Enjoy, and I'll see you all soon!
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Brothers are a wondrous thing. Quarrels between them never last, wounds of both the physical and emotional kind heal with lightening speed, and there is always someone who will laugh rather than scowl when you fart.
For brothers, tattling seems to come with unspoken guidelines. It's perfectly acceptable to tell on your brother when he does something to harm or annoy you, but to rat on your bro for jumping on his bed after "lights out" will bring you no satisfaction, but rather shame and dishonor.
Unfortunately, boys are rough, and most of the tattling in our home comes from a wrestling match getting out of hand. One child will cross the line between playful jabs and malicious wallops, and then everything is fair game, including intentional knees to the groin or running to mom and crying foul.
I once got tired of hearing the complaints of who smacked who first and whether someone hit on purpose or too hard, so I removed myself from the equation with the regrettable words, "I don't want to hear it. You two deal with it yourselves." Cameron and Ethan were six and four at the time and "dealing with it themselves" was wholly beyond their capabilities, and I would surely pay for suggesting it.
Five minutes later, I heard a ruckus from upstairs followed by crying, then a shrill scream, and then more crying. My reward for excellent parenting had arrived sooner than I'd anticipated. I called the boys back downstairs.
"What is going on?" I demanded in my most exasperated mother voice.
Cameron whined, "Ethan hit me in the face with a baseball bat!"
There was only a plastic bat upstairs so, in spite of the blood slowly running from his nose, I wasn't overly alarmed. "And so what did you do to him?" I asked.
"I threw a hanger at him."
I looked at Ethan's face, and sure enough, there was a small scratch on the surface of a bruise that was already forming under his left eye.
Tattling then became the mom-endorsed form of retaliation.
Blunt honesty is also a trademark of brotherhood. A boy can tell his brother anything and know that he cannot be demoted to the status of a mere friend or acquaintance. Brothers they will remain. I have noticed that in our house, the boys tend to listen to each other's words of advice more than they will mine or Andrew's. They have an ability to reason with one another that we, their parents, will always be left to envy.
It was a few years ago that I was in my bathroom getting ready to go shopping with my mom and I heard the following exchange between Cameron and Ethan, who were bickering loudly over something completely ridiculous, I'm sure:
Ethan: Just relax, Dude! (He was three at the time.)
Cameron: What?!?!?
Ethan: It means, Don't be grumpy.
Cameron: (telling Ethan off for being bossy, which lasted long enough for me to remove 8 curlers from my hair...and was finally interrupted by Ethan shouting...)
Ethan: Don't be an ASS!
Cameron immediately stopped being an ass. Problem solved. Ethan's vocabulary, however, has been undergoing constant therapy ever since.
Ethan was able to enjoy four years of being the youngest of just two children before he became a big brother himself. When Drew came along Ethan was immediately smitten and became the best older brother in the history of siblings. That lasted about a year, and then Drew learned to walk. Overnight Drew became the biggest pain in the butt that Ethan had ever encountered.
That feeling is one that largely remains present in our home today.
I have never understood it, but Ethan's favored form of entertainment is to put on a movie, grab an action figure that somehow goes along with that movie, and then skip, hop, and run back and forth from one corner of the living room to another acting out the scenes in the movie and making one kind of bizarre sound effect after another; an ability which seems to be coded in the male DNA.
About two months ago, and much to Ethan's horror, Drew began to mimic Ethan. He would find an action figure of his own and follow the odd room-crossing procession right on Ethan's heels. Ethan has been very distressed by this new development in Drew's interests, and told me one day that I needed to make Drew stop following him.
"Why do you care if he follows you?", I asked. "What's the big deal?"
"He's making me feel like an idiot!" came Ethan's frantic reply.
I just laughed and told Ethan that Drew follows him and copies him because he loves him and wants to be like him. Ethan was neither flattered nor gracious about my explanation, but now stops his scene reenacting whenever Drew joins ranks. Too bad, really, because Ethan did look a bit like an idiot when he did it, and I really enjoyed watching him.
I think that I am not alone in looking forward to the day when Trent becomes a viable playmate for Drew and the older boys can occasionally be left in peace. In a house filled to the brim with active, boisterous male-type children, I fancy myself an expert in the field of brotherly love, but I know that they have more tricks up their sleeves, and I will continually be taught by them. Like it, or not.
(Originally published October, 2009.)
and this is why i think i fight like a boy. i'd rather have it out and be over it, and get back to normal. no cattiness, please!
ReplyDeleteThis is a really lovely post! Both funny and so true. Men/boys just fight differently than women. Less grudges, more violence. :)
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed the read!
This was a great read. My youngest has just entered the Pain in the Butt stage. His older brother is completely annoyed that the little one can now walk and get into EVERYTHING.
ReplyDeleteI love how boys fight. I remember being young and wishing girls could just get over it like the boys did!
And this is why I never wanted girls. Oh, how queasy the thought of the silent treatment makes me.
ReplyDeleteOh, I love this! I think I could have had several boys...the boy I have is not very rough and tumble, brothers might have killed him.
ReplyDeleteI would love to see some scene reenactment first hand. It sounds highly entertaining. And that's astute of your son to realize that he might look like an idiot.
ReplyDeleteBoys are pretty special, aren't they? Unlike KLZ, I always wanted a girl, but I'm pretty psyched with my little guy.
I would love to see the movie scenes acted out! That would have been so much better than the actual movie! I think the tandem act would have been even better!
ReplyDeleteI'm an only child and think I could have used a brother or two to tease me out of being such a dork!
As much as I hate to admit it, boys/men do have a one upper on the females when it comes to fighting. When it's over it's over.
ReplyDelete