Parent Thread

iannis

Musty Nester
31,351
17,656
Tears of physical pain are the shameful ones. Tears of joy or grief are to be seen and respected.

If you cry because it hurts though, ur a fag.
 
  • 1Like
Reactions: 1 user

Bandwagon

Kolohe
<Silver Donator>
22,671
59,417
Tears of physical pain are the shameful ones. Tears of joy or grief are to be seen and respected.

If you cry because it hurts though, ur a fag.
Which one is it if you cry when Chloe beats Addison to win season 13 of The Voice?
 
  • 1Worf
Reactions: 1 user

3301

Wake Up Man
<Banned>
2,770
1,379
Took one of my girls to the mall last month. On our way out, walking to the car, we were talking about JoJo bows and if she was a real person. Daughter said she is, I said no way. Creeper white guy walking past us chimes in that she is real, she was on Dance Moms or some shit.

Looked her up google when we got into the car, yep she’s real. “See Daddy, I told youuuuuuuu.”
 

Noodleface

A Mod Real Quick
37,961
14,508
We don't change night diapers unless he's been crying for a few minutes or obviously shit his pants. My wife is OCD about poop too
 
  • 1Like
Reactions: 1 user

Regime

LOADING, PLEASE WAIT...
<Aristocrat╭ರ_•́>
16,389
37,699
My son is ready for his LA noire playthrough. Late Valentine’s Day post.


rsz_47910083-9d11-4461-aa59-37d08b392e12.jpg
 
Last edited:
  • 4Like
Reactions: 3 users

lurkingdirk

AssHat Taint
<Medals Crew>
40,583
171,506
My son is ready for his LA noire playthrough. Late Valentine’s Day post.


rsz_47910083-9d11-4461-aa59-37d08b392e12.jpg

I gotta be honest, he is super cute, but I've looked at that picture a couple times now and I know it says "heart breaker," but I always initially think it says "fart maker." That would be a good shirt, too, just perhaps not for Valentine's day.
 

Regime

LOADING, PLEASE WAIT...
<Aristocrat╭ರ_•́>
16,389
37,699
I gotta be honest, he is super cute, but I've looked at that picture a couple times now and I know it says "heart breaker," but I always initially think it says "fart maker." That would be a good shirt, too, just perhaps not for Valentine's day.


Yes I had that in my post then removed it thinking it would add confusion. I love that it says fart maker because he is a little toots n poots.
 
  • 1Like
Reactions: 1 user

3301

Wake Up Man
<Banned>
2,770
1,379
One of my twins stayed home from school today for a cold. Later in the day she tells me she’s dizzy. We start talking about it and she goes on to tell me that she feels like she’s taller than everyone, and everything like buildings. Started when kindergarten began last year. Before that she felt smaller than everyone. Never goes away it’s always like that. Hearing voices, tasting things when not eating or drinking, feeling she’s being touched while laying down for bed.

Brain scan incoming. Fucking hell.
 
  • 1Thoughts & Prayers
Reactions: 1 user

SeanDoe1z1

Avatar of War Slayer
7,224
18,604
One of my kids had this insane sensory overlord thing going on from age 4-7. Specialists and all the like involved, nothing came from it. Literally put her in a new school (private, 1/2 the students). She totally grew out of it, so hopefully its something like that. Kids are weird.

I definitely patient zero'd my entire family with the flu. Came in overnight to work on some suspect equipment, 32F or so and it took a lot longer than I anticipated. Sick as a dog, flash forward 48hours. Baby virus (no flu) -> kid2 flu -> kid3 flu. My house is like a quarantine.


A peaceful. Quiet. Quarantine
 

3301

Wake Up Man
<Banned>
2,770
1,379
Our sensory special girl had a low grade fever at school, picked her up from the nurses office and she was okay. Took her to urgent care later because she was saying she had trouble breathing. Oxygen saturation was 100% so her breathing wasn't actually a problem, lungs/heart sounded clear and normal, other vitals were normal, blood work normal except slightly elevated lymphocytes (she has a cold). Dr said to get her seen by psych, could have anxiety/panic attack issues. They gave her some zofran for nausea and iv fluids, both which helped her a bunch, no longer feeling dizzy after the zofran and headache diminished by the iv fluids. Even after we left she said she was having trouble breathing. Went out to eat at a Pho place after and when we left there she said she felt fine. Had her stay home from school the next day (dr even wrote her a note beforehand), we went to ihop for breakfast..she couldn't eat as she had a severe headache (uncommon to my knowledge, idiot wife says "yeah she's been having headaches a lot"). Could be migraines, urgent care dr said nah, but we will see. Neuro appt sometime soon.

The one year old is having ear tubes put in because of so many ear infections. She had her blood drawn and didn't even cry, threw more of a fit when I tried to show her how the Finding Nemo sticker that she got could peel apart from the backing. She is so damn good though, not even 14 months old and she sat in a laboratory waiting room chair for a good 20 minutes, holding her med barcode sticker thing the entire time. She stood up on the chair a few times, turning around to watch people by the elevator, but of course I had my hands/arms in place to keep her from falling. She's still too little to know any better.

There's been some discussion in the marriage thread about kids in daycare. Our fraternal twin girls were at home the first 3 years with an au pair that lived with us; the next 3 years at daycare. That worked out great for us and them; last month sensory girl got kindergarten student of the month. They've always been well behaved, people have been telling us that since they were very little. The one year old has been at that same daycare since she was 2 months old. Other than knowing how fake cry like an expert, she is always smiling and is generally happy, unless you stand up like you're going to walk out of the room.

She's a smart girl and has rather good dexterity for her age, able to throw a ball for the past few months, loves making a mess of her giant lego blocks, also loves cleaning them up and putting them back in the container. When she finds something on the floor that she shouldn't have, if we ask her for it she will bring it over and try to spit it out (because you know, at that age, every fucking thing goes in the mouth). When we or the twins put music on, she does this funny dance shit where she steps in place and throws her hands in the air, sometimes steps in a circle. Sometimes when I pick her up and ask her for a hug she puts her head on my shoulder or touches her forehead to mine, it's the sweetest thing ever.

Wife started taking them to christian church for some reason (guy she's seeing is a church going christian to my knowledge...), so the twins have been parroting stuff about church, "God is everything," etc. It's interesting trying to let them formulate their own opinions (which are still largely what other people tell them), vs trying to have them them think for their selves ("Well sweety, no one really knows what God is or if God exists, they just say things that they can't prove is true.") It feels kinda bad to one day have to tell them the truth about Santa, the Easter Bunny, and most recently the goddamn rich ass Tooth Fairy.... Kinda hilarious though, I pulled a tooth out last night for one of them, she wakes up and rushes to tell me she got $4 and a bubble gum. It's fun concocting stories about already made up shit; told her that the tooth fairy gave her candy so her other teeth would fall out quicker and that the tooth fairy sells the teeth for a lot of money but only gives a little bit to the kids. Important life lessons start early.
 

lurkingdirk

AssHat Taint
<Medals Crew>
40,583
171,506
Okay, I bitched a while ago in the "what rustles your jimmies" thread about how my youngest daughter was on a hockey team and none of the guys would pass to her. It was a problem, not only because she wasn't being included, but because she's about the best player on the team and they just wouldn't play hard with a girl.

Well, tonight I can report that I'm not only proud of her, but of the whole team. The coach had serious talks with the whole team in the locker room, but what I didn't know is that he actually took the time to talk to every one of the players about this one on one, finding situations to engage the guys outside of the locker room with their parents. He actually invited himself over to most of their houses for coffee or a beer. The difference is extraordinary. Tonight they played their first playoff game, and the team has responded beautifully. They aren't just dishing it to her in an attempt to over-compensate for how the year has gone, they just treated her like another guy on the team, expecting the same production from her that they expect from each other (which is what the coach told them to do, he said "if she can't keep up with you guys, she shouldn't be on the team. Give her a chance to show you she can.).

It was unbelievable. When they started feeding her when she was breaking away, she was producing so much offense it was crazy. They ended up winning the game 4-2, and my daughter had a hat-trick. She was a hero in the locker room, and she had nothing but positive things to say back to her team mates.

I'm so proud of her. She is just the right amount of aggressive when she's playing, and she knows how to trash talk with the best of them. She is the middlest of middle children, and often is very content to be the wall flower, but when she puts on skates she turns into an animal. And she's just plain gifted. If you haven't encountered it yet, watch for this moment: the moment when you pour time and energy into something with your kid, and they seem to like it, and then plain, beautiful, raw talent explodes into large achievement. Watching development like that is so rewarding, and I'm just plain proud and not sorry for it.

So, to all of you who are just starting with sports with your kids, or an instrument, or ballet, or whatever, and it feels like pushing string up-hill...Stick with it. It pays off.
 
  • 5Like
Reactions: 4 users

lurkingdirk

AssHat Taint
<Medals Crew>
40,583
171,506
Okay, sorry for all the posts, but here's a little more.
Today I had three kids at a meet for track and field, two kids doing hockey, and one kid play soccer. It was exhausting. I made it to three hockey games, a soccer game, and part of the track meet. My wife covered what I couldn't cover.
Brief highlights - youngest got player of the game in both games today because he's fucking solid. He's the smallest on the team, but solid on his skates and sees the game and plays his position. Middle child played awesome hockey again, and then ran anchor in the 4x400 for her school and they won by 10 seconds!! Oldest two represented well, and second youngest lost his soccer game, but the team played well. They played against a team a division higher, but only lost by one.

But the best part of the day, so much the best part, we all just spent hours together eating dinner, playing stupid games, and talking about the day. Every kid had to tell the other kids about their events, we had to give our perspectives as parents, too, and the hours just flew by. We're stupidly busy with 5 kids, 3 sports, 4 instruments, and everything school related. But I can't express how fantastic it is to end the day with each other, just catching up, and making sure everyone gets to talk and be heard.

I have a metric fucktonne of kids. We're super busy. I would not change a thing.
 

iannis

Musty Nester
31,351
17,656
That's good about your daughter. That kind of wall breaking takes the sort of effort that the coach was willing to put into it.
 
  • 3Like
Reactions: 2 users

Noodleface

A Mod Real Quick
37,961
14,508
Don't downplay the dudes either. It takes some serious balls to realize what you're doing is wrong and actually adapt yourself to fix it. Very cool stuff.
 
  • 5Like
Reactions: 4 users