Back in the early days of nursing Sophia, when she wasn’t
choking on my milk, she would clamp down so firmly with her gums of steel that
my tender nipples soon became red and sore.
Feeding her was excruciating, and since I was doing it every 2-3 hours,
I spent most of my days in pain. I met
with a lactation consultant who discovered that I had an oversupply of milk,
which I had made worse by pumping at night.
I could fill a 10-ounce bottle with one breast. In fact, I could have fed a whole army of
babies. Ironic, because, let’s just say
I don’t know where I was storing it all.
To look at me, you’d think I was a 2-ouncer.
Poor Sophie was overwhelmed by my milk, which shot down her
throat like water from a fire hose. She bit me to stem the flow. It was
self-defense.
I went to a breastfeeding group in need of a little sympathy
and advice. But when it came my time to
talk and I told the other moms what I was going through, I was met with
incredulity.
“You mean you have too
much milk? Wish that was my problem.”
“I might have to stop because I can’t make enough.”
“How is that a problem, again?”
Most women, it seemed, had an under-supply. I might be in pain, but at least I could feed
my baby and in less than five minutes.
I shut up. And I
didn’t go back, lest they think I attended these things to gloat about my
highly productive mammary glands.
So, I don’t expect anyone to have sympathy for me, when I
reveal my current parenting issue.
I’m just going to lay it all out there. Sophie is an early reader. She was decoding three letter words before
the age of three, and, at five, she can read passages from Kevin’s history
books with relative ease (though not with the comprehension that she can read Ivy and Bean). I am not saying this to brag, but to provide
context.
I don’t take full credit either. Now, I read to her from the day that she was
born, and I talked about the different sounds the letters made, and I gave her
“educational toys,” like the Leap Frog electronic doohickey on our fridge that
sings “A says /a/, a says /a/, every letter makes a sound. A says /a/,” in the most maddening way. But
reading is a unique and mystifying skill.
You can give a child all the tools to be able to read, but the “glide,”
the smooth blending of letter sounds to form a word, is automatic and
developmental. And as development is
uneven and chaotic in young children, different children develop this skill at
different times.
Ever since Sophie was able to make the glide, she has been a
voracious, irrepressible reader. I say
irrepressible, because, as of yet, I have not found a way to restrain it.
Why restrain her?
Sophie becomes emotionally threadbare when she doesn’t get
enough sleep. She is subject to fits,
hysteria and odd emotional outbursts that have her cackling one minute and
hurdling her lunchbox at me while I’m driving the next. She has always struggled to rein in intense
emotion, but any grip that she has on her feelings is loosened by exhaustion.
Tonight, at dinner, the mere act of calling her to the table
has her on the floor.
“I don’t want dinner.
I’m not hungry. I just want to go
to bed!”
Kevin says bluntly, “Sit in your seat. It’s time for dinner.”
She drags her body up from the floor, slumps into her seat
and glances at her plate. She is
galled. “What is this?
Gak! It’s disgusting! I will not eat it. Not ever!”
“It’s the delicious dinner Mommy cooked for us tonight. You’re eating it.”
“If you make me eat it, I’ll never sit in this room
again!”
“Take a bite, Sophie.” It’s said as a warning.
She takes a different tact.
“My head hurts.”
“My heat hurts, too.”
I say. “Must be all the noise in
here.”
“STOP COPYING ME!”
“Sophie, take a bite.”
Kevin says again.
And so it goes.
Dinner takes an hour. I hustle
her up to her room. She changes, we
brush teeth, read half a book, and review the stars she’s earned for the day
(one).
“Mommy, can I leave my book in the hallway?” she
angles.
“No. Give the book to
me.” I hold out my hand.
“No. I won’t read
it. I promise. I just want to put it in the spare
room.” The spare room is where we have
placed all of her books, having removed them from her room two nights ago.
“Okay,” I relent.
“But you are NOT to go in here and get this book. You are to go to sleep.”
“Yes, mommy.”
“I trust you,” I say with great emphasis on the word
trust.
“Thank you, mommy,” she replies and hugs my leg.
Kevin and I retire to the attic, where we veg out in front of
the television. An hour later, we hear
the pitter patter of feet on the stairs and the light goes on.
“Sophie? What are you
doing out of bed?” Kevin says in a stentorian voice.
“It’s too hot in my room.”
“Then turn on the air conditioner. Good night, Sophie.” We have to be firm.
“Have you been to sleep?” I interrupt, suspicious. “Have you been sleeping or reading?”
“Reading.”
“Sophia! Did you go
in the spare room?”
“No. I went in your
room and got the fairy book we were reading this morning.”
A loophole. She finds
every one.
“I told you to go straight to bed.”
“But—“
“No buts. Go
downstairs and go to bed. Daddy and I
will discuss your punishment.” I feel like I’m channeling my own parents.
My eyes widen as I give Kevin my most exasperated look. This is the cycle we have fallen victim
to: She sneaks books at night and stays
up all hours, reading. The next day it
is impossible to get her out of bed, which makes both of us cranky. She’s exhausted by the afternoon and becomes a
bruin. We battle our way through dinner
and bedtime, and then the whole damn thing happens all over again.
And it’s not just bedtime either. It’s hard to get her anywhere because she’s
too busy reading. I have to rip the book
out of her hands to get to get dressed, get in the car, get out of the
car. She begs to bring books into the
grocery store, to school, to the shower.
Books have become the bane of my existence.
It felt cruel to remove her books the other night—the piles
that have formed in every corner of her room, the shelves packed tightly, the
stash underneath her pillow, a couple forgotten ones under the bed. But she was chipper as I carried them across
the hall and stacked them on the floor.
Her mind was probably already working on a plan to buck the system.
What do you do with a child who reads too much? Is there a support group out there? A book written? An easy 12-step process to releasing your
child from the grips of literature?
Must we lock her books in the basement? Barricade her door? Patrol the hallways?
You can have too much of a good thing.
1 comment:
A childhood friend of mine read a book at our 8th Grade Dinner Dance. She refused to put it down. Turned down every boy who asked her to dance. We all thought she was nuts! I think there could be too much reading, yes, but I don't have any ideas how to curb it. Maybe instead of books before bed, you and she could make up a song or a poem. Redirection of sorts?
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