Maggie Makes Four!

This journal started off documenting the adoption of our youngest daughter. It now follows the twist and turns of our lives as we raise these two amazing little creatures into the best women they can become.

Friday, December 30, 2005

The Real Mysteries of Christmas

Now that the dust has settled and the house is slowly getting back to normal...I have discovered there are mysteries of Christmas that no one discusses. Let me be the first to offer the real mysteries of Christmas:

5.) Why is a toy more attractive the minute your sister is playing with it?

4.) Why would a toy company label a toy "with over 350 pieces" like it is a good thing?

3.) Why would Santa think providing 100 balls to go with Jump-o-lene is a good idea?

2.) When given the option, why do the children always chose the loudest possible volume setting on any and all toys? And why do the kids seem to compete for, "Who's toy is the loudest?"

The number one mystery of Christmas:

1.) Why would anyone give my kids a megaphone? Not that I am ungrateful, but really....no good will come of a megaphone when there is one megaphone and two kids (three, if you count Dad--who really seems to like the toy).

The crib. It's served Grace, Brad, La Nina, Maggie, and now Eric well...

Wednesday, December 28, 2005

An Era Ends

Well, an era in our house ended today at about 3pm. After 3 short years, we are back to being crib free. Today, we bought La Nina a big girl bed and moved the Magster from the crib to La Nina's old toddler bed. I am sad to see the crib go.

Our crib was lovely. Borrowed from friends, it was far nicer than anything I would have bought myself. Our friends' kids had outgrown the crib and they were very happy to find it a home with family they knew. It seems just yesterday I was stressed about getting that crib into the house before we traveled to get La Nina. I remember just wanting it in the garage, not the house....the house was way too close for comfort, but I wanted it close enough that we could set it up "whenever."

When it arrived, I was working and the Dad set it up immediately. I was so stressed to discover we possessed "a crib" I could barely look at it. The poor crib sat in our nursery barren for a few weeks before I could bring myself to make it up. I remember putting sheets on it for the first time, lovingly installing a bumper and taking a long last look at it before we left for China. I remember the disbelief I felt that there would ever be a baby gracing its mattress in our home.

Then I remember laying La Nina in it for the first time. I was sure she wasn't ready to be alone in her room, but she took to it just fine. She looked so small on its big mattress. It was probably the first time she had ever slept alone, and in La Nina style, she handled the transition without a moment's hesitation. I will also never forget her climbing out of the crib for the first time on the night of her second birthday. Nothing like hearing a "thump" followed by tiny footfalls and a soft "Mamma". Conversations about "what to do" followed the next morning.

More recently, I remember laying the Magster on its well worn mattress for the first time. Totally opposite of her sister, she white-knuckled the rail and howled like a banchee the minute I set her in her new bed. In fact, she wailed for hours. No, the crib thing didn't go well with the Magster, but I still remember the moment, regardless of how fleeting it was. The Magster never warmed up to her crib.

In fact, she jumped for joy when I told her she was getting a big girl bed today. We could have gotten rid of the crib months ago and the Magster would have been content. Yet, we held on to it, so I could delude myself that Maggie still needed the security of high walls on all sides. Alas she did not and it is time for "the crib" to move on.

Now our faithful friend is off to cradle a new baby who is arriving in a couple of weeks. In tribute to its history, the crib is being loaned to a friend...it is staying in the family, so to speak. Our crib served us well. I am sure it will handle its new charge with an equal measure of dignity. And I will miss it.

Sunday, December 25, 2005

Christmas By The Numbers

Whew! We made it through the big holiday. We had a wonderful holiday. It was so fun to see La Nina really 'get' Christmas this year. She had so many questions about Santa and the reindeer this around. It is hard to believe it is the fourth Christmas we have spent with her. This is Maggie's second Christmas. Last year, she had only been home 1 month when we celebrated the holiday. While she thoroughly enjoyed the parties and the presents, next year will be her big year to 'get' it.

I posted our Christmas by the numbers
last year and thought it would be fun to do an updated version in honor of today's celebration.

Days Ginger Bread House has survived with Pete, our dog, in the house: 9

Gatherings attended in last 3 days: 3


Events skipped so kids could rest: 1

Cookies baked yesterday 'cuz I felt like bakin': 12 dozen
(Snickerdoodles, Double Chocolate Crunch, Apple Oatmeal and Blueberry Bars)

Homemade crafty gifts completed: 19

Hostess gifts purchased and delivered: 0

Christmas cards mailed: 133

Outrageous comments made by my family regarding the state of my kitchen and garage: 2

Presents La Nina wanted to leave unopened on Christmas Eve when Santa was "spotted" flying over head to deliver presents in San Francisco: 1

Time it took Maggie to fall asleep on Christmas Eve: 20 seconds

Times La Nina told us to go "straight to bed" while we were tucking her in Christmas Eve: 7

Sighs made by La Nina during the reading of "The Night Before Christmas" before we left her room on Christmas Eve: 15 (See above items.)

Hours it took for "Santa" to make his delivery: 2

Emergency presents wrapped on Christmas Eve: 3

Emergency trips to Walgreens after 9pm: 0 (Not always the case for us!)

Hour Maggie awoke this AM: 6:00AM

Hour La Nina awoke this AM: 6:01AM

Hours spent opening presents: 2

Gifts left unopened by Maggie 'cuz she just wanted to play: 3

Hours it took her to return to gift opening: 2

Naps skipped by kids over past 3 days: 1

Meltdowns for kids: 1 (Coinicidence? I think not.)

Meltdowns for grown ups: 0 (What a difference from last year!)

Dirty Diapers during meals: 1

Hot Meals eaten by Mom: 3

Hot Meals served to kids: 3

Meals (ok, food of any kind) consumed by Maggie: 0 (she might have had some lollipop this morning)

Meals consumed by La Nina: 1

Favorite gift for La Nina: Baby Alice (aka Baby Burps)

Favorite gift for Maggie: Jump-o-lene

Worst gift from Mom's perspective: 100 balls that go with Jump-o-lene

Times Dad asked if we were supposed to live with Jump-o-lene dominating our living room all winter: 23

Times I answered "Yes": 22

Times I answered "Next time it rains all day, you stay home with the kids": 1

Times I heard about Jump-O-Lene's size after that: 0

Hours children spent in Jump-O- Lene: 4

Times dogs have growled at Jump-O-Lene: 3

Times we felt grateful for all the many blessings in our lives: More than we can count.






Friday, December 23, 2005


La Nina gives Santa a hug and asks for a baby that burps. I have it on good authority that her Christmas wish may just come true. Posted by Picasa

Meeting Santa

Yesterday, we attended a luncheon sponsored by Papa's Rotary Club and had the chance to meet the Big Guy. You know who. The Elf His Self. The Red Man. Mr. Kringle aka Santa Claus himself. For La Nina, this was big. It was her chance to petition him for her biggest request: a baby that burps. She was quite excited and spent most of the lunch asking when he was going to be there. For the Magster, it was just lunch in a restaurant with singers and chicken nuggets. There was a very cute magician, but even he failed to impress the Magster.

After a rousing rendition of Jingle Bells, old St. Nick entered the room. La Nina was delighted, she squealed in delight, jumping up and down. The Magster wanted to "Go Home NOW!" The line to sit on his lap was only 5 kids deep, so while we waited in line, I reminded La Nina to use her manners. The Magster was beside herself. She was pleading her case on leaving to anyone who would listen and jamming her fingers frantically toward every door in the room. "Door right there, Mama. Door right there," she said over and over again.

As La Nina took her turn on his lap, I snapped a couple of pictures and Santa handed her a Barbie. This single act completely confused her. You see, she asked for a baby who burps and got a Barbie. She didn't mind the Barbie. In fact, she liked the Barbie. The problem was she asked for a baby who burped and "Mom, why did he give me a Barbie?" I explained that most of the toys were still at the North Pole and he only had a Barbie with him. She accepted the explanation and asked to take the Barbie out of the box.

Even though Maggie strenuously protested going anywhere near the man in red, he still produced a little Leap Frog Lily that sings numbers for her. She liked the singing amphibian, but it didn't win her over. She never went anywhere near Poor Old Santa.

All said and done, the girls had a great time. It is definitely a nice way to see Santa.

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Since I doubt I will have time to post between now and Christmas, on behalf of my entire family, we wish you and yours a very Merry Christmas and Happy Holiday Season! If you are waiting for your baby, enjoy your last child-free Christmas. You will never be so well-rested again. If your family is celebrating its first together, congratulations!

"I don't like him, Mama. Go home now. Door right there" said the Magster as she saw Santa enter the rrom. Posted by Picasa

Tuesday, December 20, 2005

Recipe for a Birthday Cake

How I make a birthday cake for Dad, by La Nina (3 3/4 years old). Her words as recorded by Mom.

First, we get some chocolate, put it in a can, then we put it in the oven. Then we see it.

Then we see it again and put it on the stove.

Then we frost it.

The we put candles on it and sing "Happy Birthday".

And we'll need lots of candles for Daddy 'cuz he's 40 or 60 years old.
**************************************************************************************

Happy Birthday, Dear! We love you very much!

Hard at work on Daddy's birthday cake. Thanks for the matching aprons, Grandma! Posted by Picasa

The Baking Team ready for action. Posted by Picasa

Sunday, December 18, 2005

This Whole Holiday Thing...it snuck up on me

Ok, when did it become Christmas time? Wasn't it just Labor Day? I was still struggling to grasp that we have been home with Maggie a year, when La Nina's family day happened. And now we are a week away from Christmas. Stop the clock, I need to catch my breath.

This year is definitely better than last year, and we are more in the flow of the holidays now. Last year I just gave up I was so overwhelmed by two kids and jet lag. Even with my sanity somewhat restored, I find my head spinning with all the details. Am I supposed to take cupcakes to La Nina's class or Maggie's? Is the party tomorrow an ornament exchange or a book exchange? Is it a cheese tray or bagels for Saturday morning? And forget about the shopping, the wrapping, the baking and the crafting. I don't think I have had a quiet moment since November 15--the day before Maggie's family day. Make that October 15th, because we had to celebrate Maggie's birthday in late October. No wait, make that October 1, because we went to Disneyland.

In normal, non-holiday times, I am busy just getting the laundry done, the bills paid, the meals cooked, the kids cleaned and my stories written. When I had the holiday hubbub on top of it all, it seems really overwhelming. Sure, it is great seeing the kids so excited. La Nina really gets it this year and it is lots of fun seeing her so excited. The Magster is still a little young for the Santa scene, but she is always excitable. She is just bounding around because her sister is. The social commitments are lots of fun too. I just hope I am showing up with the right food and gifts, and I haven't forgotten a kid somewhere along the way.

Friday, December 16, 2005


Happy Family Day, Car Car!

Hard to believe it was 3 years ago that we first met our beautiful little La Nina!

Monday, December 12, 2005

In Honor of Family Day

December 16th marks the 3rd anniversary of La Nina joining our family. Last year on La Nina's Family Day, I wrote about meeting her in China. This year I am writing about another experience we had in China in the Spring of 2004.

As I stepped from the van into the crowded market, my senses were assualted with the sights, sounds and smells of Anqing. On my right was an open air soup stall with four, gritty men hunched over steaming bowls of soup. Directly behind their wooden table, a toothless woman wrapped in a filthy apron from the chest down stirred a steaming pot of soup under a beat up red and blue striped canopy. On my left a young woman, old before her time, hawked pan fried flatbread with green onions and peppers from an American hot dog cart. The urgent sound of horns from cars passing on the nearby street echoed off of the building and creating a din that served as the back track to the merchants whistling to get the attention of passersby. The smell of decaying vegetables, cigarette smoke, unclean bodies and raw sewage struck my antiseptic American sense of smell like a sledge hammer. No, this wasn't big city China anymore. We were in the city my daughter was found and we were visiting the market where she began her journey to us. For me, this place held the significance of the Great Wall.

As we entered the market, our group drew stares. The smallness of our group-just my husband, a translator and myself- should have made us inconspicuous, but our white skin, our stature and my husband's blue eyes set us apart immediately. People dressed in all shades of gray, young, old, women, men, most missing some teeth gaped, "Why would 'waigoren' (foreign devils) set foot in this unremarkable market?" In the soup stall, the men, hats now askew, peered over their bowls pointing our direction and chattering among themselves. A group of followers materialized from no where, some pushing bikes, others carrying groceries, and began tracking our every move. Our translator leaned over, his voice tense, and warned, "Watch you purse". I tried, but I was too distracted by the scene to watch it closely.

As we pressed further into the narrow lane between the building, we saw small stalls lining our path. Some were covered with bed sheets doubling as canopies and many were fronted by a simple wooden plank from which vegetables, fruits, and housewares were sold. The opening left for us to pass was no more than 5 yards wide in places and we stayed close together as we wove our way through the throngs. My husband was easy to spot: he towered over the others in the market. I kept my eyes on hi and my elbows out, ready for use, as I pressed forward at the same pace as my group.

The alley came to an end at a small square lined by several store fronts containing a barbershop and a pharmacy and others whose function I couldn't discern. Another passageway jutted to the right and we followed it, not knowing where it would lead us. This new alley was darker than the first: Tall buildings lined it, blocking the daylight. Discarded, semi-collapsed boxes of all shapes and hundreds of rusting bicycles lined the walls of this new path. On our left, we could see the gloomy underbelly of the building held more marketplace stalls to be explored, so we turned into the bottom floor of the building at the first gap in the refuse.

Once under the buildings we entered an eerie world. Between the haze of cigarette smoke and the pollution stained buildings created a dusky hue to the air despite the time being mid-afternoon. The ground under our feet was puddled in spots with fetid water of unknown origin. The center of the buildings surrounding us were open and above us, we could see apartments lining the floors. A sea of black heads in pairs and trios gazed down at us from above until we looked up when, like turtles, they withdrew their heads into their high-rise shells.

The glow of yellow lights cast a haunting spell on the markets. Several of the sellers had attached flimsy walls with unconvincing doors to the front of their stalls behind which green-lit card rooms were filled with gamblers. We laughed these intent players were the only people not to notice our arrival. The group following us had now reached 50 and as we investigated the bins of rice, distilled liquor and live food of all manner for sale, the mob spoke amongst themselves in hushed tones. It was clear our type didn't venture to this part of the market often, our mere presence was a newsworthy event. Our translator stopped at some point and asked the crowd if anyone knew of a baby found among these sellers. The crowd grew quiet until an older woman spoke. Following her lead, several others spoke up and our friend became so busy diffusing the tension, he did not bother to interpret for us. I know not what was said, but the tones of displeasure did not need much translation that day.

Since I am uncomfortable in crowds, I was standing back, watching the scene unfold in front of me, clutching a binder with La Nina's picture on the front. An older man approached me and pantomimed a question, "Could he see my picture?" he gestured. I showed him. Next, he made the motion of rocking a baby with his arms as he pointed at me. "Was she my daughter?" I studied his face and nodded. He smiled and walked away. Did he recognize my baby? Did he know a part of her story? I wanted to cry out and stop him, but thought better of it given the conditions and the questionable nature of our visit.

Once our motives were revealed and the displeasure noted, the older members of the crowd faded away. Only the people under 30 stayed to ask questions: When was the girl found in this market? How old is she now? Did she live with us in America? Was she happy? Could they see her picture? Through our translator, my husband handled the questions. I was too busy studying faces. Where did the man go? Did that woman in the sweater have La Nina's eyes? Did the woman towards the back with the skirt have her smile? Did the girl about 6 sitting near the vat of grain resemble La Nina? My mind raced as quickly as my eyes scanned...No, No, No. I saw none of La Nina's sweet traits in this crowd, and yet, I kept searching.

After about an hour of hunting around the market, studying faces and talking with locals, we were exhausted and had seen all there was to see. My soul told me I was ready to leave: it was time to make our way back to the safety of the van. This visit confirmed the market was the perfect spot to leave a baby. Crowded, dark, lots of entrances and exits, easy for a desperate person to set down a box, watch it be found, then blend into the surroundings. I now understood why this site was selected.

As we started to leave this market a world away from our life with its well-stocked grocery stores and air-conditioned shopping malls, I felt a sudden, desperate urge to run. I wanted to be free of this place. La Nina was not here. She was at home, waiting for us. While we travelled the world trying to understand the history that brought her to us, she was waiting. As tears started to wash down my face, I quickened my pace. My husband grabbed my hand and asked if I was ok.

I nodded at him through my tears. I was fine. More than fine. A load had lifted from my shoulders in that hour. The unknown was now known, questions were answered, the all-elusive closure attained. La Nina's journey to us may have begun in this market, but this market held her no more. We held her now and always would. As we loaded into the van, I looked around and inhaled Anqing once more. I wanted to tell her about this someday.

Sunday, December 11, 2005

Closure and A Blog Worth Reading

Ok, this is my last comment on my close encounter. I called the store, told management about my experience, they claimed they have no idea who the customer was. But, I don't believe it. The clerk knew and told me they had been told to not speak to him. The manager told me to chat with her the next time I am in, but please....I am trying to down play this incident for the kids. So, I am not going to look her up. There you have it. My choice: switch stores and let a drunk chase me away or risk further abuse. I honestly don't know what I am going to do, but I hate letting a drunk win.

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As a blogger, I read lots of other blogs. One, in particular, is a must read for me these days. Brian Stuy is a researcher with 3 adopted daughters. Most of the work he does is tracking information on finding locations and histories for the parents adopted daughters from China. His blog, www.research-china.blogspot.com is fabulous, if you want perspective on the whole situation in China. His post, The Tale of Two Birth Mothers, was absolutely music to my ears, not because of the reasons for abandonment, but because the birth mothers validate they miss their daughters and think of them often.

Countless people have said (or emailed me to say) that I over romanticize my girls' birthparents on this blog. So many people have told me that I shouldn't worry about them or waste my heart ache on them, because they gave up their kids. While I understand what they are saying and am open to the fact that my girls birth parents may really be unworthy of my emotional energy, I have never felt that way. I know in my heart they are grieving and I feel for them.

I have two reasons for thinking this: La Nina and Maggie. I know anyone who held either of them as a newborn would immediately, whole-heartedly, completely love them. And as I watch these two smart, strong, beautiful girls grow, I know that another mom grieves them. I know it in my soul. It breaks my heart to know my joy is another woman's loss. And at the same time, it is what it is, I can't change it.

But there is something I do. And I do it everytime I see the moon. Each time I am out at night and the moon is shining, I remind the moon to tell my girls' birthmoms that their girls are loved. I only hope that those birth moms so far away look up at the moon and hear my words of comfort. They deserve to know everything working out just fine for "our" girls.

Friday, December 09, 2005

A Footnote to the Encounter

With my kids in preschool, I braved the grocery store again today. And believe me, I was nervous just walking through the doors. The same clerk was working, so I thanked her and compared notes. A couple of interesting facts about my encounter were revealed.

1.) The buffoon who was picking on us is a drunk. He goes into the store everyday, buys some food, treats people poorly and leaves.

2.) The clerk had not heard my exchange with the drunk. Her comment to him was only in response to his complaint about me. Likewise, her comments to me were only about him calling me 'rude'. She didn't realize he had been harrassing me and the kids.

3.) According to her, she can get fired for her words to him, regardless of the circumstances. Her management advised all the clerks to simply bag his groceries and not speak to him.

So, now I know: He was a drunk. In no way does it excuse his behavior, but at least I have an explanation. However, the sad result of this whole experience is I am nervous about taking my kids into a grocery store again--not just that store, any grocery store. Two of my three worst experiences with comments have happened in grocery stores. Reality and hunger dictates that I will probably go shopping again with the kids, but for a little while, I will do the shopping while they are at school.

So, my latest dilemma: Do I talk to the store management about the incident? I spend more money than him at the store. The clerk knows exactly who I had a problem with and knows he complained about me, even if she didn't hear the conversation. Of course, I would leave out her words to him to protect her. There is a part of me, who says I should--just to put another nail in his coffin. And another part of me that says, the store has already decided to do nothing about him, so I should just let it go. Any ideas?

Thank you so much for the supportive comments and emails. If this had to happen, I am glad it happened three years after I adopted La Nina for I am much more experienced at handling comments, good and bad.

For all the waiting parents who read this, most people are genuinely kind to my family. The number of people who have approached me to say, "My granddaughter is from China," "My friends adopted from China," "I am adopting from China," etc, etc, far out number the negative ones.

To date, La Nina hasn't said anything about the whole incident, and I am relieved. She was the only reason I maintained my composure and remains my biggest worry. Knowing her, it could take a couple of weeks before she pops out with any questions. I am grateful that Maggie is still too young to have understood.

Reality is there are drunks and crazy people in this world, and I need to teach my girls to handle them. I only hope these lessons are few and far between.

Tuesday, December 06, 2005

A Close Encounter

Yesterday, I was shopping with the kids in our usual grocery store. I have shopped in this store for years. Most of the clerks know me, know my kids and know our story. We were in the produce section, when I thought I heard someone say, 'Lady, your kids don't look like you.' Since my back was turned and the comment was obnoxious, I chose to ignore it.

We finished up the shopping and headed for the check out stands. The girls were antsy and I was just trying to get them out of the store without breaking something. There was only one check out stand open, so we got in line behind a man.

The man looked at me and the girls, and I had a sinking feeling I was face to face with the heckler.

"These children don't look like you," he said to me.

"Every child has their own look," I answered, my tone icy.

Figuring he was going to get nowhere with me, he asks La Nina, "Are you with your babysitter?"

"No," she pipes back, "She is my mommy."

Gesturing to Maggie in the cart, he continues, "And this is your sister?"

"Yes, but she is just a baby," La Nina answers.

So, the guy finally gets some guts and addresses me again, "You married an Oriental?"

I am fuming, but La Nina is all eyes and ears, so I smile, shrug my shoulders and laugh at him, "No."

"You are a liar," are his next words to me. "You are not telling me the truth. You are lying. There is something going on here."

I was livid, my heart was pounding, but I forced myself to look the man in the eye and evenly say, "Sir, I have told you more than you deserve to know."

At that point, he turns to the clerk and complains, "This woman is rude. She lies." I am outraged to be called a liar for the second time by a buffoon, but again, with La Nina watching and I say nothing. I just look at the clerk and raise my eyebrows, a gesture questioning that last statement.

The clerk had heard our exchange and I can tell from her body language she is as upset as I am. She takes his groceries, carefully puts them in a bag, and after a very long pause, she says "You are the one who is rude, sir."

The man is stunned and leaves the store. She looks at me, we exchange smiles, partner in crimes smiles, and she lets my girls help her unpack the cart as always. As I turn to leave, she offers, "You handled him well. I probably would have punched him."

I didn't say anything and just nodded. I really didn't want to acknowledge how hard my heart was beating or how scared I was that he was going to make a scene or give La Nina a clue that both the clerk and I were shaken.

Perhaps, I have been lucky not to encounter such in-your-face rudeness until now. For the first time, I was forced to firmly set a boundary to protect my children. And that is the funny thing about these random encounters, you just don't know. He could have been some nice older man with a strange approach or he could have been simply mean. My instincts told me the guy was ignorant and racist. Was he racist? I don't know. Was he nuts? I don't know. But, the encounter shook me and made me realize that even in this lovely little hamlet in which we live, my family could be in for a turbulent ride.

Sunday, December 04, 2005

The Conversation

The following is a true (to the best of my recollection) conversation between me and La Nina.

"Mom, where are we going today?" asked an inquisitive La Nina.

"Gymnastics, the Gym and Kaiser," I answered. I was packing a diaper bag, so I was a little distracted.

"What are we going to do at Kaiser?" she asked.

We were going for round two of flu shots and I didn't want to tell her before we get there. I answer more carefully, "We need see some people. Go get your shoes on, I don't want you to miss gymnastics."

Without missing a beat she volleys back, "What people? Dr. Smith?"

I am gaining speed down a very slippery slope now. "Not Dr. Smith today. Some other people. Now get your shoes, we're going to be late."

"Is Maggie sick? Do we have a check up?" she fires back at me.

She isn't budging to get her shoes, she is staring me down. I can see her wheels turning. I am beginning to think Nana is coaching her in the fine art of interrogation. "No, no one is sick. We don't have a check up. We just have to go there. Now, please get your shoes," My tone is definitely impatient, I am resorting to intimidation.

"But Mom," she says, "What people are we going to see and why? Do you need to get some medicine?" My attempt at intimidation failed.

"We need to see the nurses, honey. It is cold today, I think you should take a sweat shirt to gymnastics. Did you put the dogs out?"

"We aren't going to see those shot nurses, are we?" she asks, her eyes wide and bright.

Oh man. When did this kid get so smart? Why do I have kids smarter than me? Why? Why? Why? I fess up. "Yes, honey, we are. You need to finish up your flu shots so you can stay healthy this winter. Now, get your shoes or we are going to miss gymnastics" It seemed wrong to flat out lie to the kid. How can I expect her to be honest when I flat out lie? And I had to hand it to her, she figured it out.

From that point on, my morning was toast. We missed gymnastics. Tears, hysteria, begging, pleading began from the moment I told the truth. Once we got to the clinic, it was even worse. As I wrestled my resistant 35 lb. daughter into the clinic for her flu shot, Maggie trailed behind us and watched with wide eyes. By the time I finished the mental and physical battle with her sister, the Magster seemed easy. At least she couldn't ask me if she was next.