I did my requisite lecturing in the car on the way to school, along with my usual karate chopping hand motions that other motorists then mistook for road rage. I gave a very wordy and passionate presentation on “looking after your things and not waiting until we are walking out the door to flag that there is something that you desperately need for the day.” I made a very convincing argument for the benefits of being more organised and I am almost certain it went in one ear and out the other.
I pulled up to the school gate, yanked the car door open, threw bags from boot to nature strip and marched to the office with my 10 year old hop-skipping to keep up with my angry mother-on-a-mission-nobody-say-good-morning-to-me stomp. I fronted up to the window (whereupon the office ladies ignored me for 20 vital seconds because someone was too busy putting staples into a stapler to pay attention to the mother-in-a-bait at the window) at which point it took all my will power not to slap $10 on the counter and shout:
“I need to buy another f*%#ing recorder!”
Which got me to thinking about all the OTHER things I have to constantly buy. If I had a dollar for every time I re-bought all these things … I could add a gorgeous second bathroom to my home and put a sign on it saying, “No Boys!”
(But that’s a whole other post.)
Here is the list of things I have had to buy 50 times over:
1. Lunch boxes
Admittedly I have a Tupperware fetish so my children are very co-dependently enabling my addiction with their rampant loss of lunch boxes. I like to change it up a bit too: when I’m really fed up I punish them by going basic with it and getting a plain rectangle box with a lid.Then if I’m in a creative mood I go all “aspirational” and get one of those ones with the four snack compartments and a specially shaped cooler bottle. During these purchases I have visions of myself packing the perfect nutritious lunch with raw vegetable sticks dipped into hummus and a gorgeous looking salad sandwich with mixed leaves on a byyooooshiful seeded bread.
My eldest child has finally accepted that lunchboxes are his Waterloo. He refuses to let me buy him any more and takes his lunch in a plastic shopping bag every day, gallantly accepting his penance with good grace.
2. 2B pencils
Again, as with the Tupperware, I also have a stationery fetish and there’s nothing I love more than an excuse to visit Officeworks and buy all sorts of aspirational things that will help me ‘organise’ my work life and save me oodles of time every day (coloured paper clips, post it notes shaped like houses, “fun” pins for the pin board, and novelty notebooks.) But it is a testament to my children's commitment to losing things that I am completely OVER buying packets of 2B pencils. There’s nothing fun about a six pack of stinky old 2B pencils.3. Pencil sharpeners
I have bought all manner of pencil sharpeners: snazzy electric ones, animal-shaped versions, I even put one on a keyring, hung it on a hook and imposed the equivalent of a stationery restraining order upon it (it was not to venture more than a one metre radius from its hook.)But when homework time comes, we inevitably spend 15 minutes hunting down a pencil (always blunt or broken) then another 15 trying to find a pencil sharpener that actually sharpens the pencil, as opposed to grinding it into a rough-hewn sawdusty nub of lead. (There is currently a warrant out on the missing keyring sharpener.)
Add to this stationery list: rulers (they are like Lake George in Canberra, they appear all at once and then just as mysteriously disappear again without a trace.)
4. Lost library books
The worst thing about lost library books is, as soon as you pay for them (as per the library policy) they appear again. Then you’re obliged to keep some stupid boring book about planes that you never wanted in the first place, because you just paid 30 bucks for it.5. Swimming goggles
What is it with kids these days? My kids whinge and whine like a bunch of pansies if they can’t find their swimming goggles when it’s time to go swimming. And I’m not even talking about doing serious laps at the pool. I’m talking about playing Marco Polo in the pool at home. They squeal like girls if they have to swim sans goggles and sometimes even refuse to go in without them. If I had a dime for every pair of freaking goggles I have purchased …In MY day goggles were like swimming caps: they were for serious squad swimmers only. We played all manner of underwater games (including ‘guess what I’m saying underwater’) with our bare eyeballs to the chlorinated water. Sure we then spent the whole summer with bloodshot eyes and blurry vision, but toughen up princesses!
6. Socks, socks and more socks
I’ve said it before, socks are my nemesis. I cannot get on top of the sock issue. It doesn’t matter what I do. The other day my son stumbled upon a matching pair and it was like he’d seen a beautiful rainbow. “Look! Look!” He shouted, holding them aloft, “Here’s something you don’t see every day!” I felt bad that something so basic was so delightful for him.7. Butter knives and teaspoons
My kids are fond of using butter knives to give their Lego men Face-Off-style head transplants. So they go missing from my cutlery drawer, I buy a stack more then I find the old ones when I do the proper ‘Mummy clean up’ of their room. (That’s the clean up you do when you ACTUALLY clean up the room as opposed to the clean up my kids do where they shove everything, including their shoes, hot water bottles, old books and pillows into the laundry basket.)As for the teaspoons. I just don’t know where they go or who is taking them and why. But every six months I have to buy another six pack.
8. Drink bottle lids
I have every single drink bottle I have ever bought. It’s the lids that elude me.9. School hats and school jackets
I am nearly done with primary school and we are at the stage where we don’t even pretend to be on top of the hat thing any more. My kids just go straight to the lost property box in the morning, ‘borrow’ a hat for the day and then put it back in at the end of the day.School jackets are just as problematic.
Teaspoons. I hear ya there sister. I'm down to my last three, which I stole from Singapore Airlines in desperation. Where do they go? No one actually uses them since my youngest turned 6. That was 7 years ago. Perhaps it's like the socks/washing machine disappearing thing, with the dishwasher.
ReplyDeleteCheck the garden. That's where I always find mine. Cause apparently, if you are in the garden, what you really need to be doing is digging with a teaspoon. And then half burying it "for later".
DeleteHilarious article - I love it and can identify with most of it, though my children are a bit younger than yours so I obviously have more to come!
ReplyDeleteSomewhere in a park or bushland nearby is an army of wombles or borrowers, cosy in their sock sleeping bags, in shelters fashioned from 2B pencils, bandaids and lunchboxes, drinking from drink bottle lids, saying "We've done our best with the rest, but what the **** do we do with all these recorders?".
ReplyDeleteScissors. I buy the three-pack every time I go to Ikea (more often than I can count). There are no scissors in our house.
ReplyDeleteDesperate, I even bought special $20 gold sewing scissors that "no one is allowed to touch. They STAY in the laundry cupboard." They're long gone. The only scissors in our house are a pair of craft scissors that cut a ridiculous zigzag pattern. No one wants them.