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The Babysitter
My
granddaughter came to visit last week. She is five months old, a
cute little bundle in pink crawlers with enough black hair that
we can cut it soon and sell it to the hair-club for bald
babies.
My daughter had some errands to do, and grandmothers, of
course, are forever-willing babysitters for adorable
grandchildren who look at them and smile with two white teeth
and black eyes the size of saucers.
It is not until the mom is out of the driveway that
grandchildren show their true colors. The instant baby realized
that mommy was gone, she looked at her smiling grandma as if she
was a reincarnation of Attila the Hun.
A blood-curdling scream emitted from her with a magnitude of
3.5 on the rector scale. "Oh, isn't that cute? She misses
her mommy!" It was amusing for about 3 whole minutes when
the sound waves began to penetrate my brain and melt it into a
puddle of plasma.
I tried to distract her with the dancing Hokey Pokey toy that
made her laugh and nearly jump out of her diaper when mommy was
there.
"You put your arm in and you shake it all
about!"
"Wah!"
"You do the Hokey Pokey and your turn yourself
around"
"Wah!"
"And that's what it's all about."
"WAAAAH!"
Well, that may be what it's all about in Hokey Pokey land,
but in grandma's living room what it was all about was screaming
like an opera soprano hitting a "high C". Who needs an
iPod to make you deaf when you have a baby?
Nothing I could do would turn off my little high fidelity
sound machine. We rocked, we read books, we rattled rattles, we
sang songs, and we changed diapers that were not even wet.
It became apparent that baby was going to scream until mommy
returned or the baby passed out from exhaustion, whichever came
first. I warmed a bottle and popped it into baby's mouth like a
cork. Finally, she fell asleep exhausted and napped for a
blissful 30 minutes.
The eye of the hurricane was past, but when she woke up, the
screams started again from the other direction. We bounced, we
did more Hokey Pokey, we played musical ABC's, we read the 1-2-3
book, and we played every musical tune in the Baby Einstein top
ten.
She actually liked the musical toys. Sometimes she would
laugh and cry at the same time. That's a neat trick. I wish I
could learn how to do it. I was afraid she would make herself
sick crying, but she only got the hiccups -- another good reason
to scream.
Finally, "The clock struck 6:00; the mouse ran down;
Hickory, Dickory, Dock." It was time to take her home. It
took me 30 minutes to figure out how the car seat worked and
another 30 to pack up all the baby gear that modern babies need
to reinforce their hysteria. But the instant we hit the road,
she passed out cold and the concert ended before the car got out
of the driveway.
By the time we got to my daughter's house, baby pink pants
was wide-eyed and all giggles. She smiled at her mommy,
practically leaped into her arms, and looked at me as if I were
a demented terrorist kidnapper who had been foiled.
All the books say that there is no such thing as
spoiling a baby. It's called "separation anxiety." I
suspect it's the same symptom by a different name. Something is
basically wrong here, though. I thought it was a Grandma's job
to spoil the baby rotten and then let mommy deal with it.
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