Showing posts with label poop on book. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poop on book. Show all posts

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Trifecta

The other night at Praise Team practice, my old boss (who is also our sound board guy) was telling us about his bad, stressful week. I shuddered inside because I used to share those weeks with him. I thought about my worst, most recent day...

Stone is potty training, and doing a good job, save for the poop - he just doesn't want to go #2 in the potty. So, I hear him yelling at me from his room and I go to investigate. I find him totally naked and the smell of poop assaults me. Where, I ask myself, are his underwear???

They are upside down on our favorite color book.

And they are stuck to the book with poop.

Now, I forgot to tell you that I'm holding the baby during this. As I bend down to get the underwear with my fingertips, the baby throws up on me. I'd use "spit up" if it applied. My baby went Linda Blair on me. And I was wearing a v-neck. So, now I've got a baby in one hand and a poop-filled pair of Diego underwear in the other hand and baby vomit is running down my front - into my bra, onto my stomach...

I make a dash for the kitchen to throw away the soiled book and undies and grab a paper towel to clean myself.

Let me backtrack a moment here - though I'm sure it will give the next part of my story away. We keep a potty seat in the kitchen to make it easy for Stone to go whenever he wants.

As I'm running into the kitchen, I clip the potty chair.

It isn't empty.

So, now I'm standing in the kitchen with a giggling baby in one hand, poop drawers in my other hand, baby vomit on my front (which has reached my waistband), and my right flip-flop (flip flops being important to your mental picture) and foot soaked with toddler pee.

Lessons learned:

1. Don't leave favorite books (or toys or pets or baby siblings) on the floor during the potty training stage.

2. Clean out potty chairs as soon as pee-pee happens.

3. A good sense of humor (and the promise of a good blog post) is imperative to parental sanity.

4. It was still better than a day in a cubicle.