Friday, March 8, 2013

Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Goood, Very Bad Day


So I've highlighted on our family nightly routine in a previous post but for those that are unaware our night usually goes something like this...

1. Husband and  I come home to either an excited little cub or a frustrated one. Toddlers I am learning have serious mood swings.
2. Husband and I sit and eat dinner. The cub joins us more as a formality because he has usually eaten earlier with his Abuela. (The Husband and I are carpooling right now so we get home way too late but that's a story for another day).
3. We all spend the next hour chasing the cub through the house, kicking the ball, or dancing to Elmo.
4. Around 8 p.m. we take the cub upstairs to begin bath time. Bath time consists of more chasing the cub around the house to undress him, then the bath.
5. Cub splashes in the tub and use his toys to pour water on the bathroom floor.







6. Husband takes cub out of the tub and goes into his room to put on PJs while mommy mops the bathroom floor.
7. Cub eats Vaseline and lotion while mommy and daddy dress him for the night-don't judge us. Having a toddler has also taught us to pick our battles. Playing with sockets we are willing to fight. Eating the Vaseline...not really worth a fight.

Once the cub is dressed for bedtime we usually read a book to him. Now that he is more vocal and able to express what he wants, we usually let him pick the book. His favorite book is one titled "The Boy Who Wouldn't Share" but lately he has been enjoying my favorite childhood book "Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day". Although the Husband and I usually try to alternate reading to him, I always read this book because one I love it and two the Husband hates reading the long books. Well, last night the cub picked the book and took it to the Husband to read. We have both been battling a cold the past the few days so needless to say the Husband's rendition of the book was lacking the fan fare the cub appreciates. He allowed the Husband to get halfway through the book when he started advancing the pages to skip ahead in the story. A few pages later he closed the book signalling his desire to end story time. The Husband reopened the book attempting to finish the story only to have the cub close the book again, and as if to make sure we understood that he had enough he then said to the book "Bye-Bye" and waved it away.