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Let's Panic: The Book!

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How to Endure and Possibly Triumph Over the Adorable Tyrant
who Will Ruin Your Body, Destroy Your Life, Liquefy Your Brain,
and Finally Turn You
into a Worthwhile
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Written by Alice Bradley and Eden Kennedy

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At LET'S PANIC ABOUT BABIES, Eden Kennedy and I share our hard-won wisdom and tell you exactly what to think and feel and do, whether you're about to have a baby or already did and don't know what to do with it.

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Tuesday
Nov282006

Here I am!

Hey there! Hey, you! How was your Thanksgiving? Was it good? Mine was good, too!

We hosted Thanksgiving this year for our in-laws. So drunk were we on our relatively roomy new house and our ability to own more than four wine glasses, we actually believed we could put together a well-rounded Thanksgiving meal. Shockingly, we were right. By some miracle, I cooked a twenty-pound turkey that tasted like turkey, and not like tree bark. (In this I was aided by my brother-in-law, who stuck the thermometer into various parts of the turkey as I huddled in the corner, shrieking I JUST DON’T WANT TO POISON EVERYONE.) Many side dishes were also composed and enjoyed, all without incident. My baby niece was just as adorable as I remembered, and I managed to hold her without gnawing at her cheeks, which took considerable strength of will.

The only mishap occurred the day before, when I heated the oven to bake the pumpkin pie, having forgotten that the day before I had sprayed some oven cleaner in there. The kind of oven cleaner that says WHATEVER YOU DO, DON’T HEAT UP THE OVEN WITH THIS IN IT all over the canister. I would have paid attention to this, were I able to read. What I needed was a picture of a toy poodle on its back with x’s where its eyes should be and its little pink tongue hanging out, but the E-Z-Off people didn’t care about my needs. So I almost killed us all.

Fortunately I noticed the foamy quality of the oven’s insides mere moments after turning it on, so instead of dying I only had to wipe away some hot oven cleaner. This was the most exciting thing that happened all week. The End.

And now, friends, my mind is cast inexorably toward the last hurdle of 2006, that being The Christ Child’s Birthday, Wherein We All Flirt With Poverty To Praise Jesus. My son, who was so articulate regarding his birthday wishes, now will only tell me that he wants “cool stuff.” He seems to feel that Santa will know what this means, as Santa is all-knowing. Sadly, his mother doesn’t know a thing. And there’s a disconnect between what he claims to like and what he actually plays with for more than five minutes. If I give him a puzzle, he will shrug and ask for the next gift, but then play with that puzzle every day until I want to burn the puzzle. Whereas if I buy him a militia of Power Rangers, his head will explode with joy, and the next day the Power Rangers will be dumped in his Enormous Bin of Guys, to be next seen in the Spring of Aught Eight. Oh, what’s a mother to do?

Reader Comments (40)

Art Supplies, Legoes, Play-Doh. These are the toys that never, ever, ever go out of fashion and will take years for him to outgrow.

Other fun items of the squishy-crap genre: Silly Putty (always a classic) Floam, Gak, and Slime (much less messy than you might think). Any kind of building toy...tinker toys, Connex, Lincoln Logs, Bristle Brix. They can be pretty much anything your kid can imagine.

There are some seriously hella cool art supplies out there. I'm always tempted to buy some for myself. Glow In The Dark crayons, glitter glue, scissors that cut wavy edges, scented markers, color-changing paints...all kinds of great stuff.

Toys you can do something with, like Legoes are the best, because you can have a car, a robot, a dollhouse, a space-ship control room, pretty much anything, after you sit down and build it for a little while.
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterMichelle D
I have no advice. I keep handing Jake the catalogs of toys that come in the mail and asking him to circle what he wants for Christmas. He rifles through them with a touch of disdain and says with an enormous sigh, "You can get me whatever you want."

I'm certain this means - "Get me X and Y or die" but he refuses to elaborate.
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterkerflop aka verymom
I agree: my husband still hasn't outgrown legos. Get the kinds related to trains, the kinds that move and blink but that are a little difficult to put together (cough, cough. He'll love 'em.
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterchirky
Ooooh! I forgot to close my parenthesis. THAT WILL BOTHER ME FOR ALL ETERNITY. I cannot look upon it any longer.
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterchirky
My daughter changes her Santa 'order' every 6 hours. She's 8 and is starting to question why the great mysterious Oz, I mean Santa, needs to know what she wants when he is all magical and stuff. Her believing days are numbered. Zack is 5 and has been asking for a scooter since June. (He has been riding the Barbie one way too long.) But I think he'd be equally pleased with new undies and socks. Sick, I know.
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterLisa Milton
Power Ranger Puzzles?
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterlizneust
What's a mother to do? Buy him socks. And drink.

I found a suggestion on someone else's blog for what seemed like the perfect gift for my boy of roughly Henry's age: a kiddie digital camera. Problem is that all internet sellers of said Fisher-Price item are out of stock, except for those who are selling it for 200% of the list price. Luckily, his birthday is in mid-January, so I'm hoping that it will be available for a non-gougy price by then. Gosh, that was a lot of help for you, wasn't it?

How 'bout buying him his own keg tap? We discovered at a party that our boy LOVES to work kegs, which is a very useful party trick. And you'll save on deposits, too!
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterSummer
Soon Henry will be old enough for a Gameboy and then you won't hear a peep out of him for the next six years. If all goes according to plan.
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterEthel Kennedy
Just give him a box. Kids love boxes.
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterTorrie
Enormous Bin of Guys, made me laugh heartily. I will give you 5 bucks to call it the EBG from now on.
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterjenB
Do you think it might be coming from him thinking he is supposed to like the action figures when he really likes the puzzles more, but doesn't want to show it?

Would he be able to get through a trip to the toy store without getting much? It might be helpful to walk through the store with him and note the things he seems most interested in.

Good luck!
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterSparklieSunShine
What about giving an experience? A class in something he's interested in, a trip with him to someplace you couldn't afford to go as a whole family...
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterephelba
Perhaps one of those Star Wars Lego sets? If you can stand it, and the Star Wars love has not died?
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterCountry Mouse
Alice, I hate to tell you this but your commenters have been drinking. Let me tell you abot Michelle D. and the slime, floam and silly putty? Yeah, they aren't that messy if you sit on your child while they play with it wrapped in plastic on a plastic table, in a plastic room. Would you like to know how many hours I have wasted trying to scrape the silly putty, slime, and floam off of clothes, rugs, the couch and worst of all the berber carpet?

And the toy store idea? Hello? Sparkle Sunshine? Wake up and smell the coffee, BAD IDEA unless Henry wants to celebrate early. WHat kid do you know that can pick out his own gifts a month in advance and then wait pariently for them? Wait, yor name is Sparkle Sunshine, never mind.

And Country Mouse, having just lost 3 hours of my life that aren't coming back because I put together one of those lego star wars flying things this morning (and last night too) let me tell you something about the lego sets. They are for decortation purposes only, because when the thrilled youngster attampts to play with them they fall to pieces, and so does the youngster, and so will the parent the fifth time he/she has to reattach the wings and wonder why there are three extra pieces.

I say, get him everything for goodness sakes, it's Christmas, go into debt like every one else. Suffer afterwards.

I hate this time of year.



November 28, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterclickmom
Sorry, no useful suggestions here, but a little story: My sister and I used to play this game at Grandma's house where we would go through all the catalogues and circle everything we wanted. I remember loving to do this and spent hours at it. It wasn't until I was an adult that I found out that she actually bought us a lot of that stuff. My parents just passed most of it on to more needy and I never knew the difference. Thinking about it now makes me think we must have been slightly clued-out kids...
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered Commentercarabeth
Chutes and Ladders! Or! Candyland!

You probably already have these, but I was looking longingly at them while at Target yesterday, wishing either for my lost childhood to return or someone for whom to buy the games.

Sadly, neither option has materialized. Unless! Henry? Do you want Chutes and Ladders for Christmas? It's TOTALLY fun.
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered Commenterelise
Clickmom--you are a riot! And I second you on the FLOAM. Jr. begged and begged for it and we finally ordered it and it came and Oh! how it smells! Jr.'s never touched it again! And now,of course , it's available everywhere. I don't like this time of year either. Could you tell? And, we have many Enormous Bins of Guys and yet, he still "needs" more.....sigh.
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterCeej
Hey! My Thanksgiving was great, thanks for asking! We also hosted every family member within driving distance, and I cooked a twenty pound turkey that was moist and delicious instead of dry, plus a bunch of kick-ass side dishes! I am totally drunk on power now.

Oh, Christmas. First I have to buy birthday gifts for my two year old nephew who doesn't want anything, and my own son who will be eight and changes his mind every day. Then there's Christmas, and both my boys are like, whatever. You know those ten dollar toys in the blue boxes at Wal-Mart? Those are looking pretty good right now.

ALSO, three years ago my Dad had the kids go through the Mindware catalog and circle what interested them, and they are still playing with the big bucket of Gears.
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterElizabeth
Yeah, um. My five year old son asked for a knitting machine.

Want Henry to knit you some underwear? Don't worry, mine will.

Sigh.
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterKarianna
Truthfully, my Thanksgiving was not the pinnacle of awesome. It was meant to be a time for me to show off my catering/drink-mixing skills at a friend's luncheon, but turned quickly into damage control: when I arrived, the guest list had mysteriously ballooned by 50% AND they were surprise vegetarians who didn't drink and make very judgemental faces when I ordered the boyfriend to keep my cocktails full. They even made faces when meat came within 12" of the pan on the stove where I was frantically making Lunch Plan B for them.Guess who I'm NOT quasi-catering for next year?
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered Commenternadarine
Ethel Kennedy suggested a Gameboy! To that I say "Noooooooooooo!" This is the best and fastest way to replace their eyeballs with little swirly patterns, squash any creativity they ever had, and ensure that they would claw their own eyes out before ever picking up a book and reading. Your child will likely prefer playing his Gameboy to eating, sleeping, playing with friends, and going to the bathroom. How do I know this? Each of my two boys have one.
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterRobin in San Jose
Playmobil stuff is our favorite - they have so many cool things. Legos, puzzles, art projects, books, playing cards... all that stuff is what gets used at my house (probably largely because I will sit down and play Legos or do a puzzle with him, but I can't stand the way Play-Doh smells). Though I do love modeling clay.
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterMelanie Cipher
Creative without being messy:

Drum kit.
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterL
My kid does exactly the same thing. Goes nuts over toys he ends up not playing with... you know what he plays with? The boxes the toys came in. I'm too late to do this this year, but I think if I just raid the garbage at some other 5 year old boy's house the day after Christmas and pull out all the opened toy boxes, I can give them to Michael next year and while he may be disappointed in an immediate sense, I'll be satisfied knowing I did what it took to give my kid something he'll really play with!
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered Commentertitankt
I am so proud of you and the turkey and it all!Henry kills me, we have a Bin of Guys altho we call them Mens too and I have daughters LOLyou make me happy, thanks for posting!
November 28, 2006 | Unregistered CommenterDeb

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