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By Meredith Ethington

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Chandler Humor In the Motherhood Parenting

Conversations with a Two Year Old

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I wrote a post a little while ago that was featured on Scary Mommy. It was innocent enough, and all about my two year old declaring he had a hard day. Honestly I had no clue if people would find it funny, but in my wildest dreams I never thought anyone would find it controversial. That just goes to show you I still have a lot to learn. Funny how I thought the mommy wars were over.

I’m cute and naive that way.

But I have to owe the popularity of that post to the first commenter who started the controversy. She innocently suggested I just ask my toddler why he had a hard day.

Oooh. Thanks random interwebs lady. Never thought of that one.

Then I started to fantasize about a world where you could actually communicate with two year olds in a clear way.  Sure, now, I can ask him questions, and he answers me to the best of his ability. But, real conversations with a two year old with meaning and purpose are still a little bit elusive around here.

What would it be like? I wondered.

Conversations with a Two year Old (If they were actually listening)

“Why was your day hard little man?” I could ask.

“Because you wouldn’t let me strangle the cat.” He would answer.

It could be nice. And so handy. I mean one sweet commenter lady declared her kids were “speaking in complete sentences at two because she asked them questions and challenged their brains” sooooo, yeah, that would be nice.

Because I’m totally anti-brain challenging. Obviously.

But, for real. Think of the possibilities!

We could wake up and just ask what they were going to destroy that day.

“Glad you asked, Mom. I was thinking of taking a sharpie to the couch first and then trying my hand at a little frisbie throwing with your new plates.”

We could ask about naptime and know whether or not it was going to ruin the day.

“Yeah, I was thinking I would toy with your emotions for a while and make you think I am going to nap. Then about 15 minutes in I’ll attempt to take my diaper off in bed and pee on the sheets you just washed. At dinner, I’ll fall asleep in my bowl of spaghetti. Cool?”

And meal planning could get so much easier.

“Yeah, so I will refuse all meats and veggies this week and stick to a strict diet of noodles and protein bars. Forget making that meal I loved last night for dinner. It’s so last week. Save yourself the time and energy.“

You could be warned about catastrophic events ahead of time.

“I love Target and all too, but about ten minutes in, I’m going to make you wish you had never come. Right when you fill the cart so full that I have to walk, I’ll start pulling things off shelves, demanding to be held, then go limp and lay down on the floor screaming. Next time, just buy me the popcorn, OK?”

We could just cut right to the chase and be told so much information.

“I won’t potty train until I’m 3 1/2 because I’m scared a shark is lurking down there.”

“The reason why I’m still waking up at night is because my foot gets itchy and I want you to scratch it.”

“I really wish you would let me play with knives and do all the dangerous things. Since you won’t, I’m going to start refusing to eat breakfast for a week.”

In the photo above, he refused to believe me that the cone was edible. So, he insisted on having a spoon. We aren’t exactly dealing with rational little human beings people.

And, it would be SO nice to hear, “I love you mama. I know I’m difficult, because I work hard to be. But, I know you work hard too, and one day, I’ll take care of you when you’re old and gray and wrinkly, so try not to worry too much about my temper tantrums. It will ALL be worth it in the end.”

A tired, exhausted mom of three can dream, right?

 


19 Comments

« 20 Reasons My Two Year Old Had a Hard Day
10 Things You’d See if This Mom’s Phone Got Hacked »

Comments

  1. Denise G. says

    September 3, 2014 at 11:36 am

    Brilliant response to those who lack a sense of humor! I doubt they would understand this very funny post. Loved it!

    Reply
    • Meredith says

      September 3, 2014 at 1:40 pm

      Thanks Denise!!

      Reply
  2. Chris Carter says

    September 3, 2014 at 11:37 am

    LOVE this Meredith! You have NAILED it once again!! Good Lord, what is wrong with people? I love your come back post, my friend. I am standing at my computer giving you a standing ovation!!!

    And chuckling too. 😉

    Reply
    • Meredith says

      September 3, 2014 at 1:40 pm

      Thanks Chris! People are crazy. It’s ok. I’ve accepted it.

      Reply
  3. Jessie says

    September 3, 2014 at 1:58 pm

    Oh this made me laugh. Just the other day I asked my two year old why she had just wrecked something (I don’t remember which thing it was, there are too many) her very serious answer: “Oh, I just wanted to.”

    Reply
    • Meredith says

      September 3, 2014 at 2:26 pm

      LOL. I know. I think that’s why they do most things they do honestly. ha!

      Reply
  4. Lisa @ The Golden Spoons says

    September 3, 2014 at 7:43 pm

    Ha! I love it! Some people should really think before they speak -or comment – because they make themselves look ridiculous! Congrats on the Scary Mommy piece and the commenter controversy! 🙂

    Reply
    • Meredith says

      September 3, 2014 at 9:26 pm

      Thanks Lisa!

      Reply
  5. Carin Kilby Clark says

    September 4, 2014 at 9:45 am

    I am completely and literally ROTFL! First, I read the other post (and the comments) so I was already halfway to the ground with a bellyaching LOL. Thanks so much for the laugh. And, I love the follow-up. Kids are too funny and parents have a sense of humor to survive it all! Loved both articles. 😀

    Reply
    • Meredith says

      September 4, 2014 at 10:13 am

      Thanks carin!!

      Reply
  6. Tracey Tobin says

    September 4, 2014 at 11:05 am

    Oh, people. How I love them.

    Seriously though, I can’t believe people took a post like that and made it controversial. How foolish. It always amazes me how people think that all kids should act the same, feel the same, learn the same, and progress the same, and that if your kids aren’t a perfect picture copy of their kids then OBVIOUSLY you’re doing something wrong. >.>

    Believe me, I’ve gotten a lot of pretty rotten looks from people who find out that my daughter goes to bed with a TV show on. To them I give a rude gesture and point out that my daughter sleeps 11 hours straight almost every night and is smart as a whip. So yeah, clearly watching TV in bed is the sign of the worst mother ever, right? 😛

    That all said, I love your theoretical conversations…lol…I can totally imagine those words coming out of my daughter’s mouth when she was two. Scary stuff. lol

    Reply
    • Meredith says

      September 4, 2014 at 1:02 pm

      Ha. yes, people are crazy. That’s all there is to it! 🙂

      Reply
  7. Stephanie @ Mommy, for Real. says

    September 4, 2014 at 3:56 pm

    Oh, I LOVE this! See, something good can come from rude, condescending commenters! 😉 Way to take those lemons and make lemonade… or at least another fantastic, funny, relatable post. I’m right there with you… Toddler conversations are completely confounding. 🙂

    Reply
    • Meredith says

      September 4, 2014 at 8:15 pm

      Well, I stopped reading the comments after a while, but it was actually humorous. I think blogging is FINALLY giving me a thicker skin!

      Reply
  8. Tarana says

    September 4, 2014 at 11:09 pm

    It’s hard to get inside the minds of toddlers, even if they can talk, so there’s no difference anyway! But perfect response to some rude people 🙂

    Reply
  9. Liv says

    September 6, 2014 at 7:11 am

    Hilarious! Seems to me there’s a youtube video of a guy who re acts actual conversations with his two year old with an adult male. It seems a lot more ridiculous hearing it in a grown up voice. Clearly your commenters (or trolls) have never had or been a two year old. Nothing rational about them.

    Reply
  10. Lisa says

    September 7, 2014 at 7:34 pm

    Hilarious! I saw that post over on Scary Mommy and was just did a slow headshake about the crazy and condescending that littered the comments thread. I found your blog through another avenue altogether but loved this post in response!

    Reply
    • Meredith says

      September 7, 2014 at 7:36 pm

      Well either way, glad you found me!

      Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Cause We Can says:
    October 7, 2014 at 2:53 pm

    […] Conversations with a 2-Year Old Some people need a sense of humor; seriously! Meredith responds to some critics of an earlier post of hers with this wickedly funny article!  […]

    Reply

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Welcome! I’m Meredith.

Mom. Writer. Diet Coke connoisseur. Born and raised Texan. Lover of real talk and laughter with a hint of sarcasm mixed in.

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Sure, you can commiserate with a fellow parent about teenagers being the worst.

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What if it’s right now while I’m in finals week of grad school, and have a kid that’s sick? 
I already miss so much. The gummy smiles of babes without any teeth. The squeaky voices of 2 year olds. The babbling of a baby that’s just trying so hard to say mama. The grammar mistakes my kids make when they’re talking that I don’t have the heart to correct because I love it too much. 

I miss a lot about those younger years that have already slipped away. My youngest is sick, much like in this picture, but he is too big to snuggle in my arms now when he’s running a fever. 

Today I had the thought, what if this is it? What if this IS the happiest I’ll ever be?
For a moment, I lingered in that thought as I stood over my sink and did the dishes. I started to cry.
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Look, I’ve never been a half glass full kind of gal. I can ALWAYS find the negative in every situation. 

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The state of our economy. Social media. People being unemployed. People being racist and homophobic. The debate over politics. People judging people. ALLLLLL of it. 

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It’s the one millionth day of January but Spring feels so far away. 

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But, my guess is you’re reading this right now and realizing you’re over it too. Whatever “it” is in your life.

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