I mean, I didn't even fart in front of another human being until I was 30 (for those of you keeping score at home, yes, that does mean that I survived my entire first marriage without farting in front of him). I never really laughed at fart jokes (sex jokes were and are a different story). I certainly didn't make them.
Until my kids began to find them the funniest things on the planet. Well, fart jokes and the word "poop" in any context. At first, I merely sighed resignedly as my husband and kids cracked up about farts. Then I started grinning, just a little bit, because it's impossible not to smile when the rest of the family is laughing.
Hugmonkey had just yelled, "Poop!"
Until the other night when Lovebug expressed disappointment that Daddy wasn't there to read the current family favorite, Big Bad Wolf Is Good. "I wanted him to read it funny, Mom," he explained when I said I would be happy to read it again.
"I can read it funny," I said confidently. Meanwhile, years of prissy behavior flashed through my head. The years of holding in farts and stopping my students from talking about this stuff and rolling my eyes at fart jokes and not discussing my ulcerative colitis because it's totally about poop and never leaving the door to the bathroom open and horror when my kid farted at the dinner table and fear of turning into the family on Honey Boo Boo. Then my son looked at me with a mixture of hope and shock. He handed me the book.
In the book, which is really cute (and you should use my link above if you want to buy it because then I will make 15 cents), Big Bad Wolf decides he wants friends. At the beginning, he theorizes he has no friends because, "Perhaps it's because I'm big and scary." I added in, "and have a stinky butt." All three kids laughed out loud. I felt like supermom.
So now, even though I'm not as good as Daddy, I get requests for "read it funny" when he's not around. My prissy side, which I thought was part of my DNA, has crawled off into the sunset, weeping. And the phrase "stinky butt" now makes me laugh too. Motherhood does change you.
6 comments:
Haha! What a great change! Poop :)
Brilliant! I too had to kiss off my prissy personhood when I had my kids because honestly? I just don't think she fit into the lighthearted and open life I wanted to create for my children, the one I didn't have as a child.
I've been wondering if this isn't the amazing part of being a parent: the opportunity for do-overs, the kind that make the littlest parts of an adult fill with new-found joy.
You know that I started to change the words because I was soooo sick of reading it the same way- and also because I never grew up!
my inner 13-year-old wants you to read it funny to me! welcome to the lighter side of being human ;-)
Caitlin - It definitely is, for the most part.
Karen - What a beautiful way of putting it!
SR - I know. But look at how well it has worked out.
Cindy Lou Who - Come visit and I totally will!
I tried to let my prissy side go completely, but I couldn't do it. So now we just have certain times that the bathroom humor isn't cool.
Like at the table. Or before mommy has had her coffee. :p
Post a Comment