Latest Posts

Friday 8 March 2013

THE MALE GENE


I think any mother of a boy will tell you how interesting (...hysterical and so on) the moment is when you start to glimpse true 'male' behavior in your little one. This is especially amusing for me, as I grew up with all women, so watching a little boy grow and change into a soon-to-be man is pretty mind boggling. Not to mention, it’s frightening how early it starts. One day you’re just hanging out with them and it hits you, oh my god, they have the male gene - this is usually about the same time they've figured out that even a loaf of bread can simulate a weapon of some sort, or a truck, and you realize, dear god, it's IN there. (All the mothers of boys are nodding right about now, as they know what I’m talking about). Now granted this works for both genders I’m assuming, but as the King is not a Queen, I’m focusing on his gender today. 

It seems like an obvious conclusion, you have a boy, he acts like a boy; he loves a good truck, car, train or sporting event....and of course, he can only think about one thing at a time or else he gets very overwhelmed (I'm talking about my son and my husband, I might add). But in this case, I’m also intrigued by the more subtle and very innate behaviors that scream ‘man.’ The ones that make me look at the King and see my husband’s face morphed on top of his - which isn't hard as my son is a dead ringer for his dad (except for the fact that he looks exactly like me. ha!)

For example, at the ripe age of two and a half, my son is already designed NOT to look for things (I don’t care what you say, but this trait is innate to the male gender). He’ll glance around for his toy car, look at me and ask six times in a row, ‘where’s my car, mamma?’ Maybe if I’m lucky, he'll look around again (staring RIGHT at it) and then throw his hands up in desperation. If he had the vocabulary I assure you that he would tell me that I’ve clearly moved it and could I please stop moving his stuff around. Ah yes, the fallback excuse for the inability to find one’s own things. He does this with pretty much everything and I’m starting to wonder if this is indeed a male ingrained trait, or if the mother figure from too early on finds things for the male and hence hinders their ability to do this for themselves. Trust me, from now on, I look at the King when he asks for something and I say, ‘no clue, but, I’m sure you’ll find it.’ Seriously, it's for his own good, or that of his future girlfriend.

Then there is the King when he is around other males, it is an amazing – and slightly alarming transformation. In mere seconds he turns from my sweet, focused, endearing little muffin, to a high octane, screaming whirling dervish of testosterone that punches the air and grunts like a wild boar - whilst maintaining his adorableness of course. 

Case in point, he had his best friend over yesterday (just to add to the confusion, they have very similar names and the mother and I spend the afternoon calling our children by the other one’s name) and they spent the majority of the time in the bathroom (seriously, what is it that men find so fascinating about that room?). Each was on his respective potty and you would have thought a summit meeting (on acid) was taking place. They were talking, laughing, squealing and talking in some incoherent animalistic Klingon language that was beyond me, but apparently it was highly amusing to the both of them. Then the King decided his potty could just as well function as a car, and proceeded to drive it along (by his bottom) the bathroom floor. When they finally left the bathroom, after inspecting what each other had done of course, they proceeded to eat pasta as if they were both going to never see food again – this involves shoveling, stuffing and inhaling at rapid speeds. Watching the King eat fills me with fear, as between he and my husband; my food bill in the next ten years is going to skyrocket.

Then there is the King’s 'male' humor. Now granted, he’s a child. Children find certain things funny that we don’t. However, I’m starting to realize that he and my husband often laugh at the same things (physical humor ranks high: falls, spills, trip-ups, and people running into things), which means either my husband has the brain of a two year old (love you honey!) or there is something male going on here. They also both have eyes in the back of their head whereas women are concerned (I’m not the jealous type and think, let ‘em look; we're all only human!). There is nothing funnier than watching the King clock a tall blond coming his way (he has a thing for blonds, even though I know he knows brunettes are far superior). He smiles, he tilts his head down and looks up batting his eyelashes. Then he stops in the middle of the street, turns and watches her walk away like she’s holding the greatest dump truck in the world. I’m telling you, the male gene, it’s a powerful thing.

Then again, my son does clean, help unload the dishwasher and love himself a mean broom, so I must be doing something right. 

Happy Friday all.


Tuesday 5 March 2013

DORMEZ-VOUS


I recently posted a message on Facebook stating that I had discovered something that has helped with my insomnia and if people wanted to message me to find out they were welcome to write me. I remarked to my husband that I bet I received a few messages from fellow sufferers. Boy was I wrong. I did not receive a few; I received many. And in each and every message there was a desperation in people’s voices (their written voice obviously) that was palpable. I mean it jumped off the page: ‘Wait a minute you can sleep, cause I can’t sleep, HOW DID YOU sleep, please tell me, I just want to sleeeeep!!!!!’

To say that I relate to their desperation is an understatement. In fact, it is becoming more and more apparent to me that there is a sweeping epidemic out there of non-sleepers and in any given time zone there are legions of us that are wide flipping awake. It’s a truly painful affliction and you wouldn’t wish it upon your worst enemy (okay, perhaps someone that has laid a hand on the King’s head, but that’s about it). The irony is, if we insomniacs could somehow harness all this non-sleeping power, or at least the sheer hours wasted staring at one’s ceiling, think of all the things we could get done. We could open an agency, an all night agency that services any job that needs doing at odd hours and of course charge double time. Cause well, “we’ll do the job with the utmost efficiency but we’ll be extra tired come morning damn it!” Okay, I’m still working on our sales pitch.

I’m sure those of you reading this blog with chronic insomnia are thinking, can we get back to the first paragraph where you tell us what will help us sleep?! The problem is, I’m not a doctor or a sleep therapist or any sort of professional, so I’m wary about telling people what to take like I’m some expert; but I will say that in the last few years I’ve trolled my fair share of websites, saw doctors, joined sleep forums, saw holistic practitioners, read books, got hypnotized, got stuck with needles, drank tea, stood on my head, jumped on one foot, prayed to a variety of sleep gods, and at this point, I do in fact consider myself some what of an expert on the topic of sleep…or not sleeping.

So of late, the rest that I have gotten at night is due to a concoction of perfectly legal vitamins/amino acids that can be purchased from the health food store; and if you do your fair share of due diligence you will see that they come highly recommended as natural and effective sleep aids. But don’t take my word for it, check it out for yourself:

(http://www.betternutrition.com/sleep/columns/askthenaturopath/714).

Trust me, if you want to sleep, you’ll read, try and do just about anything. Even if I said meditate, paint yourself blue, eat raw kale while listening to Kenny G, you'd try it. Come on, you know you would.

The irony of all ironies is that over the last few years as my insomnia has raged on like an unruly beast, I have given birth, logged more late nights than I can count, sleep-trained a child, and are now in the throes of trying to convince my young toddler that sleep is not only good, but a bloody blessing he should wrap his little toddler arms around. At nap time he looks at me like I’m nuts when I desperately try to tell him that naps are not only the best things since February sunshine, but that mommy would pay serious money if she could lay down and take a two hour nap. But like most things, sleep is truly wasted on the youth.

Soldier on non-sleepers, and I wish you the best of luck. 


Copyright © 2014 Anthea Anka - Delighted And Disturbed