Category Archives: motherhood

The Peanut Butter Sandwich

There was an incident with a peanut butter sandwich.

I packed it for his lunch.

Normally, I pack cold stuff – a yogurt tube, a cheese stick and a Babybel, a piece of fruit (apple, banana, or grapes), a crunchy snack (of the orange and salty variety), and a juice box.  I pack this same lunch for him every single day.

Every. Single. Day.

But on this day, he went on a field trip and needed a brown bag lunch.  He needed a completely disposable lunch that didn’t require a cold pack.  I thought a peanut butter sandwich would be a refreshing change.

I was wrong.

As soon as he opened his brown bag and discovered a peanut butter sandwich inside, he bolted to the garbage can and threw it out.  He threw out a perfectly good peanut butter sandwich.  I know this because I chaperoned the field trip and witnessed both the disposal of the sandwich and his tear-filled (regretful?) (embarrassed?) (scared?) eyes after he did it.

Sidebar:  I can now add “big yellow school bus filled with screaming Kindergarten children” to the list of things I’m afraid of.

Here’s the thing.  My sensory kid doesn’t like food much and he doesn’t like much food.  But he does like peanut butter.  I know this because he occasionally has a peanut butter sandwich for dinner when he’s bored of eating macaroni and cheese, bagels and cream cheese, and plain spaghetti.  I thought the peanut butter sandwich for lunch was a clever idea.  It wasn’t.  Here’s why.

There’s a reason he eats the same lunch every single day.  He thrives on the structure.  He depends on it.   My intentions were good but unwise.  Good because I want nothing more than for him to love food and enjoy eating it.  Unwise because I should’ve known that springing an unexpected food on him at school was going to turn his familiar order of things upside down.  (And what was the upside of that?)

A few months ago, I had a tearful conversation with his OT about camp this summer.  For the first time, he’s going to “big kid” day camp (vs. pre-school summer camp).  It’s going to be a big and adventurous experience, and he’s going to meet new people, try new activities, and visit new places.  It’s going to be an amazing summer, and I know in my heart that he’s ready for it.

But, here’s the thing.  I can’t pack his lunch.  I’m not allowed.  How’s he going to get through the summer if I can’t feed him?  If I can’t save him from spinning in an abyss of fear and anxiety in a lunchroom filled with unpleasant smells and food he won’t eat?

Hence, the tearful conversation with the OT.

You’ll be relieved to know that she talked me from the ledge.  She reminded me that he needs this push.  That he has to move forward.  That he can and will find his way.  That he will eat.  I also found out from the camp administrator that regardless of what’s on the lunch menu each day, the kids can always choose from an alternative menu that includes – you guessed it – a peanut butter sandwich.

So, I (selfishly) sent a peanut butter sandwich to school in a brown bag lunch as a test.

It failed.  The sandwich ended up in the garbage can before it ever came out of the plastic bag in which it was packed.

He failed.   Instead of eating it or staying calm and saying, “No thank you,” he panicked.

I failed.  I failed the most.  I should never have done it.  My attempt to get him to eat a peanut butter sandwich for lunch by surprising him with a peanut butter sandwich for lunch was the equivalent of yelling at a crying baby to get him or her to stop crying.  It wasn’t going to work.  I set him up for failure and then had the audacity to be angry with him for his inappropriate response.  (Yes, “inappropriate” is the word I used when I quietly confronted him by the garbage can.  I regretted it instantly.)

Sometimes my actions aren’t meant for the child I do have, but for the child I think I have.  (Or wish I had?)  If that sounds harsh, it’s because it is.  But, it’s the truth.  In my children’s beautiful flaws, I have the opportunity to see and face my own.

I know now (but should have known before the incident with the peanut butter sandwich) that introducing him to the lunch menu at camp must be a slow moving, delicately handled, and unsurprising process.

Isn’t it funny what chokes and humbles us as parents?  Of all the real and imagined things that have kept me up at night – and there have been many – I never thought in a million years the thing that would render me so completely unsure of myself as a mother would be a peanut butter sandwich.

What’s your peanut butter sandwich?

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Filed under camp, food, food issues, motherhood, parenting, school, sensory processing disorder

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Kids say the darndest things, don’t they?  Dylan’s “Six Years Ago I Was Dead” bit comes to mind right away.  One of my favorite lines from Riley is, “I love you all the way to Costco and back.”

Kids also ask a lot of questions.  I think we can all agree on this.  Here’s one from the car on the way home from the park.  We were talking about when the boys were in my belly (this comes up a lot) when Dylan asked, “How did I get in your belly?”

And there it was.  The big one.  The question that, if answered truthfully, would end with a premature, confusing, and awkward conversation with way too much information at too young of an age about sex.  The question that, if answered falsely, would result in a child who thinks babies are made as a result of holding hands, touching heads (remember the Coneheads?!), or a really good knock-knock joke.  After a long and excruciating silence, my response was, “That’s an excellent question.  Would you like some Pirate’s Booty?”

Pause.  Acknowledge.  Redirect.  (Every so often, my deer-in-the-headlights parenting works.)

Here’s another one I think we can all agree on (and roll our eyes at and hide in a closet from and drink to).  Kids are prone to tattling.  Now there’s an understatement!  The frequency, originality, and drama of tattling in my house is un-freakin’-believable.  If it weren’t so annoying, it would be hilarious.  The other day, while tattling on Riley for not sharing one of roughly seven thousand Star Wars toys, Dylan said, “My heart is breaking.  Riley has broken my heart into hundreds of tiny pieces.”   Good grief.

And here’s a new one (for me).  I’ve recently noticed that kids like to show off in front of their friends.  You know, “The tooth fairy gave me this much money,” or, “I have all the Batman movies,” etc.  Unfortunately, this bragging occasionally exposes us parents as the Crackpot/Throw Spaghetti Against The Wall To See What Sticks/We Have No Idea What We’re Doing But We’ve Kept Them Alive This Long imposters that we really are.

Like the other day in the car (we’re in the car a lot) with Dylan, Riley, and one of Dylan’s friends from school.  Out of nowhere, Dylan boasted to his buddy, “I get to sit in the front seat with Daddy.”  Seriously?  I quickly interjected, “Just once or twice…in your booster seat…in the neighborhood.”  Then Dylan said, “No, Mommy, remember the time I got to ride in the front seat home from Grandma and Grandpa’s house.  We drove on the highway that time.  Near the airport.”  Ugh.  True (and not recommended by the Insurance Institute of Highway Safety) story.

And the hits just kept coming.  Next, Riley said, “Yeah, and I get to drink Daddy’s beer!”  OMG.  Crap.  Also true.  Also not recommended.  Illegal, actually.  (For the record, Daddy got in a hell of a lot of trouble when I found out about the beer tasting.)

There I was driving this nice boy back to his house where he was probably going to tell his Mama about all of the irresponsible things I allow my kids to do.  All I could think of was the scene in Sweet Home Alabama when Reese Witherspoon’s character says to her old high school friend who’s in a bar with her baby, “Look at you.  You have a baby.  In a bar.”  (Bugger.  I’ve done that, too.)

Many, many moons ago I worked in public relations, and the number one rule in a PR crisis is to stay ahead of the story.  Therefore, in the interest of full disclosure and because my kids are inevitably going to rat me out again, there are three streets that we use to enter our neighborhood and at the first stop sign on each one, I let the boys  unbuckle their seatbelts.

I am sooooo glad I got that off my chest.

Anything you want to unload?  The comments section is all yours.

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Filed under conversations to remember, friendship, motherhood, parenting, Uncategorized