So when I told Hubby that I was going to post on a blog way
cooler than mine, his first question was, “What are you going to write about?”
blog. *Pout*
as possible. (I do so love a fuck-friendly zone, hehehe. . .get it?)
clothes I buy at The Children’s Place (aka Ironflower and Lovebug, my toddlers)
would do something blog-worthy. And even though I never said anything, they
managed not to cooperate anyway. Much like when I ask them to do those cute
things again for their grandparents and they look at me like I’ve asked them to
perform fucking Shakespearean monologues.
cabinet under the sink. Under the sink is where we keep all the dangerous
chemicals like dishwasher detergent and glass cleaner (not that I was getting
those, I was getting trash bags because I do not clean on Friday night. Or
Saturday. Or. ..well, I’m getting off topic). The rubber band that holds the
cabinet doors shut broke and I had to search for a new one. Finally I took the
one off of Lovebug’s favorite cabinet, the one with fancy, breakable dishes
that we never use.
of the cabinets with rubberbands?”
whole childproofing thing. Breakables went up high. The cabinets got weird
plastic things. Wall sockets were covered. Sticky foam things went around the
coffee table corners. The toilet got a lock.
right and had a tendency to fall in. So instead we started shutting the
bathroom door, despite the warnings from our childbirth teacher about kids opening bathroom doors and
drowning in toilets. Even now that they can open doors, we keep them shut
because “out of sight, out of mind” is a great description of how the toddler brain
works.
nails (not that I’m manicured anymore, but I HATE it when they break off down
to the quick) and because Hubby would remove them to get something out and just
leave them on the counter. The rubber bands are cheaper and a lot easier to
use.
diligently reapplying them until Ironflower fell and smacked her head on the
side of the coffee table, after which we realized that we could not cover all
the hard things in the world with foam.
don’t have that worry anymore. And we
still use the wall socket covers. Because they’re so NOT a pain-in-the-ass.
until I realized that someday I might have to host a playdate. Still being a
bit new to the area, we haven’t yet. But it will happen. And I just know it
will be with some mom who actually hired a child-proofing service or something.
yous to Karly, for allowing me to guest post.


3 Comments so far
Say It!
My mom and my mom-in-law refused to do any “child proofing” and babysat for us all of the time - the kids never got into any mischief at either of their houses (except when my parents went to europe, I stopped by to check on everything and my little brothers left the bleach out and middle child decided to drink it!) - we too did away with a few of the pain in the ass babyproofing items - we used a blanket on our hearth at our old house - and I shopped for a house with no fireplace when we moved. The only thing in my house that actually stayed locked was the ‘linen closet’ because it was one of those old fashioned hotel lock dealios that you mount inside the door frame and the little brass dealy just flips in front of the door - the lock is still there, just never flipped - but really, they weren’t going to the laundry room in the basement alone anyhow - that’s where I kept all the poisonous crap - so I only needed to lock them out of the ipecac so that if they did eat a plant I could find the ipecac to induce vomiting!
oh yeah, we still have little plastic thingys on outlets too - even though they are teenagers, I have nieces and nephews so…
By momumo on 09.01.07 9:03 am | Permalink
Oh I feel so much better!!
By MammaLoves on 09.01.07 11:19 am | Permalink
I tried to comment on this before, but the comments were all wonky and kept sending me an evil error message. Grrr!
Anyway…just wanted to say, I’m with you on the childproofing. I started out all gung ho, but only succeeded in locking myself out of stuff.
By Leslie on 09.05.07 6:14 pm | Permalink
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Be nice, yo. Nobody likes a hater.