The Evolution of A Hug

When I was fifteen years old I learned an important lesson.

Don't poke the bear.

It was an overcast weekend afternoon, during our summer vacation. My parents were grocery shopping and figured that since my brother was 16, I was fifteen and my sister was 12, the three of us had enough combined maturity to leave alone for the length of time it takes to grocery shop for a family of five.

Haha suckers.

You know what happens when the responsible adults leave a 16-year-old boy alone with the lone television set, a SEGA system, a video game addiction and a pathological need to drive his younger sisters insane?

Nothing good, I can assure you.

So there he was, Stretch, the over-grown boy who thought that because he towered over every living thing in sight,  he could hog the TV.

And there I was, the much shorter yet way bossier younger sister who refused to be bullied.

My sister was the only intelligent child around. She hid in her bedroom to avoid the bloodshed.

It all went down something like this.

"Stretch, can you get off the tv now? You've been playing video games all morning and I want to watch a movie."

"No. Go away."

"No, you go away. I want to watch tv."

He ignores me as the sounds of an annoying 1990's video game taunt me in the background.

"Stretch. Get. Off. The. Television. Please."

Pew pew! Pop! Bam! Cutesy music and complete silence from my suddenly deaf big brother.

So I did the only thing I dared to do. I stood in front of him, blocking his view of the television.

"Stretch. I WANT TO WATCH TEEVEE NOOOOW."

My brother paused the game, looked up and growled in a low voice, "Tanis, you'd better move. Now."

The fifteen year old me was not so different from the modern day me, in that I don't respond well to being told what to do. Also, the fifteen year old me was way dumber than I currently am now.

"No. GET OFF THE DAMN GAME STRETCH OR I'M TELLING MOM."

"I'm warning you Tanis, MOVE." His voice was deadly serious.

So I moved.

I dove for the console box and tried to turn the entire thing off. My downfall was (besides being dumber than a stump and more stubborn) I miscalculated how quick my brother's reflexes were.

Quicker than a cat on a hot tin roof, darn it.

I can't remember with crystal clarity what exactly happened next but I know I did a lot of screeching at high volume in his face, he told me to back off, and I told him where he could stick his head.

The next thing I knew, a river of red ran out my nostrils and I was running out the door of our house, my brother hot on my heels. I was yelling for help and he was screaming he was going to pummel me.

Lucky for me, our parents happened to arrive home JUST AT THAT MOMENT. The rest is, as they say, history. But I never poked that bear again.

***

Fast forward 21 years.

***

We have one television in our house. One. It's located in our family room and it's communal property.

Yesterday, as I was online, reading blogs and such, I heard, "Fric, stop it."

Fric replied to her younger brother in a sing song voice, "What? I'm not doing anything!"

"Fric! Stop it!" Frac barked again.

Being the dutiful mother I am, I asked what was going on. Suddenly all traces of annoyance was gone from both of them as they answered, "Nothing! Just playing video games."

"Well stop fighting or I'm shutting it off."

"Yes Mom."

The peace lasted for about, oh, two seconds. They were playing split screen, a first person shooting game and somebody was deliberately shooting her brother. Even though they were on the same team.

I have no idea where that girl child of mine gets it. I swear.

My boy child was at his wits end. Because apparently, gaming online is a serious business when your mom only lets you play for an hour on a sunny day. Who wants to waste it constantly getting blown up by your big sister?

Before I knew it, there was more shouting, more arguing and I was suddenly having flash backs of my brother's fist meeting the tip of my nose.

Someone was poking the damn bear.

"That's it, you two. Stand up. Get over here," I shouted over top of their yelling and scowled at them with my meanest mommy face ever.

"I've had enough of this. If you want to act like children, I'll treat you like kids," I threatened. They glowered at me and then at each other.

The problem with disciplining is you need to have a plan of action. I didn't actually have any plan in mind, short of kicking them outside. But I figured with my luck, they'd just take it outside and continue their war there. I needed something and I needed it right now before any more bears were poked.

So I made an impromptu decision and I did what I used to do when they fought when they were little. When they actually were kids, not these grown up wannabes, straddling the line of adulthood.

I made them hug it out.

And I documented it.

Because they are still kids. But they won't be for much longer. And darn if some Sunday morning I'm not going to be wishing the two of them were squabbling over video games in my living room once more.

Which brings us here. A little photographic series I like to call the Evolution of a Hug. (Also known as DONT POKE THE BEAR.)


First off we have smugness and annoyance. I can barely tolerate the waves of "I want to rip off your limbs and beat you with them" that one of them is projecting. I choose to ignore said waves and pretend everything is sunshine and unicorn farts.



Unfortunately, the older sibling is unable to avoid said waves of anger and responds back by very maturely calling her younger brother a jerk. If this happens with your children the best thing to do is to fine them a dollar for cussing and remind them that Momma ain't messing around. Be sure to use your sweetest voice though. It confuses the honey badgers and puts them on high alert.



And we have contact. Hug therapy begins. Vomiting is threatened but no actual gagging occurs.



A little squeezing is to be expected. The oversized irritated sibling may want to assert his dominance by pretending he's a python and the annoying older sibling may want to fake actual innocence. Do not interfere. It's all part of the process. Just remind them, very sweetly, you have all damn day and you don't mind waiting until they can play nice.



Eventually, I promise, they'll crack. And they'll actually hug one another nicely and tell each other they love one another while making promises that they'll stop trying to cyber kill one another. 


Hug therapy. Every gamer needs it occasionally. Bears do too.

Bra Shopping and Boy Trolling

I don't know how it happened but somehow I found myself agreeing to take my teenaged daughter and her same-aged cousin shopping.

Bra shopping.

Ya.

If that wasn't bad enough, I promised I'd take them to the largest shopping mall in North America, currently the 12th biggest mall in the world. (According to Wikipedia. And we all know Wiki never lies.)

Because bra shopping in the mecca of North American consumerist excess is the funnest idea EVER!

Add in two teenaged girls, my bad back, and all the punk arsed boys making goo-goo eyes at my gals and today is shaping up to be a fantastic day.


Her version of Blue Steel.


The good news is, when I tear my hair out in frustration with the girls (and you know I will) there will be places I can go to immediately buy new hair. That's the charm of West Edmonton Mall. I can buy fresh sushi from the fish market in China Town and walk across the mall to find new hair. Synthetic, horse and human!

Hair for everyone! Baldness is not an option. Unless of course you want it to be.

I don't really have a point to this post. I'm just trying to work through the horrifying realization that my niece is going to be here any minute, I'm still sitting here in my bathrobe, and I can't get past the memory of what I did at the Big Mall of Consumerism when I was 16 years old.

I trolled for boys.

Since 16 year old girls (and almost 16 year old girls) haven't changed much in the 20 years since I was that age this basically means I am taking to hormonal moody teen girls to buy bras in between sessions of boy trolling.

Do I acknowledge that I know they're trolling for hot dudes? Or do I turn a blind eye?

I am completely over-thinking this entire adventure which only proves one thing: I've officially hit middle age and I've morphed into a dork.

Whatever.

As the girls troll for dudes I'll rock my inner dork while looking for chastity belts amongst the bras. Because I may be a dork but I'm dork accompanying two hormonal teen girls trolling for boys.

This dork ain't stupid.

Double Dork Power 


Some Children's Mothers: My BlogHer 12 Takeaway

Everyone goes to a blog conference for different reasons. Some people go to blog conferences to meet new people, hug old friends, make new connections. Some people go to learn a thing or two, others go to drink and blow unicorns. I try not to judge. I've been there, done that.

This was the BlogHer where I was going to aim higher.

How I managed to sink so low is a bit of a mystery.

I mean I went to BlogHer as an invited speaker. The incomparable and awesome Mary Mac invited me to be on her and Stef's Room Of Your Own panel session, "Mom Stop Blogging About Me." (Or as I preferred, How To Effectively Scar Your Children For Life.)


My coolest swag, courtesy of the Animated Woman


Besides being a part of what may have been the most entertaining panel session I've ever participated on (thanks ladies) I was also asked to speak on a session for BlogHer's inaugural HealthMinder day. I was a little star struck with my fellow panelists Kristina Chew and Carol Greenburg but I like to think I didn't make a complete arse of myself.


Partial arse, however, is always a given.


In keeping with what is has now become a BlogHer tradition, I found myself filling in on a panel when a speaker failed to show up at the last minute. Except instead of speaking I found myself belly dancing on stage. In front of actual people. With a pulse. And camera phones.



I'm not really sure what I was supposed to be doing, but I shook my booty for Julia Roberts and Susan Senator like my life depended on it.  And I enjoyed it.


When I walked out of that session I thought, well, that was awesomely awkward, but it's all cake from now on. The belly dancing would be the moment I'd document as my most embarrassing at the conference, and oh, what a giggle it will be.


I only wished.


No, the most embarrassing moment happened when I basically accused an old friend that she's sleeping with her son.


Ya.


Because I am uber classy like that.


My only excuse is that I was tired stupid. But for the record, when the lovely and slightly Dorian Grey-ish Georgia waves at you and says, "I want to introduce you to my son," while gesturing to a hot young thing in a suit, the CORRECT response would be, "I am pleased to meet you, Bossy's son. You're mother is a lovely lady and an old friend."


The incorrect response is to leer at the young man like he's a piece of meat, while waggling your eyebrows at his MOTHER and say, "Your son. Sure. WINK WINK."


"I don't really like that laugh Tanis," she replied. AS A PROPER MOTHER WOULD DO.


"Ya, I don't blame you, PURRRRRR, you dog you, RAWR, Georgia." I was about to high five her and congratulate her for getting her groove on Stella style when suddenly the hunky boy toy dropped the chair he was carrying and stuck his hand out to introduce himself to me and said, "Hi! You know my mom?"


For one single solitary second I hoped he was just playing along, in on my joke. But then I realized, nope, jokes on me! You know those moments you wish the ground would open up and swallow you whole? I was wishing HARD for that to happen.


What made it even worse was my complete inability to refrain from purring whenever her son was around. Even after I embarrassed myself. I had no shame. No FILTER. And I wasn't even DRINKING.


Some mother's children should never be allowed near me. Bossy's son clearly falls into this category.


My deep and heartfelt apologies to the ENTIRE BOSSY FAMILY AND oh my god I swear I'm going to duct tape my mouth shut forever and walk around wearing blinders, staring only at my feet until the end of time.


I went to New York and turned into a dirty old woman. Lord have mercy.


Fate gave me a chance to redeem myself later that night when I crossed paths with Lisa Stone's 16-year-old son.


No, I did not hit on him. Sheesh. (But at this point, I don't blame you for asking.) (Sob.)


No, what I did do was sell my daughter to him in exchange for a goat and drink ticket. And after some twitter negotiation, the deal was sealed. We even worked out our future grandchildren's names.




My daughter's reaction, upon hearing her new fate? 


Momma say what?


Of course, she changed her tune quick enough when I showed her a picture of her betrothed. Clearly this apple didn't fall far from my tree. Remind me to keep her away from her friend's sons when she is an adult.


So. The take away points of my trip weren't the swag I collected, the new friends I made, the hugs I traded or the knowledge I gained. Nope. My souvenirs will be mortifying myself with one mother and then trying to purchase another's son.


Like I said. We all attend blog conferences for different reasons.