Finger Paint as a Torture Device

Kurt likes to tell everyone that I’m a total clean freak, and admittedly, I am. I actually like to clean and I’m a little OCD about it too. Usually the OCD part is only shortly after cleaning and goes as far as picking up the lone pine needle on the floor, or the hair (usually mine) or spec of dirt in a sink. That OCD aspect ends right after Sophia comes in from playing in the mud and walks across the entire house before taking her shoes off or Kurt goes to shave and leaves what looks like the quills of a half dozen hedgehogs around the sink. That pretty much cures the OCD and I’m back to my defeated maid mode. I calm myself by saying, “I’ll clean it all next week. It’ll be spotless!” And then it all repeats itself…again.

Two things bug me about Kurt going on about my obsession with keeping the house clean. The first is that people wrongly assume that I judge their cleaning prowess. I don’t. I could care less how someone else keeps his or her home. I worked as a maid for six months, which is about five months longer than most people last. I’ve seen it all. I also worked for a psycho woman whose home made all others look utterly spotless. Unless animals are running around crapping in the house and no one bothers to pick it up, ever. I’m fine.

It’s also assumed that because I like to clean that I’m a germaphobe. I’m not. My hatred of water aside, germs don’t bother me. I’ll share eating utensils with friends, and drink from the same cup. I even ate food prepared by psycho woman in her home.

The second thing is that Kurt make it seem as if it’s all me.  It isn’t.  He is just as obsessed as I am, but I allow messes to be made. I try to keep all food and art messes contained within the borders of the dining table. Sometimes they escape, but usually I’m pretty good at collecting the art supplies before they wonder off with the preschooler. Either way, I allow messes to happen.

Last week I found finger paints in a tube at the store and bought some. How awesome is that? I can just squeeze out the allowable about of color mess onto a plate and let the mess creation begin. I told Kurt about my find as I pulled it out of the art drawer to dole out to the preschooler and his first question was, “is it water soluble?” He was almost frantic about the question as I’m squeezing blue paint onto a paper plate. No dear it’s oil based finger-paint. It’s an evil plot concocted by Crayola and Bob Ross to get every child to look like a Smurf and paint Happy Little Trees all over the damn house. Yeah, but I’m the neat freak. Right.

I bought Crayola’s Color Wonder paints once before. It’s a clear paint that only shows color on special paper. Kurt was also leery of that. I didn’t buy it again because each color came in a small container meant for the kid to put her finger in and paint on the paper. I don’t know if other kids are disciplined enough to paint a picture and then stop, but my child just glopped paint on one piece of paper in one sitting until all the paint was gone. That was about seven dollars for an hour of painting joy. I bought Color Wonder markers after that just to use up the rest of the paper. She doesn’t like the markers as much.

finger painting
finger paint as a lotion
colorful lotion
leaving her mark

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More than a Fair Day

Over the weekend of amazement we went to the state fair. We saw the pony ride and knowing that she probably wouldn’t go for it I asked Sophia if she wanted to ride on the ponies. She shook her head as I knew she would and we just stood there and watched for a little while. I was admittedly disappointed though not at all surprised. In another area they had a cute “Farmer for a Day” area for the little kids right before the petting area. The activity they had set up was right up Sophia’s OCD-putting-things-into-containers alley but because we were in public, there were no guarantees that she would take to it. It took a little encouragement, but not much.

The first part was to pick out a basket, take it to the hen house and pick an egg, then to the apple tree for an apple, and finally to the sandbox to dig up a potato. There was also a cow milking area where she waited her turn for a while, but ultimately she skipped that. Once the little basket was full, it was time to take it to market and separate her things into the market’s baskets. She then received a stamp on her hand with the animal and color of her choosing. She picked an orange horse.

Picking an apple from the treeWaiting her turn at the milking stationDigging up a potatoPicking up her potatoPotatoAt the Grocer

Directly after that area there was the entrance to the petting area. She showed interest in the animals but didn’t want to touch them at first. She began to take my hand but then switched and chose Kurt to lead around the pen of baby farm animals.

Lately she’s been a little Nazi with her demands for which parent she wants to do whatever task for her like reading her bedtime story. “Momma’s turn, “she’ll say. We accommodate sometimes, but if it was predetermined by the parental units that momma has the night off then it’s tough shit. On this occasion it was, “Daddy’s turn”, which I just thought was great. Kurt later decided that the child figured if anyone could protect her from a rouge baby goat it would be daddy. If that’s the case she would be quite shocked as to what the otherwise animal loving “momma bear” can and would do if her young were attacked. I’m just sayin’.

Controlling little Nazi child took her dad’s arm in both her hands and used it to pet the goats until she was comfortable doing so herself. She also pet the calf, but the chickens and pigs she only looked at.

Once we done with the petting area we went out to wash our hands and then retrieve the stroller, which was waiting for us at the entrance of the “Farmer for a Day” area. Upon seeing the baskets, OCD child had to go through the maze again. I had to go to the bathroom, so Kurt wound up going through there with Sophia another seven times. On their way out Sophia spotted something through another vendor and indicated she wanted to go there. I’m not sure if she said anything since I was still waiting in line for the ladies room, but I know she wouldn’t have had a word for what she wanted other than maybe horse. She wanted to ride the carousel. Kurt was shocked and when I found out, I was stunned. Kurt bought the tickets and Sophia kept pointing at the horses she wanted no ride. Wow, she really wants to do this. On the horse she was so happy, she sat waiting for the ride to begin and pointed to her horse smiling. Kurt’s horse was much smaller, and it made his 6’ 4” figure look hilarious. The carousel began to turn and each time around Kurt pointed me out to Sophia who flashed huge smiles at me. The biggest smiles I received were when the camera was down but I still got a good shot. Unlike her camp photo, no tickling was required for these. I cannot tell you how happy it made us for her to have a normal kid reaction to normal kid fun. There are just no words to express it.

Waiting for the carousel to startbear on a tricyclenormal kid reaction to normal kid fun

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55 Flash non-Fiction Friday: Tenacious Toddler

She placed each on the step above, took the next step, and then picked up each item. Always setting down and picking them up in the same order. This is how she carried her coveted sippy-cup, ‘friend’, and cell phone upstairs. Good thing it wasn’t a full flight of stairs. This could take all day!

55 Flash Fiction Friday
Flash Fiction Friday is hosted by g-man.

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OCD Strong Baby Competitions

Obsessive-compulsive baby has been infatuated with boxes, bags, carts, and my purse for quite some time. After I bought her Stride Rite shoes, she took to carrying that box around the house and putting things into it and then pulling them back out again. Her shoebox used to have a plastic window that kept her treasures safely inside, but that was meticulously removed by OCD child and now her treasures spill about all over the place. Not to worry, I rarely ever have to pick them back up for her. She will come by and collect them. I just need to be aware that there may be things in the laundry basket that don’t go in the washer. I don’t know why she puts her stuff there. She knows where things go. On one occasion, after finishing her milk she very matter a factly put her sippy cup in the bottom drawer of the open dishwasher. So you can’t tell me she doesn’t know books don’t go in the laundry. *crossing my arms* humph!

A couple weeks ago, we were at a friend’s place for the birthday party of their now four year old and Sophia carried her shoebox around with her for FIVE hours. I don’t think she put it down once. Well, maybe to switch hands. She had to have it as we left the house and held it for the whole car ride over, then carried it like a purse the whole time we were there. Even going up and down the stairs required her shoebox.

Stride Rite shoebox

More recently, Sophia has had an interest in groceries and other items brought home from the store or more specifically anything that is container-like. She enjoys “helping me”. Of course, by helping I mean that she takes things out of the grocery bag and puts it on the floor or in a “baby proofed” drawer. She also takes the still full bags and drags them around the living room.

I thought she was strong when she lifted her diaper bag. Red faced and grunting, she carried it around the house, but her newest fascination is the gallon jugs of milk, which she can almost pick up. A few days ago it was a full gallon of paint that she insisted belonged on the other side of the living room. She can’t totally lift either gallon jug of liquid, but she can drag them and she can tilt them. I don’t think she’s going to be a girly girl. Just a hunch.

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