I had great plans to torment my children this morning, the morning of the first day of school. I had the alarm clock set early so I could sneak into their bedrooms and delicately awaken them with an old air horn I found in the back of my husband’s shed while simultaneously singing Poison’s “Your Mama Don’t Dance” at the top of my lungs while perfecting the art of tossing my hair around.
I planned on actually cooking breakfast for them this morning instead of the usual of slapping two empty bowls, a box of Cheerios and a jug of milk in front of them. (And by actually cook I mean pour premade pancake batter out of a jug into the non-stick waffle iron. Maybe toss some bacon into the microwave. Maybe.)
I planned on chirping happily to them as I tossed a couple of slices of bologna into some bread for their lunches while they munched on the breakfast I so thoughtfully and meticulously made for them.
I had a series of Miss Molly Homemaker moments planned this morning before my children toddled off to school for yet another new and exciting year of public education and peer powered persecution.
My children, however, had other plans. Plans that included getting up at the butt-crack of dawn, creeping about the house silently like thieves and getting ready for school while I drooled out of the left side of my mouth on to my pillow and softly snored.
I woke up to the sound of the coffee beans being freshly ground for me and the clatter of a bowl being dropped into the sink. I blearily looked at the clock and noted no sane person should be up at such an unholy hour and cursed my demon spawn for being excited to go to school instead of behaving like normal kids and hiding under the covers until they are dragged from their beds kicking and screaming.
Apparently, two months of having me in their faces constantly inspires my children to want to go learn. Away from me. I’m choosing not to take this as a reflection upon my parenting, no matter what I may have over heard my daughter tell my son last night while they did the dishes.
While disappointed that my kids foiled my plans for morning amusement, I am nothing if not adaptable. Which just means I’ll wait until a morning they over-sleep to bust out the airhorn. Heh.
Unlike my children, I am not excited about the start of school. I rather enjoy having my children around at all times to fetch me a drink, cook me supper and take the clothes out of the dryer for me. Unless Nixon grows opposable thumbs on his front paws and learns to walk upright, it looks like my reign as Queen of the Coach Potatoes has come to a screeching halt for the next ten months.
Besides that, my daughter is entering junior high. Middle school. Seventh grade. This hardly seems possible to me. After all, it was just yesterday that I was in the seventh grade and desperately wishing for a pair of boobs to sprout on my chest. Or so it seems.
Now it’s my daughter’s turn and it’s freaking me right the fack out. She’s going to be twelve in less than 2 weeks and I’m only 32. I’m still a baby for crying out loud, no matter what the crows feet and wrinkles on my forehead say.
Junior high was the gateway to hell puberty for me. It’s where I had some of the best moments of my school years as well as some of the worst.
It has taken me most of my adult years to get over the wounds suffered during those formative years and I am not ready just yet to repeat the experience through my daughter.
Junior high was when I started wearing aqua green eyeliner and frosted pink lip stick. I back combed my hair and used more hairspray than any human being should ever spray during their entire lifetimes. I strutted about in acid washed jeans and over-sized neon tee shirts. I stuffed my bra.
Junior high meant boyfriends, tongue kissing and dances. It meant Friday night house parties at what ever kid’s house whose parents were dumb enough to leave them alone for the night.
Junior high meant doodling on scrap pieces of paper about the dark haired boy with green eyes who didn’t know I was alive. To this day I’m a sucker for dark hair and green eyes. Damn you, Jamie G. If only you had noticed my googly eyes on you back then, I’m sure my life would have turned out different. Heh.
Junior high is where I slowly started to unfold my wings to get ready to fly from my nest and explore the skies of the world. It’s where I got the first real glimpses of who I was to become before disappearing under the weight of my painfully self-aware and insecure self.
Scarier still is the fact that junior high was were I learned about sex. Not through our mandatory sexual ed classes and snickering while a room full of hormonal boys and girls made crude jokes and peeled a condom on banana. No, I learned the real truth about sex through gossip and furtive whispers and hidden notes that spoke of who let who into their pants or got drunk at a party and had sex in a bush.
Up until that precious moment in time, I never knew what anal sex was. I simply thought the butt was a one way door and not the gate way to the pleasure palace for some.
I do not want my daughter to know what anal sex is, people. Hell. I don’t want her to know any of this. I want her to be the sweet little girl who still struggles to tie her own shoe laces, not the young lady she’s blossoming into who can conjugate verbs into three languages, play two instruments and is wearing her first pair of leather loafers with a wedge heel out the door and into middle school hell.
When I was in junior high, my parents were invisible. I did my very best to pretend they didn’t exist.
Which is why I am determined to do my very best to remind my daughter that I do exist, that I won’t be rendered invisible and forgotten. No child of mine will ever be too cool to acknowledge my presence.
If that means chasing them down the driveway to get the requisite back to school shot while wearing nothing but a robe and slippers, then that’s what I will do to remind them I’m still here, loving them as they grow into themselves and away from me.
If that means making them turn around to pose while all the cool kids, their friends and even the bus driver wait while I immortalize this moment for posterity, so be it.
And if my robe happens to gape open and a boob falls out, blinding the eyes of all the children and teens on the bus and mortifying my spawn, then that is a price I am willing to pay to remind my children they can run, but they can never hide from me.
They will never escape from this mother’s love. Or, apparently, my boobs.
At least I made my daughter’s first morning to junior high memorable. One way or another.






Jess
My son started 7th grade weeks ago. It was huge for both of us let me tell you. Then he did the worse thing every, he turned 13. UGH a teenager. Heaven help me.
Hope the bus driver enjoyed your peep show.
Fancy
My 14 year old baby started high school last week. You should have seen him trying to ignore me in the sporting goods store while I tried to figure out which “athletic supporter” would fit him! Good times.
Amy
It looks cold up there already! Coats? We’re sweating in Iowa.
Eternal Sunshine
Who said they were allowed to grow up??
Ungrateful little brats.
Lylalou
Coats? Crazy Canadian weather, it’s still summer down here!
Wendy
Hehe. That’ll teach them to do what you say anyway! For the rest of their school lives you can remind them that’ll you’ll flash a boob at every kid they know if they decide to ignore you.
Also… Your kids do dishes? Together? I WANT MY KIDS TO DO DISHES DAMN IT!
And oh yeah, I’m so moving to Canada, whether the kids and hubs come or not. It’s too freakin hot down here in South Carolina!
Jen
Mine are in 11th and 2nd already. I am counting the days until I can be children “free” on most days, other days I just want them to still be in diapers and cuddly, not smart mouthy and demon spawn.
Jamie
Big Sis started junior high last week (Thursday) for some reason our country school picked two days before the long weekend. I will eventually post about it I hope……
I’m a step mom so I’m only 27 talk about feeling like a baby and ooold having a daughter in junior high!!!
Lets all hope your girl and mine are late bloomers!!
Writer Dad
Thank you for making me laugh Redneck Mommy. My daughter’s in first grade tomorrow. I don’t think I can take middle school. I’ll probably just hide her in the attic and give her a stack of books to read.
FADKOG
First, let me commend you on your willingness to go the way of the pre-made pancake batter. Vive la Bisquik, baby!
I’ve spent the past two weeks getting in my 6th grader’s face, reminding him over and over again that, if necessary, he can talk to me. Anytime and about anything. He promises me he will, but he basically wants me to get out of his way so he can watch wrestling and field countless telephone calls from girls. GIRLS!!! I was a girl once. I’m not ready for the girls!
O'Neal
Though I am already nervous just thinking about my kids making it to junior high, I am even more terrified of the thought of how much things have changed since I was there. They are growing up WAY too fast as it is and society is hurling them even faster! And puh-lease dear Lord NEVER let either one of my kids say ANAL SEX within my ear shot – even when they’re grown!!!
Insta-Mom
My oldest started 4th grade this year. The grade I specifically remember as when I first used “bad” words. Totally freaks me out knowing it’s all downhill from here.
CBW from Ontario
This reminded me of my dark-haired, green-eyed crush…He was soooo…HAWT. Yeah, like HAWT! But I was in Gr.10 so it was way more mature than a middle school crush. ;o)
I have to go and slow down my heart rate now…feeling flushed…
(Some people read the paper…I read your blog now…I’ve been creeping around here for about a month…but I’m really cool. Really. I’ve been creeping in a very cool, not-at-all creepy way).
Becky
That hair was rocking. And you’re right: junior high seems somehow old. For a kid.
Astarte
Your Girls are just determined to get more attention, aren’t they?! Hell, that’s probably the best day THAT bus driver’s had in a loooong time.
I still remember trying to figure out what a bj was in the middle school library. We decided that it was when you blew on a boy’s Thingie like a candle to make it do…. something. Ahhh, the innocence.
Ellyn
For me it was always blonde hair and blue eyes. I still get weak in the knees.
My oldest starts preschool this year. I can’t even imagine middle school.
Shamelessly Sassy
My daughter started preschool this morning. I shed some tears. Luckily, before she left for school I did have her go fetch a Diet Pepsi for me.
Stan
For the love of the bus driver… But this is yet another reason to home school your majesty!
shonda
I had the exact same hair, only my bangs were longer and, therefore, higher. It was pretty awesome, I must say. I even shaved bars in my eyebrows.
Capt jeff
wow… there is a niche for bachelors in this world…
every time i read your blogg or better yet, you living your life vicariously through your kids… i have to thank all my past girlfriends and live-in’s for our diligence in not be coming a parent…sxchitte- i can barely take care of myself!!!
btw…redneck mom… seems your quite happy or proud of your chest…an admirable quality of females i must say…