Angels in the Outfield, Devils at Home: I’ll take some private mayhem if it means good behavior in public.
We had quite the day on New Year’s Eve. We woke to a snowstorm, which we drove through, slipping and sliding, for an hour to reach a lawyer’s office in a town that’s normally a 20-minute drive away. We were closing on a refinance of our home mortgage, a process that had taken many frustrating months and literally reams of paper (you’d think much of this could be done digitally, but alas, no). We’d gotten several extensions of our locked-in rate, the last of which expired on that day, so there was no option left: We had to drag the boys (no available babysitters) to a boring law office on a snowy day.
And there we sat, in a conference room, waiting for the closer to gather her stack of papers and Wite-Out and stapler (seriously, folks; digitize. Let’s go paperless!) and get the process started. While we were waiting, and out of the clear blue, Daniel began complaining of an earache.
Meltdown city? In fact, no.
My husband, in a break during the loooong process of signing multiple copies of loan documents, ran across the street to a convenience store for some children’s Tylenol, which helped Daniel temporarily, but even without the pain, both boys had to hang around a dull office (complete with fake ficus tree) for two hours without complaint and without bugging us endlessly so we could concentrate on signing our names over and over and trying to listen to the details of our particular refi process.
And they did it. They both had activity books and a box of crayons, markers, and colored pencils to entertain themselves, which turned out to be an inspired choice of distraction, since they could pretend they were doing “work” while we did our “work.”
When, finally, the last paper was signed and the last fax received (honestly? Faxes? In almost the second decade of the twenty-first century? I digress, but I was amazed at how many trees had to perish so we could secure a lower mortgage rate. Maybe that explains the fake ficus), the woman who handled the closing pronounced our boys “excellent.” She said: “We end up having a lot of children in here for closings, and I have two children, so I know what I’m talking about. Some of the kids are awful, but you’re excellent.” The firm’s partner, wandering by in his snowboots and fleece, invited the boys to his office to plunder a bowl of candy on his desk, and jokingly offered Daniel an internship (he likes calculators, my little geeky second-grader).
I get this a lot:
“Oh, what angels your boys are!”
“What well-behaved children, my goodness!”
“Is he always this polite?”
“Denise, do your boys ever scream and run around like lunatics?” (this last was a comment from my cousin’s husband, Mike, as he tried to corral his kids and a couple other random female cousins at the tail end of a party, while my boys placidly waited for their coats.)
The answer, to Mike and everyone else: Yes, they do scream and run around. No, they aren’t always this polite. Yes, they are well-behaved and angels. Outside the house.
At home? Eh, not so much.
At home, Daniel and James run, literally run, from one end of the house to the other; leap onto and over furniture (Daniel can’t get across a room without making my heart stop in 12 different ways); slam monster trucks against the base moldings (that would be James, who wants to drive monster trucks for a living someday, after which he might be a dentist); and squabble with each other. Constantly.
Normal boys, right? Of course they are.
But outside the house, you’ll see Daniel slinging a protective arm around his little brother, introducing him to strangers, and stepping out of the way to let other kids run rampant at the library or the post office or the supermarket. James is more rambunctious and mischeivous when we’re out in public, but without Daniel as his foil, he calms down pretty quick. Give him a slice of American cheese at the supermarket and he’s my puppet.
So my secret is out: Those well-behaved boys trailing me in the mall like cute little ducklings? Just imagine the bigger one stomping angrily around the house and making his most determined “mad face” because I’ve asked him to shut the TV/go brush his teeth/stop banging on the piano. Just picture the little one telling me to “stop talking to me! don’t even look at me!” at the dinner table because I committed the grave offense of requesting that he eat one bite of hamburger.
I guess that they feel safe and comfortable enough at home to, as my mom would say, let it all hang out. But the fact that I get the glowing reports on my angels in the outfield? Yeah, that feels good. Because that’s always been one of my goals: I want to be the parent who leaves the doctor’s office (or, in the case of last week’s refi episode, the lawyer’s office), or the family party, or the playdate, and be able to hear, as the door closes behind us, “what nice boys. We’d love to have them come back again.”
Bridget
January 5, 2010 @ 1:22 pm
I can’t believe it took 2 hours to refinance! That is crazy. It should take 60 minutes tops. Oh well! At least the kids behaved.
Emily Rogan
January 5, 2010 @ 3:19 pm
Denise,
I’m with you on this one. I was always amazed when my kids’ teachers would tell me how well-behaved my kids are in class, because at home with us? At times, beastly. But my mom, the child psychologist, always told me that’s what we want as parents; our kids should be well-behaved out in public, but feel free in their own home to let loose and yes, even be fresh (horrors!) from time to time. Similarly, Bobby taught our kids to shake people’s hands and look them straight in the eye when being introduced. I poo-pooed it then, but now feel so proud when adults comment on our kids’ good manners.
Emily
Kimberly
January 5, 2010 @ 5:16 pm
Denise – I almost came off with a chide comment of “that won’t last” but heck … you never know! My 10 year old son was the same as your boys. His friend’s parents use to say how well behaved he was, how polite, and certainly always wanted him to come back “anytime!” But boy … could he put on a show at home! Now, depending on the situation and where he’s at, the devil makes his appearance in public as well. I once told him after sitting through an afternoon at his elementary school that I understood why he was so ornery at home – he had to let off steam somewhere because he was so well behaved at school! I’ll gladly take the tyrant at home (most days) and the saint in public because it reminds me that he DOES know how he’s suppose to act! Now we just have to work a little harder on his behavior at home!
Laura
January 6, 2010 @ 9:22 pm
I have always said I wanted my boys (all four of them) to be kids others wanted to be around. It has worked pretty well, so far. But it doesn’t come easy, does it?
Great blog! Come visit me, too!
Denise
January 7, 2010 @ 9:37 am
Laura,
thanks for your reply! I’ll be checking out Outnumbered Mom. At least that’s one thing I’m not: outnumbered! I’m in awe of parents handling larger broods.
best,
Denise
Jennifer Fink
January 14, 2010 @ 12:31 am
We were lucky: every time we’ve re-fi’d, a notary came to the house with papers for us to sign.
My boys, too, are angels outside of the house (most of the time) and something else (a lot of the time0 at home. Sometimes, it drives me crazy. But when I think about it, I realize that’s exactly what I’d pick if I had to choose.
Sally
January 14, 2010 @ 10:38 am
I have always said, if my children are well behaved outside of the house, in particular when they are at someone else’s house without me (grandma’s, a friend’s house), then I have succeeded (for now, anyway). I have had similar experiences with travel, whereby my son (before my daughter was born) would be amazing during a multi-day trip including plane ride, only to become a terror upon returning home. This is not uncommon. They hold it together until they feel they can “let it all out”. Are we adults all that different?
April
February 9, 2010 @ 12:58 am
You’ve captured the flavor of boys so well!
This felt so familiar, yet made me laugh out loud!
“So my secret is out: Those well-behaved boys trailing me in the mall like cute little ducklings? Just imagine the bigger one stomping angrily around the house and making his most determined “mad face” because I’ve asked him to shut the TV/go brush his teeth/stop banging on the piano. Just picture the little one telling me to “stop talking to me! don’t even look at me!” at the dinner table because I committed the grave offense of requesting that he eat one bite of hamburger.”