Mothering
on a Weak Stomach
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I have often marvelled at the fact
that my youngest daughter is so healthy. At first I chalked it up to
homeschooling, since we shelter her from germ factories. But thanks
to Austrian lung specialist Dr. Friedrich Bischinger, I now have the
real answer. It turns out that picking your nose and eating it
boosts the immunity.
This is one of those things that, as a
parent, you would rather not know. And as I was pondering this piece
of research, a few questions occurred to me. Does Bischinger have
nothing better to do with his time than worry about nose picking?
Perhaps he should come do a shift or two at Canadian hospitals and
fill in for some of the overworked internists here.
Even more importantly, how does one
measure this particular experiment? You have to compare the
pick-and-swallow kids with something. Do you arrange for a group of
pick-and-stick-it-on-the-side-of-Grandma’s-couch? Or a group of
non-pickers? In our family the question may be moot anyway because
we have actually cured my youngest of this habit, at least in
public. According to Bischinger, of course, we should just let her
rip. Somehow I just don’t think I can find the stomach for it.
Stomach fortitude, though, is
something I have discovered in a whole new way since becoming a mom.
Grown women venture out with other grown women, only to find the
conversation turning to the consistency of toddlers’ fecal matter.
Two or three years earlier many of us wouldn’t even admit we had
fecal matter. Kids, of course, don’t share our squeamishness. They
know body functions are taboo, but these still cause gales of
laughter. They are the source of the most outrageous insults and
humour they can imagine. (Typical joke told by a four-year-old:
"Knock knock." "Who’s there?"
"Fart!", followed by everyone collapsing on the floor
laughing). Recently, when our family was considering renting a
particular movie, I refused since it had swearing in it. Rebecca,
our oldest, leaned over to her younger sister and whispered,
"that means it has bum words."
The odd thing is that children have no
concept of what actually is distasteful. They think nothing of
barging in to the bathroom at that particular moment when you really
want privacy, but should they see you and your spouse kissing, well,
the screams you hear are enough to think we had been the ones
nose-picking.
Meal times are perhaps the worst for
these expressions of disgust. I actually enjoy cooking, but my meals
usually have vegetables and meat—I know this will be hard to
believe—mixed together. This is a major faux pas in my children’s
eyes, and worthy of several choruses of "eeeewwwws!". If
everything is not confined to its own hemispheres on the plate, it’s
not worthy. And don’t even get me started on sauces.
Yet I am not the only source of
squeamish stomachs in our family. My daughters cause plenty of
nausea, too. One of them, who has never met a sauce she likes,
thinks nothing of picking up the gum she stuck on her dresser before
dinner to finish it afterwards (we’re working on curing her of
that, too). And why is it so hard to get kids to remember to flush
the toilet?
It seems that motherhood is an
inauguration into new challenges for the stomach-challenged, which
is probably why it begins as it does. When I was pregnant with
Rebecca the only thing I thought of, for the first five months, was
food. I dreamed about food. I daydreamed about food. The only thing
I didn’t do was eat food. I was so nauseous that every waking
minute was dedicated to trying to picture some food that would stay
down—an apple? A hard boiled egg? Definitely nothing with sauce.
One day I will have the bathroom to
myself, I will be able to kiss my husband whenever I want, eat
whatever I want, and ignore the consistency of everybody’s toilet
habits. I think I’ll miss these days. And that’s why I still
cherish the mushy kisses and mushy cereal I’m presented with every
Mother’s Day morning. I hope you all had a wonderful day Sunday,
too.
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