You smug bastard. |
So it's 11:11.
Let me rewind a second to the months of January, February and March, where my kids asked me every day, "Can we go camping yet, Mom?" and I (much to my delight) had to say "Oh darlings, this is the worst winter ever. No, we cannot go camping." Smile, smile, smile.
Then April, May and June roll into town and I have to pretend I keep forgetting to camp, and that we can't because the ground is too hard, or too wet or too... you get the picture. Plus there's school... So. Many. Helpful. Excuses.
See, because the thing that Santa didn't think about is that neither Husband nor I are campers. My ideal camping adventure includes a terrible (campy) 60's Sci-Fi and a FABULOUS (campy) drag show. It doesn't include bugs, dirt or nature. Just crap special effects and men who look better in dresses and heels than I do. Muah! Love it!
All along, however, Husband has been telling the kids he'll camp with them in the basement and then "forgetting" or making sure the kids get into enough trouble that they lose camping as a reward. Really, we're a match made in heaven, Husband and Me.
But here we were in July, summer vacation for the kiddos and me and finally, finally I gave in and told the kids we could camp outside.
Of course, having spent 6 months fake-forgetting to camp, we actually forgot to get out there Saturday night. Handy for Husband, let me tell you, because I was gonna trade him all sorts of whatever he needs--yes, even that, so that I don't actually have to go out there and sleep on Saturday night. Unhandy for me because now I can't trade him anything because it's Sunday night and we forgot last night, and now he works in the morning. And I don't.
So I set up the tent with Kiddo #1, giddy and giggly. I couldn't put the tent on the soft grass, though, because we paid umpteen dollars to have the lawn replaced. So I cleared a spot off our paving stone patio and set up camp.
Me: I put the tent together.
Husband: Are you gonna sleep out there?
Me: Yes. I told the kids I would.
Husband: Well, you can't just leave them out there.
Me: (irritated because he figured me out) I wasn't GOING to. SHEESH!
Back to the tent I went with a ladybug looking sleeping bag.
Back into the house I come.
Husband: Are you gonna sleep out there?
Me: Yes. I told the kids I would.
Husband: Well, you can't just leave them out there.
Me: (irritated because he figured me out) I wasn't GOING to. SHEESH!
Back to the tent I went with an alligator sleeping bag.
Back into the house I come.
Husband: Are you gonna sleep out there?
Me: Yes. I told the kids I would.
Husband: Well, you can't just leave them out there.
Me: (irritated because he figured me out) I wasn't GOING to. SHEESH!
Back to the tent I went with two pillows and a frustrated rage in my heart. I really, really just didn't want to sleep outside in a stupid tent, on our stupid paving stones, and how come Husband won't bail me out of this one like he usually does? Grr.
So I put the kids to bed in the tent, kissed and hugged them, zipped them in, and went back into the house.
Husband: Are you gonna sleep out there?
Me: Yes. I told the kids I would.
Husband: Well, you can't just leave them out there.
Me: (irritated because he figured me out) I wasn't GOING to! I am ... geez! I am just gonna go out there when I'm sleepy. Sheesh!
Yes. Totes beginner friendly. |
I gave Husband several legitimate chances to be awesome and go sleep outside but he kept saying "I've gotta work in the morning. You don't. You're on summer vacation." UGGGGGGH!
So at 11:13, I got into my jammies and went outside. I entered the tent cautiously because the two children inside were sleeping like starfish. Luckily the outside light was on so I could see inside and avoid smooshing my kids. My stupid-camping-loving kids.
I immediately noticed that the pavers were still quite warm through the tent floor. That's an unexpected perk for the tootsies, although... oh yes. It was quite stuffy in the tent because of the extra heat. And Kiddo #2 had sweat through his jammies. I rolled him over so I might lay on my side and he made a gross velcro-y sound because he was so damp. Gag.
My hips don't lie. Each of these sequins represents a throbbing pain point. |
And just like the lagoon animals in The Little Mermaid, the bullfrogs of the creek behind our house were singing "Let's Get It On" by Barry White while a bunch of teenagers yelled and carried on in some undisclosed backyard.
The warmth of the solid brick patio stones aggravated my hips and lower back. And the bullfrogs grunted. While the teenagers screamed. And the green grass grew all around, all around, and the green grass grew all around.
So I lay there with a moist preschool leg and arm draped over my abdomen. Gag.
And I listened while a slithery creature slowly entered the pond and ate all my fish and squinted its evil eyes on our tent. I couldn't SEE this per se, but I could surely hear it happening. And I did peer cautiously out the tent door/window to spy if there were glowing red eyes coming from the pond or not. I've learned from Scooby Doo that all evil has glowing red eyes.
And the wind blew creepy long-fingered shadows onto our tent. I exhaled slowly and thought of pleasant things like Smurfs and Bambi and Beauty and the Beast. Oh that frickin' terrifying Beast.
I will gnaw on your toes and skull for kicks. |
come up to my toes, which were pushing on the end of the tent, and want to just chew on my toes or my head or HOLY SHIT THERE"S SOMETHING MOVING IN OUR TENT and I screamed and covered my mouth because FRICKDY FRICK FRICK GODDAMMIT CHARLIE!
And while scream-crying, I quickly turned on my video camera and made a video of me begging for ... well, it's just as good to watch the Blair Witch Project again. Ain't a lick of difference between the shakey snot-and-saline video of Heather Donahue and mine. ... Except that I may have told the monster that I had two tender, juicy kids to trade for my own life.
"Listen, these other two are young. Take 'em. I'm mostly just fat anyways." |
Oh, shut up. If razor-toothed ninja zombies were attacking YOU in the middle of the night, you'd throw your damn kids at them, too. And if you wouldn't, then you haven't been puked IN and pissed ON yet.
It'll happen.
Just believe.
Then I deleted the video because I think in the eyes of the law, "willingness to sacrifice one's young in an attempt at self-preservation during a zombie-ninja attack" is frowned upon.
I grunted and groaned and tried to get myself off the bricks and out of the tent. I threw a shoe out of the zippy door so that the Killers might eat it first and I could still flee to safety. Nothing ate my shoe, so I put it on and walked the 4 steps to the backdoor. I stood in the kitchen pacing back and forth like a crack addict trying to come up with a way that I could sleep in my own bed while headlines of "Mother left Kids 7&3 Overnight for Zombies to Eat" scrolled through my head.
Awesome.
And then, our tiny, old Jack Russell Terrier clicked her way into the kitchen. Sure I'd been pacing for 15 minutes before she realized I was in the house, but she came! I smiled a Grinchy grin and called her to follow me. I giggled like a maniac.
In a flash of fur and triumphant tears, Rizzo was zipped inside the tent with the children, and I was gleefully slipping into our bed. Rizzo wouldn't let anything eat the children! Rizzo would bark like a maniac if a ninja zombie appeared! Huzzah for Rizzo!
Husband snuggled into me then realized I was in the bed and where were the kids and I said, "Don't worry, I zipped the dog in the tent."
I swear, I heard him giggle in his sleep.
Like I said, a match made in heaven.
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