I’m sitting in my living room, watching TV, and as usual, my daughter is busy crafting. As she ran towards the kitchen, I noticed a hole in the right leg of her pants. I KNOW the hole was NOT there before. My first thought… “Sweet Jesus, what has she done now?” I asked her about it and she said, “I cut them.” So, I asked, “Why did you cut a pair of pants you didn’t pay for?” She replied, “I needed to make something.”
My daughter is 8 years old, bright, inquisitive and creative. I call her my scientist because she loves to do experiments and asks tons of science related questions. All of this is great, I love that about her. There’s just one thing that drives me up the wall. When she gets an idea, she follows through, and I usually find out after the fact. The end result is usually something that has to be fixed or cleaned up.
I can sleep for half a day with my son in the house and everything is perfectly fine when I wake up. A fifteen minute nap with my daughter around is a completely different situation. In less than 2 weeks, she ink stamped her closet doors, played pixie and sprinkled glitter all over her room, and just a few days ago made pancake batter to avoid a bath.
About 2 weeks ago, while eating a bag of fruit snacks, she started the following conversation:
Her: Mommy, have you ever wondered what fruit snacks would be like melted?
Me: Umm, no.
Her: (Pressing a few of the snacks together in her hands) I wonder how you melt them.
Me: Well, it would take more heat than what’s in your hands.
Her: Oh, Ok.
(I should have known then)
Me: It’s not a good idea to melt them though. They would be very hot and you could seriously burn yourself.
After that, I didn’t think about the fruit snacks. Fast forward two days later, after a nap, I woke up to my little girl explaining how melted fruit snacks got into the microwave.
Her: Umm, mommy, ummmm, while you were sleeping, I accidentally put some fruit snacks in the microwave.
Me: Wait a minute! Did you put a whole bag of fruit snacks in the microwave?
Her: No ma’am. I wasn’t thinking when I was eating them and put them in there.
Me: Stop lying. You just asked me two days ago about melting fruit snacks. Now, there are melted fruit snacks in the microwave.
Her: It was an accident.
Me: No it was not! This lie is not working.
She stomped off in anger to her room. I decided to assess the damage. I opened the microwave and saw a melted mass of red and blue goo. She didn’t put them on a plate or anything, just threw them in and hit start. My first thought, “Sweet Jesus, why?”
After a few minutes, I called her in to talk.
Me: First, you know I hate lies, yet you continue to lie about things you do. If you can do it, you can be honest about it. Don’t change up and lie, keep the same energy.
Second, what you did was stupid. You could have seriously burned yourself.
Third, you just stamped your closet doors, and glitter bombed your room. You’re doing the most! Do Less! Give me at least a week or two before you decide to test another idea. I need time to recover.
My son: (always the diplomat) I’m proud of you. You actually did an experiment. You had a question and tested it.
Me: Your brother, even though no one asked him, has made a very good point. You did complete an investigation. What did you learn?
Her: Fruit snacks get hot and sticky when they melt.
Me: (nodding) Yeah, next time, please ask before doing anything else so I can help you.
Her: Ok mommy.
Now, will she do something like this again without telling me first, more than likely. Did I learn a lesson? Yes, just stop taking naps.
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