to do. What you can do is go into his room about two to three hours after he falls asleep. Then pull down his pants, and get a flashlight and a magnifying glass and look right in the hole. If he has pinworm, you aren’t going to see worms. What you will see are these teeny tiny little dots sort of moving around. They like to come out at night. If you notice this, then give me a call on Monday and I’ll call in a pill to the pharmacy for you. It’s just one pill and it gets rid of it very quickly. You can also ask around at preschool to see if any other kids have been scratching around down there (yeah right…that would go over SO well with the other preschool moms who love me so much).”

Ok, I don’t even remember the rest of the conversation and I’m pretty sure that I didn’t even hear much of anything that the doctor said after he told me to spread my poor little boys ass cheeks open, WHILE he was fast asleep no doubt, and to look inside his butt hole with a magnifying glass. (Um, excuse me? WTF)?

On the car ride home, I kind of laughed a little bit, because I pictured what I like to call “Operation Ass Watch” commencing that evening after my boy was asleep. I pictured the hubby and I tiptoeing into our son’s room, pulling down his pants, the hubster putting on his headlamp flashlight that I’m still not quite sure why he feels he has to own, and me spreading the little guy’s cheeks apart as the hubby got down in there with the magnifying glass. Then I pictured us not being able to control our laughter while doing it. Then I pictured the poor little guy waking up out of a dead sleep to find that Mommy was spreading his ass cheeks apart and that Daddy was wearing a headlamp and looking at his butt hole with a magnifying glass. Then I pictured him being completely traumatized and scarred for life and winding up in therapy for a good twenty years or so. Then I decided that there was just no way in HELL that we were going to subject our son to such humiliating treatment.

I decided that the best thing to do was to just keep an eye on the little guy for the weekend and watch and document any butt scratching that went on, so “Operation Ass Watch” continued. I figured that if the tush digging was still going on through Monday, that I’d go ahead and call the doctor and have him call in the pill. Better safe than sorry, right? And it sure beats the alternative. Come to think of it, I don’t even think that we own a magnifying glass.

That brings us to 7:00am this morning. I’m pleased to report that “Operation Ass Watch” was successful and the hubster and I seem to have debunked the problem, and no, it’s not pinworm. Our son’s skin gets extremely dry in these cold New England winter months, so a few weeks ago, we started bathing him every other night instead of every single night in an effort to try and help heal his poor little alligator skin covered body. It worked. Unfortunately, we’re also pretty sure that it resulted in an incessant bout of ass scratching on our little guy’s part due to (there’s really no polite way of saying this) the ever-dreaded sweaty butt-crack. The hubster and I are pretty good when we put our heads together, and after back to back nights of baths, the little man has pretty much left his butt alone. Let’s hope the streak continues.

The Mommyologist’s Last Word: “Well, we’re headed back to the doctor today because that “oh, don’t worry, it’s nothing” little cough he had has turned into a full-on hack-fest complete with a 102 temperature. Poor little guy. At least I won’t have to discuss his rear end with the doc today though!”

I Can’t Get No Satisfaction!

“Mommy, I need to go POOP!” This is a very familiar sentence that I hear almost every day of the week. The chain of events following this statement usually progresses in the same manner. My kid announces this to me, and then he starts running for the bathroom holding his bum like a volcano that is about to erupt. I quickly follow him, grab the Disney Cars potty seat and slap it onto the commode, and all the while he is yelling, “MOMMY!!! Hurry UP before I POOP MY PANTS!!!” I am slightly out of breath at this point since I’m in such awesome shape these days, and I grab him and sit him down on the seat. I intend to stand there and wait for the eruption, at which point he sternly says to me, “Mommy, get out of here! Give me some privacy please! SHUT THE DOOR!” If only my loving child would bestow this same courtesy upon me once in a while. Yeah, RIGHT!! The word privacy doesn’t exist in my vocabulary anymore.

I waited outside the door for my little man to finish and asked him every few seconds, “Are you done honey??” I kept hearing, “N-O-TTT Y-E-TTTTT accompanied by groaning and grunting. Ain’t that just like a man? Anyway, I stood in the hallway like a patient Mom, and then I heard an unexpected and very unwelcome phrase come from the other side of the door. “Mommy! My hands smell of POOP!” I couldn’t help but laugh as I entered the half bath and found my son sitting on that potty with his two little hands up, covered in the brown stuff. You see, he is getting way more independent these days and likes to wipe (or try to wipe) his own tush. He usually does okay, but this time something just didn’t go as planned. I told him to keep his hands up and not to touch anything, and to STOP putting his fingers up to his nose to SNIFF!! Oh my GOD! I am lucky I didn’t faint. Visions of Ecoli and other parasitic bacteria danced in my head. I tried to let my horrific thoughts go and got back to the task at hand. I leaned him over a bit, and there was the toilet paper completely stuck to his rear end and caked with poop. I’m still not sure exactly what went wrong in the wiping department, but I successfully cleaned him up and then immediately lifted him off the pot, hands still in the air, placed him on his little green stepstool, then LATHERED him in green Kandoo soap and made that poor little boy scrub his hands like it was his job. After his hands were sparkly shiny and completely free of any sort of brown residue, I gave myself a huge pat on the back for avoiding a potential bacteria crisis.

This latest poop incident made me stop and think about whether I like the fact that my son is potty trained, or if I really miss the days of diapers when at least I knew exactly where the poop would wind up, and it was never on my son’s hands. I made a list of pros and cons in my head and tried to compare the two.

Don’t get me wrong, diapers can be kind of gross, but I really had to give props to the convenience factor. When my son was in diapers, I never had to worry about pulling the car over on the side of the highway so he didn’t completely pee himself and his car seat and we didn’t have to spend the rest of the ride with the car completely smelling like pee. I also never had to worry about him having to poop on an airplane. We fly several times a year, and it never fails…every time the plane takes off and the fasten seat belt sign is still on, that kid has to take a dump.

I remember one incident when we were flying from Washington National Airport to Jacksonville. I am Silver Preferred on USAirways, and me and my little barely 2-year old had been upgraded to First Class that day. We got out on the tarmac, he looked at me…then got up and stood on his two little feet, got into a squatting position, and proceeded to start making those groaning and grunting noises, and said with a reddish purple color on his face, “Mommmmyyyy I’m pooooping!” Don’t worry, he’s little and those First Class seats are big, so the seat belt was around him the whole time. He was in the window seat and I was in the aisle, so I was leaned over towards him trying to block him with my body in the hopes that none of the other First Class patrons would realize the events that were taking place in 3D and 3F. Right around this time, the pilot came on and announced that they were changing the direction of traffic taking off from North to South, so it would be a good 20 minutes before we were airborne. I was screaming inside my head. Everyone knows that you cannot get out of your seat while on a live runway, so my poor little man was going to have to sit in his own poop until that plane got up in the air. The anxiety was really starting to build at this point, because all I could think about was that First Class cabin reeking of my son’s crap. The next thing I knew, I looked over, and little man was fast asleep, diaper full of poop, looking like an angel. A sleeping baby for the whole flight? Free drinks in First Class for me? I did what any good mother would do. I put a blanket over him, gave him a “sniff check”, decided that I didn’t smell a thing, and proceeded to get out my book, order a vodka and take one for the team. Now WHAT on EARTH would I have done if that kid hadn’t had a diaper on and wasn’t allowed to get up and use the airplane lavatory? I shudder at the thought.

Back to the potty-trained kid. Sure, it takes a little effort, but any parent can’t help but feel a huge sense of accomplishment once you get your kid(s) potty trained. It brings about a whole new sense of freedom. Gone are the days of your garage smelling like an overflowing toilet from rotting diapers. Gone are the days of going to change your baby’s poopy diaper only to realize that the poop is halfway up his back. At least now it winds up in the toilet…well, at least on most days it does. A potty-trained kid is generally just much happier, definitely much cleaner, and is starting to turn into an independent child…not a baby anymore! Of course, now that my son is potty-trained, I’ve seen the inside of every single public bathroom in the Hartford area and anywhere we’ve traveled. A lot of them I’ve seen more than once. What is it about a public restroom that is so darn exciting to a kid? And don’t even get me started on the port-a-pottys that I’ve had the pleasure of visiting with him. I could write a whole separate entry about that experience!

I think that when it’s all said and done, the potty-trained kid absolutely wins. The pros really do outweigh the cons on this one. If this is true, then howcome every time that my nice hot meal arrives at the table when we go out to eat and my child looks at me and says, “Mommy, I need to go pee-pee!”, do I dream of the days when I could just look at him and say, “Just go in your pants!”, and then proceed to stuff my face with whatever delicacy is in front of me.

The Mommyologist’s Last Word: Let’s face it, women are just NEVER satisfied!