Monday, December 21, 2009

A Picture at Age Ten



Ten years ago Daughter was a baby just learning how to roll over.  Today she's a pre-adolescent. That went kind of quickly.

Here's a present day picture of Daughter:  she's grown taller but hasn't gained weight.  Her hair is growing out at the rate of one inch per year. She has a perfect memory for everything I ever mentioned in passing that I might be able to do with her some time and no memory at all for anything she ever absolutely promised to do, like her chores. 

Her new thing?  The silent treatment.  Now this is kind of funny because we're Jewish which automatically means we're really loud and can't shut up when something bothers us.  But since she's sneaky and wants to get a lot of attention, she's figured out how to stand out in this family where no one can hold anything in.

First she gets a martyrd look on her face and then she stops talking.  She swiftly moves beyond silently miffed to traumatically silent.  After a lifetime of this child filling the air with conversation, it's pretty noticeable when she stops talking.

When she's really mad she slams the door on her way out of a lot of rooms, apparently enjoying the thud of the door and the sudden end it causes to all conversation.  Sometimes she charges into her bedroom, but she doesn't slam the door there.  She knows if she does we'll remove it from its hinges.

When she's done this about ten times and has finally managed to get some displeasure out of me, she says, "Well, aren't you in a grumpy mood today!" and then she slams out of that room.

I think way, way back, to Skokie.  To seven sisters separated by eleven years.  When we fought - which was often - we'd end up a huge ball of clawing girls rolling through the hallway.  Or one sister would throw a lamp or a hockey puck at another sister.  No silent treatments, just fist fights.  And no slamming doors.  Not because we wouldn't have enjoyed the satisfaction of it but because our mother had installed carpet too thick for the doors to shut at all.

I think, surely I can't be riled by a ten-year-old? I lay down the law, tell her I hope she's enjoyed herself but I'm not planning to be given the silent treatment for the next eight years.

And she nods her head, goes back to childhood and starts talking my ear off again.

4 comments:

  1. oh man, I had two brothers...my youngest I loved...we got along fabulously...
    my older, well, we fought like cats and dogs.
    We each did each other the favor of knocking our front teeth out (baby ones luckily)...lol.
    Kids.
    My teen likes to annoy me by doing things that verge on disagreeable but are called on a technicality....
    like getting all of her classmates to join the 'dark side' by offering them cookies and affordable health insurance. technicality, It's a joke.
    I am torn between good old fashioned righteous southern baptist outrage and admiration for her ability to get her principle who is also a youth minister to sign on....for a cookie. And somehow, all these 'jokes' she impliments end up with me spending money.
    16 dollars worth of cookies to be exact.
    That's okay...when she trots home with a (moment of mommy brag)gpa of 4.17 and is heading to college and eventually spending her older years rolling in dough and sending her aging parents money for poker at the old folks home...I'll pony up the 16 bucks. just sayin'

    ReplyDelete
  2. I am laughing. I used the silent treatment to perfection. In fact, I still use it. (With less drama, I hope!)

    My sisters and I had so many fights. Violent fights. I still think back to them and shudder. Ugh.

    As a silent treatment master, I hope you don't mind if I give you a peek into your daughter. When I shut down, I was usually looking for some sort of validation. It was my way to gain attention. I hope that helps you!

    Enjoy the rest of your holiday!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Chris, hopefully my daughter's sneaky brain will translate into a big payday for me and Husband later too! And my two get along, except when they're not getting along and then they really don't. Either way, a lot of noise.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Ambrosia, I had a friend in college who once got mad at me and didn't speak to me for 3/4 of our Freshman year! Turns out she came from a "silent treatment" family. And I agree with you, she wanted attention and effect (like those slamming doors!) but it looks like it may be over...

    ReplyDelete