I came back from a late church meeting last night a couple of hours after Laylee and Magoo should have been sleeping in their beds. I closed the door behind me and turned around to see Laylee at the top of the stairs grinning down at me in the last pair of footy jammas she owns, the fuzzy pink ones I can’t bear to part with yet, the ones that are 2 sizes too small.
My first thought was consistency. We’ve been really inconsistent this summer with bedtimes, snacks gone wild, discipline, and pretty much every aspect of parenting and family life. This week we’ve been really focusing on getting back into routines and teaching our kids that because we love them, we give them limits and now we’re finally gonna get back to actually holding them accountable to those limits.
So my first instinct when I saw her up out of bed was to say, “What do you think you’re doing? Bed. Now.” But I just couldn’t do it. Looking at her sweet face beaming down at me, I thought, “She just wants to greet me. How does she want me to respond? How would I want my mom to respond? What will she remember about me when she’s grown and gone?”
I let my face break into a very sincere grin and exclaimed, “Oh LAYLEE! I’m so glad you’re still awake! I’m so happy I get to see you before I go to bed.” I rushed up the stairs and gathered her in my arms and could feel her face squishing joyfully against my shoulder.
“Why don’t you head back to bed sweet pea?”
“Mom,” she whispered in my ear, “I’m making a copy of my Jesus book for Ellie. I’m working so hard and writing and drawing and do you wanna see it?”
I looked at the black pen on her freshly bathed face and hands and considered for a second. Again, my instinct was consistency. “She should already be asleep and she’s up coloring in her room. We have to get up really early for church and she’s covered in pen and if I go look at her picture, I’m encouraging her to disobey her dad and stay up late when she should be sleeping.”
Again I looked at her face, so eager to please, so excited about her project, not at all calculating or manipulative (Trust me. I know what those faces look like too.) and I told her to run quick and get her picture to show me.
She’s just beginning to really enjoy writing letters and she has latched on to this little tiny book and wanted to copy it for her friend. I was overcome with cuteness and sent her off to sleep. A few minutes later I walked by her room and saw her hunched under the nightlight, carefully transcribing. I remembered late night games and books read with flashlights under the covers and I smiled and left her to her fun.
The products of last night’s adventure were a snuggly and happy preschooler today who was patient with me when I did tell her she couldn’t do certain things, and this little book that’s sure to be a family treasure. Looking at the outrageously happy faces on the pictures she drew last night, I realized that love is the most important thing I need to be consistent about with my kids.
You are such a good mom!
They are brilliant drawings.
I think if you love your kids enough, then they can forgive you anything.
Adorable… and so true.
Awwwwwww!!!
You’re right, you know – she’s so little still and there will be so many times she’ll have to go to bed on time and get up early and it’ll be for things more earth-shattering than church (like school and early morning Seminary). These “little kid” times will fade away soon for her… not that you want her staying up till 11:00 every night, but just enjoy her. 🙂
That has to be the sweetest project I’ve ever seen a kid undertake.
That is the sweetest set of drawings I have ever seen. Congratulations on a great “mommy day”.
That! is the most precious thing I’ve ever seen in my life. What a sweetheart that girl is. And you, are a wonderful mom for remembering flashlights and books. 🙂
What a sweet post! Laylee did such a good job with her book!
I am speechless…what an amazing little girl you have. I agree with Ree..that is the most precious thing I have ever seen a child do…I am so glad that you left her to her nite light drawings, allowed her that contented moment in her little life…she will remember moments like those with great joy as she grows up…you totally rock as a mama!
Dixiechick
Soooo cute!
I have had this same realization lately–yes we need to be consistent, but sometimes we need to be fun. And the fun and the hugs and the love are equally important, if not more important, than “following the rules”. Great post!
That’s so sweet! Great artwork! If she’d publish, I’d buy!
That has to be the cutest thing I’ve ever seen. What a special peanut!!!
Oh, Kathryn! Thank you for sharing this tenderness with us. I need to be reminded of this, too.
Adorable! Good parenting choices!
This is the sweetest thing I’ve seen in a long time…
You’re better than I! I send the kids back to bed… you’ve given me something to think about today…
She is sooooo good at the art! Cuteness. Oh. Cuteness.
Way to go. There is no way I’d have been that flexible, and look what my way would miss! yikes.
Those are the sweetest pictures! 🙂
That is a great story, and a great reminder to me to be more patient with my kids. I yell too much. You should be in the GRSP (General Relief Society Presidency). I’ll nominate you next time we get to vote…
This is why Google Reader has the “share” feature. So that DYM parenting goodness (and Laylee goodness) can easily be put on my blog too, sharing it with even more of the world.
(Well, my husband is probably the only person who ever ventures to my blog that isn’t already a regular reader of yours. But that’s still 1 more person!)
“Outrageously happy faces”: indeed. My heart could burst.
I don’t think it was mentioned, but Laylee made her version of the book using a post-it note pad (called “bonimals” in our household, for reasons only known to Laylee), so it’s like a book with pages that turn, and is the same size as the actual book (which is one of those teeny board books for babies).
I can barely stand to let her give the “book” to her friend, but I know she will, and we must let her–we can’t keep the book any more than we can keep her perpetually four years old. I’m so glad we have scanners.
Good Job, DYM and DYD. My eyes are watering my cheek-in a joyful way. Tell Laylee “good job” for me, please.
THAT GIRL IS BRILLIANT!!!!!!
That really is so incredible! Wow, she is SO READY FOR SCHOOL!
Oh, my goodness! She must have spent hours trying to exactly duplicate that book.
I love that she loves books and reading and art work and sharing with her friends. This was very precious!
And I’m proud of you both! Laylee for working so diligently to make her little friend happy and you for putting aside “the advice of experts” to do what will bring love and joy to your child. Consistency is wonderful, but you were so wise to make an exception this time.
Love you!
Sometimes we just need to stay up late to finish that special project. She was on deadline! 🙂 Her book is absolutely incredible! Her girl in bed is my favorite.
What a wonderful little girl you have 🙂
What an absolute sweetheart.
Thanks so much for sharing this. I also need to remember what it is like to be a kid and that they need our love more than anything.
Those were the sweetest pictures I think I’ve ever seen. How awesome that she wanted to give them to her friend.
That is precious beyond words!! And a good lesson for me too. I loved this the most: “I realized that love is the most important thing I need to be consistent about with my kids.” You are so right. Thank you for this encouraging and sweet post!
That was beautiful, Kathryn.
“I realized that love is the most important thing I need to be consistent about with my kids. ” How sweet. How true. Thanks for sharing a great reminder.
Thank you. That blog is just what I needed today. You’re right, love is the consistency we need in parenting.
PS. My 5 year old does the exact same thing. very cute.
thanks for this much needed reminder. bless you, daring one.
I love it! So adorable!
Awww… you did the right thing. 🙂
Your daughter is just precious. What beautiful gift for her friend!
That is so sweet and heartwarming. Thanks so much for sharing!
ugh you have just snapped me back into reality, and i am going to take your advice. i think sometimes we get too lost in the parenting side of being a parent and forget about the love side. we forget how we effect their feelings, and their thoughts on us. thank you. I needed this, and your an awesome mom!
Awww, that is the sweetest thing ever. I don’t blame you for being able to scold her. Like you said, sometimes it’s all about the love and I am positive that she felt love and valued at that moment. Routine Shmutine, there will be time for that later.
melt a momma’s heart sweet!
What a sweet project!! I love how thoughtful children are, so beautiful! 🙂
Oh, it’s beautiful. Weren’t you so glad you didn’t snap at her without knowing the story? Good job.
I know what Church meeting you were @–the same one I was @!
Thanks for this post–it was exactly what I needed.
Oh, MAN! You get like a hundred points for your reaction. And a hundred more for writing about it and reminding us how to think. And Laylee…the drawings are fantastical. Aren’t you glad you didn’t get mad, but found out what she was up to? I’m gonna try really hard to change my knee-jerk reactions to the “naughty” things my kids do.
This is just adorable! I love it!!
Nice. Being a grown-up often means you have to be the bad guy with your kids. That’s important — there are some parents out there who only want to be their kids’ friends. But it’s also important to not get so caught up in the “rules” that you stop letting your kids be kids. I think you made a great choice, and provided a wonderful example of how parenting and Adultitis do not always have to go hand-in-hand.
Your reading my mind again. Next time consistent voice starts to kick in, I will give it a swift kick!