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| The mother of these two boys will not be having a third |
This is one of two families we know with four kids. Let me
explain how you get to four children – first, you have three girls and you want
a boy. Then you realize how foolish it was to want a boy and quit. It’s the
same in both families. Three girls followed by one boy. We have friends with
three boys. I can assure you that our friends with three boys are not having a
fourth. When you have two boys, you think maybe,
just maybe, I can still eke out the energy to handle the little princess I’ve
always wanted. But when that third boy comes, you know that if you have a
fourth you will probably die.
Boys are harder than girls.
Let’s be clear. Parenting, irrespective of circumstance, is
hard. All children are hard. Young girls are hard. They are fickle and
demanding. They are irrational. They scream and whine and cry to get whatever
ridiculous thing they want.
But young boys take it to a whole different level. Young
boys are little monsters. They do everything listed under girls above, plus
they destroy stuff. They are violent. Every object becomes a sword to swipe at
things or a hammer to smash things with. On top of it all, they have so much
energy that they run around until they slam into walls and damage them.
Cody, my little boy, is fearless. There is nothing I can say
or do that will stop him from doing whatever knucklehead thing he wants to do.
He literally laughs at – when my blood is really boiling – what he should
recognize as mortal peril. Naturally, he’s too knuckleheaded to realize that
the laughing increases the blood boiling and, in turn, the peril.
Andrea regularly reminds me that Chiara is 6 and Cody is 4
and that we can’t hold the 4-year-old to 6-year-old standards. And that is
fair. But me forgetting how hard Chiara was at 4 doesn’t make it pleasant to be
around Cody at 4. (Plus I actually do believe Cody at 4 is much worse).
There is also something about birth order. I think it really
stinks to be the younger sibling. Cody can’t concentrate long enough to, for
example, play golf. So, he isn’t invited to play golf. He has to stay home and
smash things while Chiara gets to have all of the fun. As first born, Chiara is
(at least at the moment) by-and-large a rule follower. Cody couldn’t give a
flip about the rules. He has to carve his own way in life. The point is: if you
are going to have a boy, make sure he’s first born.
It’s not all birth order, though. Andrea and I once stayed
with my aunt and uncle in Tulsa, where I was a child. In telling Andrea about
those early days, my aunt said “He was a perfect little…” there was a dramatic
pause to let the listener’s brain fill in the blank, “[expletive].”
Andrea later told me she thought my aunt was going to say
“Angel.” Instead of the expletive, she probably could have just said “boy.”
