Having tried illness and decided that it wasn't all that bad, F went for another bout this week.
Nothing as serious, just a snotty nose coupled with a brief but high fever. And lots of enfeebled wails. And the same insistence on lying on top of mummy on the sofa, eating only the best raspberries and orange juice. I'm not exactly sure when she started feeling better. I have the impression it was some time before she started asking for V's china puffs* and she'd been getting away with a spot of light acting for a bit.
Summer is here. Early, as part of the balancing act that is still inflicting late snow on parts of the US. Our balcony is an excellent sun trap of which F is very fond. She stands in front of the chairs out there yelling 'uh uh uh' until I pick her up as indicated and sit next to her, explaining the windows and the thermometer over and over.
Adult chairs are a big draw at the moment. Adult most things are, of course, which is why I eat more of the food I prepare for F than the stuff I make for me. It's all the same, to be fair, her portions are just minced finer. But she'd still rather eat forkfulls of daddy's quiche lorraine with daddy's fork than touch any of the identical stuff in front of her. Eating it while sitting next to daddy on a grown-up chair was an added requirement the other day.
Actually, I forgot to mention the 'eating with forks' thing. It's about a month now since she suddenly started eating perfectly with a spoon as though she'd always done it. For about four months, she'd been eating whilst holding one, occasionally using it to bless the mouthful she was about to take like some miniature podgy bishop, but very rarely trying to eat with it. Then one morning over porridge, some internal revelation struck her and pow! spoon all the way. Fork followed soon after, although that's still mostly in crosier mode right now.
She also walks. Three or four times in the last few weeks, I'd come into a room to find her standing in the middle. She'd immediately sit down and deny all knowledge, and she still has a preference for having a parent's hand to hold (two for outside). Whenever she started this surrepticious practice, it's certainly paid off. She toddles about independently more and more every day.
I must be tired at the moment (actually, I know damn well I am) - all these milestones would have prompted long and gushing blogs before. Now I'm so swamped in astounding newness, it almost gets a bit ho-hum. Her vocab in Swedish and English is a couple of hundred words, although only in comprehension, she isn't talking very much yet. As with walking and spoon use, though, I suspect she'll start very fast once she finds a use for it. Right now, she can get her demands across perfectly well through the international language of pointing and stropping.
God help us when she can explain what the yelling means in more detail, I suspect. Parenthood is quite relentless, I do feel fairly worn out at the moment. The endless tide of housework, the insistence of routines - although it's good to always have something to do, it's tiring.
As a kid myself, I never understood why parents were so boring when they got together. Sitting down and talking? Given that they could go out and do whatever they wanted whenever they liked (it seemed to me), I didn't understand why they wouldn't be riding bikes round and round the block forever. Or why they'd want to drink coffee. Or sleep in. Or watch the news instead of cartoons.
Funny how times change.
*chocolate covered rice sweets, for those in the UK. The packaging has coolie hats on it, which is unusually un-PC for Sweden. It's one close step away from calling your confection a 'chinky gay'.
This is a blog about being a stay-at-home dad. In Sweden, where it's not thought of as weird. Or less weird, anyway. I hope.
Sunday, April 27, 2014
Tuesday, April 15, 2014
Fever
Inevitably, F succumbed.
What a relief! I've been dreading this moment for ages. After her first minor flirting with illness, way back when, she's been relentlessly healthy. So much so that I kept thinking whatever got to her first would be double-extra-grim. Pea soup off the walls, frantic screeching at all hours, a frenzy of health care professionals whizzing in and out of the flat with drip stands, EEGs, etc.
Nope.
F sat down in the middle of the floor yesterday afternoon, looking a bit flushed and confused, and sobbed miserably a couple of times. She was trying to play. All the usual stuff was there - the gaudy aeroplane, a scattering of poker chips, three or four opened and discarded books and some dominoes. But she just couldn't get anything to work right.
She was burning up, but other than being a bit weepy and tired, she was fine. She spent the rest of the afternoon sleeping and watching TV on mummy, then woke up and marched me relentlessly round the flat with the 'plane, screaming every time it collided with anything. That was quite a lot, she doesn't really steer, and the screaming was to indicate to me that I needed to make a course correction. That's no way to fly, I kept telling her, you should scream earlier. But she wasn't in a listening mood.
She woke up today after her usual twelve hour sleep, still feverish but entirely perky. And now very much of the opinion that her morning and afternoon naps should be on the sofa whilst watching TV. I explained that wasn't going to happen (tantrum) and indicated that if she didn't want to go to bed, she could carry on playing (tantrum, no I should remain on the sofa so she could sleep on me), but I did give her orange juice instead of water to drink.
Using the bottle as a brush, she painted most of it under the coffee table, except what she got in her socks and mummy's hat, so I think she's probably better. I wish I'd had it that easy.
What a relief! I've been dreading this moment for ages. After her first minor flirting with illness, way back when, she's been relentlessly healthy. So much so that I kept thinking whatever got to her first would be double-extra-grim. Pea soup off the walls, frantic screeching at all hours, a frenzy of health care professionals whizzing in and out of the flat with drip stands, EEGs, etc.
Nope.
F sat down in the middle of the floor yesterday afternoon, looking a bit flushed and confused, and sobbed miserably a couple of times. She was trying to play. All the usual stuff was there - the gaudy aeroplane, a scattering of poker chips, three or four opened and discarded books and some dominoes. But she just couldn't get anything to work right.
She was burning up, but other than being a bit weepy and tired, she was fine. She spent the rest of the afternoon sleeping and watching TV on mummy, then woke up and marched me relentlessly round the flat with the 'plane, screaming every time it collided with anything. That was quite a lot, she doesn't really steer, and the screaming was to indicate to me that I needed to make a course correction. That's no way to fly, I kept telling her, you should scream earlier. But she wasn't in a listening mood.
She woke up today after her usual twelve hour sleep, still feverish but entirely perky. And now very much of the opinion that her morning and afternoon naps should be on the sofa whilst watching TV. I explained that wasn't going to happen (tantrum) and indicated that if she didn't want to go to bed, she could carry on playing (tantrum, no I should remain on the sofa so she could sleep on me), but I did give her orange juice instead of water to drink.
Using the bottle as a brush, she painted most of it under the coffee table, except what she got in her socks and mummy's hat, so I think she's probably better. I wish I'd had it that easy.
Saturday, April 12, 2014
Vomit
It was bound to happen sooner or later, I suppose. Of all the bodily fluids I've had vented on me, this is still the one I dread most. The smell, the instinctive gut reaction to copy the action, the howling.
Lucky, I suppose, that it was just me vomiting and not F.
There's a bug in town at the moment. V had it earlier in the week (and is still recovering, grimly), yesterday was my turn. F didn't seem unduly bothered by the fact that daddy couldn't get off the sofa without changing colour. She just left me there and occasionally bought me things to read or do. Nothing to help your roiling intestines like being smacked in the face with a copy of Den Här Lilla Grisen, I find.
The actual vomit didn't happen until late in the day. I thought I'd got away with it, but no, round five o' clock I had to flee to the bathroom. F followed me in some distress, making 'oh no, daddy! what is this! what is this dreadful happening!' noises. She undermined this touching concern by then craning her neck interestedly to see what was in the toilet bowl and saying 'oo!'
The second set of heaves hit me while I was trying to feed her. I was already anxious that I was a walking plague pit, smearing germs on everything I went near, so I'd been extra OCD about preparing her food. Having to dash out as she ate it was a bad moment; she shouldn't really be left unsupervised in her high chair, for example, but she can't quite squirm out of it yet (as far as I know). So leaving her there for a minute or two was probably more child-care-conscious than spewing into her dinner.
I tried to reassure her I was okay inbetween retching. It is a low moment in anyone's life when you're incapacitated by illness but still more concerned with someone else's well-being. "Bu?" called F from the kitchen, sounding a bit anxious. I wiped my face and hurried back, but I needn't have worried. She'd just seen a bird at the window and wanted me to look at it.
Febrile and slightly confused, I tried to have an early night but really just rolled about in a twist of blankets, alternately shivering and sweating. My fever broke at about three in the morning, loudly enough to wake me out of the half-sleep I was in. It was almost as though I was getting an after-action report from my immune system.
"Yeah, so, what we've done is, we turned all the heaters up to full to blast the bugs out, so you'll need to top up your wet and dry fuel reservoirs, not much left there I'm afraid. Sorry about the smell. Your throat's taken a right pounding, all that coming and going, so you'll want to take it easy on that for a day or two, just until it's settled, and you'll probably find a lot of dead bugs gathered in your kidneys, so if your lower back feels sore for a while, no worries, that's all normal. Bill's on the kitchen table, give us a shout if there's anything else you want done. We'll let ourselves out, cheers!"
We now wait the likely horror of F getting the same bug. I can't see her being quite as equitable about that, somehow.
Lucky, I suppose, that it was just me vomiting and not F.
There's a bug in town at the moment. V had it earlier in the week (and is still recovering, grimly), yesterday was my turn. F didn't seem unduly bothered by the fact that daddy couldn't get off the sofa without changing colour. She just left me there and occasionally bought me things to read or do. Nothing to help your roiling intestines like being smacked in the face with a copy of Den Här Lilla Grisen, I find.
The actual vomit didn't happen until late in the day. I thought I'd got away with it, but no, round five o' clock I had to flee to the bathroom. F followed me in some distress, making 'oh no, daddy! what is this! what is this dreadful happening!' noises. She undermined this touching concern by then craning her neck interestedly to see what was in the toilet bowl and saying 'oo!'
The second set of heaves hit me while I was trying to feed her. I was already anxious that I was a walking plague pit, smearing germs on everything I went near, so I'd been extra OCD about preparing her food. Having to dash out as she ate it was a bad moment; she shouldn't really be left unsupervised in her high chair, for example, but she can't quite squirm out of it yet (as far as I know). So leaving her there for a minute or two was probably more child-care-conscious than spewing into her dinner.
I tried to reassure her I was okay inbetween retching. It is a low moment in anyone's life when you're incapacitated by illness but still more concerned with someone else's well-being. "Bu?" called F from the kitchen, sounding a bit anxious. I wiped my face and hurried back, but I needn't have worried. She'd just seen a bird at the window and wanted me to look at it.
Febrile and slightly confused, I tried to have an early night but really just rolled about in a twist of blankets, alternately shivering and sweating. My fever broke at about three in the morning, loudly enough to wake me out of the half-sleep I was in. It was almost as though I was getting an after-action report from my immune system.
"Yeah, so, what we've done is, we turned all the heaters up to full to blast the bugs out, so you'll need to top up your wet and dry fuel reservoirs, not much left there I'm afraid. Sorry about the smell. Your throat's taken a right pounding, all that coming and going, so you'll want to take it easy on that for a day or two, just until it's settled, and you'll probably find a lot of dead bugs gathered in your kidneys, so if your lower back feels sore for a while, no worries, that's all normal. Bill's on the kitchen table, give us a shout if there's anything else you want done. We'll let ourselves out, cheers!"
We now wait the likely horror of F getting the same bug. I can't see her being quite as equitable about that, somehow.
Saturday, April 5, 2014
Reading Age
F is almost fifteen months old. She can read, apparently.
Through the rosy tint of fatherhood, at least. She has been particularly interested in her alphabet books in the last week or so. And I was getting over-excited about the fact she was pointing to the letter O, just as I'd been patiently doing on demand six hundred times in a row, and saying 'O. O.' Except she was also doing the same for the letters G, Q and D, so maybe not quite there yet.
But yesterday we went over to V's workplace, the logo of which is a large, stylised capital F. And apropos of nothing, F pointed to it and said 'Effffvvvvv' very emphatically.
I give you, therefore, Ladies and Gentlemen, the amazing reading prodigy that is my daughter, and damn you all if I look like the preeningly proud parental idiot I most certainly am.
She also counts, very enthusiastically. She counted the first star in 'Mumin räknor stjärnor' about fifteen times before moving on to the next one this morning. Whichever language 'bam bam bam bam bam' is, I'm not entirely sure it counts.
Ho ho.
It's been sunny and warm all week. This brings winter-crazed Swedes flocking out of homes and offices to lie over any available pak bench like IKEA-themed Dali clocks. For the first few moments, at least, then they get all organised and picnicky.
This means we've been out in the parks even more than usual. Plikta is my favourite, up in Slottskogen, where, amongst other incredible constructions, there's a gigantic exploded whale to climb around in, tiny working construction diggers, a set of descending waterways with drains and paddlewheels and a fifty-metre-long tunnel slide.
Of these manifold joys, F's favourite is a concrete step. She ascends and descends over and over, screaming at me and slapping me away if I try to help when I'm not wanted, or screaming and slapping at me if I don't help when I am. It comes up to her waist, and it's about three metres away from a set of much lower steps that she can get up and down perfectly easily. No challenge there, I suppose.
I put fruit in the porridge this morning, blueberries and chopped grapes as I have most mornings this week. For some reason, she took against this particular blend this morning, and I had to wash all the porridge off again before she'd eat it.
I suppose if you're going to be a genius, you're allowed to be particular about some things.
Through the rosy tint of fatherhood, at least. She has been particularly interested in her alphabet books in the last week or so. And I was getting over-excited about the fact she was pointing to the letter O, just as I'd been patiently doing on demand six hundred times in a row, and saying 'O. O.' Except she was also doing the same for the letters G, Q and D, so maybe not quite there yet.
But yesterday we went over to V's workplace, the logo of which is a large, stylised capital F. And apropos of nothing, F pointed to it and said 'Effffvvvvv' very emphatically.
I give you, therefore, Ladies and Gentlemen, the amazing reading prodigy that is my daughter, and damn you all if I look like the preeningly proud parental idiot I most certainly am.
She also counts, very enthusiastically. She counted the first star in 'Mumin räknor stjärnor' about fifteen times before moving on to the next one this morning. Whichever language 'bam bam bam bam bam' is, I'm not entirely sure it counts.
Ho ho.
-
It's been sunny and warm all week. This brings winter-crazed Swedes flocking out of homes and offices to lie over any available pak bench like IKEA-themed Dali clocks. For the first few moments, at least, then they get all organised and picnicky.
This means we've been out in the parks even more than usual. Plikta is my favourite, up in Slottskogen, where, amongst other incredible constructions, there's a gigantic exploded whale to climb around in, tiny working construction diggers, a set of descending waterways with drains and paddlewheels and a fifty-metre-long tunnel slide.
Of these manifold joys, F's favourite is a concrete step. She ascends and descends over and over, screaming at me and slapping me away if I try to help when I'm not wanted, or screaming and slapping at me if I don't help when I am. It comes up to her waist, and it's about three metres away from a set of much lower steps that she can get up and down perfectly easily. No challenge there, I suppose.
-
I put fruit in the porridge this morning, blueberries and chopped grapes as I have most mornings this week. For some reason, she took against this particular blend this morning, and I had to wash all the porridge off again before she'd eat it.
I suppose if you're going to be a genius, you're allowed to be particular about some things.
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
Frejish, a brief introduction
Da or Ga - The thing I am pointing at
Pappa - Daddy
Mamma - Mummy
Kom - Come here/I am coming
Caw Caw! - a bird on land or in the air, sounds like a raven's call
Kwa' - a bird on water, sounds like a duck
Du' - a duck
*snort - a pig, sounds exactly like bloody Peppa Pig, and hence
Peppa Pi' - bloody Peppa Pig
Ipa' - I will require use of your ipad in the near future
Ba ba - Bye Bye, accompanied by waving usually about thirty seconds after whoever you're waving at has left
Haluh (occasionally with virtually any household item alongside head) - Hello, I'm on the phone
Crrrr - Cracker or similar biscuity, crunchy foodstuff
Brrrm - The noise a car makes as you push it along the floor, hence also the noise a picture of a car makes as you push it along the floor as though it were a car to show you've understood what we're looking at here
Gr' Gr' - Frog and/or the noise it makes
Googir - Good Girl, i.e. herself
Curl or currel - a cuddle, now please
A-aaah - Teddybear
A-aaaaah! (loud, shrill) - that's the giant teddybear outside the sweetshop on the way to the park!
Aa - I am excited about the thing I am indicating right now
AAA! - I am very excited about the thing I am indicating right now, which is often a bath
AAAAAA! (piercing) - Behold! Daniel Tiger/Pipi Pupu and Rosemary/Wibbly Pig/Timmy Lammen/Byggare Bob/bloody Peppa Pig (delete as appropriate) is on the TV!
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA (heartrending) - It is midnight, please pick me up and place me in your bed until I tell you otherwise (new all this week)
Uh uh uh - This mechanical device is making an unexpected or alarming noise, I will require picking up now
Ne - No
NO (with vigorous head shaking) - I do not require any more of this foodstuff
No No NO NO NO - I am not currently sleepy and would prefer to continue playing with this bucket at the present time
Pla' pla' - I will now play the piano for you
Gunga gunga gunga gunga gunga (rocking) - that is a swing/swings are fun/I am swinging/that is a playpark/I am on a rocking horse, see-saw or other related item/I would like to go to a playpark (delete as appropriate)
Gubba gubba gubba (repeat indefinitely) - We are having a conversation
Bugger bugger bugger (repeat indefinitely) - We are still having a conversation
No (talk to the hand gesture) - Conversation over
Pappa - Daddy
Mamma - Mummy
Kom - Come here/I am coming
Caw Caw! - a bird on land or in the air, sounds like a raven's call
Kwa' - a bird on water, sounds like a duck
Du' - a duck
*snort - a pig, sounds exactly like bloody Peppa Pig, and hence
Peppa Pi' - bloody Peppa Pig
Ipa' - I will require use of your ipad in the near future
Ba ba - Bye Bye, accompanied by waving usually about thirty seconds after whoever you're waving at has left
Haluh (occasionally with virtually any household item alongside head) - Hello, I'm on the phone
Crrrr - Cracker or similar biscuity, crunchy foodstuff
Brrrm - The noise a car makes as you push it along the floor, hence also the noise a picture of a car makes as you push it along the floor as though it were a car to show you've understood what we're looking at here
Gr' Gr' - Frog and/or the noise it makes
Googir - Good Girl, i.e. herself
Curl or currel - a cuddle, now please
A-aaah - Teddybear
A-aaaaah! (loud, shrill) - that's the giant teddybear outside the sweetshop on the way to the park!
Aa - I am excited about the thing I am indicating right now
AAA! - I am very excited about the thing I am indicating right now, which is often a bath
AAAAAA! (piercing) - Behold! Daniel Tiger/Pipi Pupu and Rosemary/Wibbly Pig/Timmy Lammen/Byggare Bob/bloody Peppa Pig (delete as appropriate) is on the TV!
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA (heartrending) - It is midnight, please pick me up and place me in your bed until I tell you otherwise (new all this week)
Uh uh uh - This mechanical device is making an unexpected or alarming noise, I will require picking up now
Ne - No
NO (with vigorous head shaking) - I do not require any more of this foodstuff
No No NO NO NO - I am not currently sleepy and would prefer to continue playing with this bucket at the present time
Pla' pla' - I will now play the piano for you
Gunga gunga gunga gunga gunga (rocking) - that is a swing/swings are fun/I am swinging/that is a playpark/I am on a rocking horse, see-saw or other related item/I would like to go to a playpark (delete as appropriate)
Gubba gubba gubba (repeat indefinitely) - We are having a conversation
Bugger bugger bugger (repeat indefinitely) - We are still having a conversation
No (talk to the hand gesture) - Conversation over
Sunday, March 23, 2014
Silhouette Recognition
F likes my T-shirts. I've got a whole bunch of increasingly elderly ones from when I was last a student. The usual kind of stuff - a few smart-alec quips, iconography from 80s kids' cartoons and other assorted geekery.
She points at whatever the T-shirt de jour is, and I read out whatever it says. Or explain the picture, or do some kind of minor performance appropriate to the garb. Standard 'dance monkey dance' father-based entertainment for her, to be done on command and then repeated for as long as it pleases her.
She learns very fast now, she's got a lot of vocab already (probably not far behind my Swedish, sadly). Even if she doesn't speak so much as babble, she certainly understands plenty. So she can point at the Thundercats logo and say "Ho!", of which I am justly proud. Sadly, Mr Benn's shopkeeper, who is on a big yellow and red circle about the same size and shape as the Thundercats' Cat Head, gets a little frown and a "ho?", so she's not quite there yet. Unless Mr Benn is currently cosplaying as Lion-O.
V recently bought me a T-shirt that says 'What Part Of Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn Don't You Understand' (look it up if you don't). If you do the cultish chanting bit in appropriately octopoid burbles, really hitting the gutterals, that always gets a good chortle and an indication to repeat.
All well and good - basic shape and sound associations, bonding with daddy, etc etc. However, her absolute favourite T-shirt is my Trapdoor one, the claymation series that Willie Rushton did the voices for. As featured on No. 73 in the mid-80s. She knows all the characters names, as featured on my stomach. Which means I've taught my daughter to point at Daddy and say 'Burk'.
Good.
She points at whatever the T-shirt de jour is, and I read out whatever it says. Or explain the picture, or do some kind of minor performance appropriate to the garb. Standard 'dance monkey dance' father-based entertainment for her, to be done on command and then repeated for as long as it pleases her.
She learns very fast now, she's got a lot of vocab already (probably not far behind my Swedish, sadly). Even if she doesn't speak so much as babble, she certainly understands plenty. So she can point at the Thundercats logo and say "Ho!", of which I am justly proud. Sadly, Mr Benn's shopkeeper, who is on a big yellow and red circle about the same size and shape as the Thundercats' Cat Head, gets a little frown and a "ho?", so she's not quite there yet. Unless Mr Benn is currently cosplaying as Lion-O.
V recently bought me a T-shirt that says 'What Part Of Ph'nglui mglw'nafh Cthulhu R'lyeh wgah'nagl fhtagn Don't You Understand' (look it up if you don't). If you do the cultish chanting bit in appropriately octopoid burbles, really hitting the gutterals, that always gets a good chortle and an indication to repeat.
All well and good - basic shape and sound associations, bonding with daddy, etc etc. However, her absolute favourite T-shirt is my Trapdoor one, the claymation series that Willie Rushton did the voices for. As featured on No. 73 in the mid-80s. She knows all the characters names, as featured on my stomach. Which means I've taught my daughter to point at Daddy and say 'Burk'.
Good.
Friday, March 14, 2014
Playdate
Our friends A (a few months younger than F) and J (a couple the other way) came over to visit for lunch the other day.
I had visions of a cheerful meal followed by both children playing together under the warm and relaxed supervision of their parents. There was a dream of a glass of wine.
Which was always going to be ridiculous, let's face it.
F had only just woken up as they arrived, and got a bit thrown by the extra people in her lunchtime routine. Or something. I'd rather believe that than believe that she is as dramatically antisocial as she pretended to be for the next hour and a half. Every time friendly baby A came to cuddle her or say hello, she burst into howling tears and threw herself on the nearest parent as though we were a divan in a Victorian melodrama.
Okay, having a chap you've only just met rush up to you and pat your bum is perhaps more forward than most young ladies would appreciate. But the degree of weeping seemed excessive, even to me, and I'm a right drama queen.
You can tell when F is being melodramatic, because she can shut her waterworks off the moment she gets whatever she's after. In this case, as long as she was the beating heart of Daddy's world to the exclusion of all else, there would be no more screaming. Even if she is exactly that on a moment to moment basis, I'm trying very hard not to let her know it at the moment.
So I tried to behave as though lunch was proceeding as planned, wine, pleasant conversation, jolly playtime and all. No mean feat with the equivalent of a sonic landmine clamped to my legs. I thought I managed it with great aplomb.
After an hour and a half, by which time even A's cheerful attempts to socialize were looking a bit woebegone, we went out to the park instead. Where F repeated her performance with someone else entirely.
A little girl came up to her, smiles from ear to ear, and tried to shake hands. F brushed her off and turned away, clearly far too busy, important and socially superior to have time for such a frivolous encounter, although she did accept the girl's brother's kindly offer of a stick. Brusquely and without thanks.
At least she didn't scream at them. Perhaps she frowns on public displays of emotion. She's part Swedish, after all.
Pappagris, they say in Sweden, of little girls who cling to daddy, Daddy's pig. The sooner she goes to day care and gets used to playing with other people, the better, I don't want her turning into a shut-in. She's very obviously fascinated with other kids when we're out, but she doesn't really know how to play with them yet.
I'm sure she'll learn, and quickly too. And I'm equally sure I'll rue the day she started at some future point when I'm knee-deep in 8-year-olds trying to have a sleepover.
I had visions of a cheerful meal followed by both children playing together under the warm and relaxed supervision of their parents. There was a dream of a glass of wine.
Which was always going to be ridiculous, let's face it.
F had only just woken up as they arrived, and got a bit thrown by the extra people in her lunchtime routine. Or something. I'd rather believe that than believe that she is as dramatically antisocial as she pretended to be for the next hour and a half. Every time friendly baby A came to cuddle her or say hello, she burst into howling tears and threw herself on the nearest parent as though we were a divan in a Victorian melodrama.
Okay, having a chap you've only just met rush up to you and pat your bum is perhaps more forward than most young ladies would appreciate. But the degree of weeping seemed excessive, even to me, and I'm a right drama queen.
You can tell when F is being melodramatic, because she can shut her waterworks off the moment she gets whatever she's after. In this case, as long as she was the beating heart of Daddy's world to the exclusion of all else, there would be no more screaming. Even if she is exactly that on a moment to moment basis, I'm trying very hard not to let her know it at the moment.
So I tried to behave as though lunch was proceeding as planned, wine, pleasant conversation, jolly playtime and all. No mean feat with the equivalent of a sonic landmine clamped to my legs. I thought I managed it with great aplomb.
After an hour and a half, by which time even A's cheerful attempts to socialize were looking a bit woebegone, we went out to the park instead. Where F repeated her performance with someone else entirely.
A little girl came up to her, smiles from ear to ear, and tried to shake hands. F brushed her off and turned away, clearly far too busy, important and socially superior to have time for such a frivolous encounter, although she did accept the girl's brother's kindly offer of a stick. Brusquely and without thanks.
At least she didn't scream at them. Perhaps she frowns on public displays of emotion. She's part Swedish, after all.
Pappagris, they say in Sweden, of little girls who cling to daddy, Daddy's pig. The sooner she goes to day care and gets used to playing with other people, the better, I don't want her turning into a shut-in. She's very obviously fascinated with other kids when we're out, but she doesn't really know how to play with them yet.
I'm sure she'll learn, and quickly too. And I'm equally sure I'll rue the day she started at some future point when I'm knee-deep in 8-year-olds trying to have a sleepover.
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