Monday, November 16, 2009

Fairy Cannibalism

Aaron and I have (for better or worse) chosen very distinct and somewhat cliche parental roles for ourselves.  I am in the trenches everyday, wiping the snot and maintaining just enough order to keep the house from combusting. He allows himself to be manhandled, nay physically abused, by our sweet cherub every single day. He also encourages her to torment me with a game only they find funny, called SMELL MY BUM.  I am the voice of reason, Aaron is the voice of  the absurd.  It works out just fine for us most of the time. In fact, when a firmer hand is needed, Mean Daddy is such a shock that Violet straightens up immediately. 

Four year olds are notorious for their completely nonsensical dietary quirks. Foods are routinely rejected and Violet reserves the right to stop eating a normally accepted food without cause. My efforts to strong arm her into eating have failed spectacularly.  So, I started using deception. For some time I have been sneaking a very thin slice of turkey into Violet's grilled cheese sandwiches. Aaron took issue with this at first and warned me that she would figure it out eventually.

Violet did find out, largely due to Aaron's sloppy execution of the aforementioned hot sandwich.  He knew the jig was up and said the first ridiculous thing that came to his mind.  He told Violet that the turkey was in fact ground up fairies, the eating of which gave one special, magical powers.  I left the room, not wanting to hear the shriek of injustice, or worse, the sound of regurgitation.  What happened instead was typical of the funny father/daughter relationship that Violet and Aaron share.  She was intrigued, even delighted that she was being given such enchanted food.  I am still a little uneasy about the idea of my little girl who enjoys pretending to be a fairy, turning around and committing acts of fairy cannibalism, but it's working.  I guess I should expect nothing less from a child who has proclaimed Halloween to be her favorite holiday and whose favorite show is a Discovery Channel cartoon called Growing Up Creepie.

Perhaps it's time to get her a copy of Lady Cottington's Pressed Fairy Book. Clearly, her sense of humor is more sophisticated than I thought.


10 comments:

  1. It's amazing the things kids aren't scared of like ground up fairies in a sandwich(!) but absolutely terrified of Santa, the jolly old guy who brings PRESENTS, or an uncle with an unruly hunting beard. Wait, maybe that's just my kids. Basically what I'm trying to say is, you have one brave little girl.

    PS. I hear fairies are a great source of protein.

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  2. OMG! I imagine that Princess would totally freak if someone told her that...buy hey, I could be wrong. Hmmmmm.....

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  3. I think Violet would fit right in at our table. Eating ground-up fairies is a perfect example of the kind of thing my kids find to be appropriate dinner conversation. That and poop.

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  4. LMAO I thought you were kidding about her falling asleep. She's cute and a wee bit twisted, what more could a mother ask for in a daughter?

    I love the sophisticated humour of girls, there's 8 years (and a single brain cell) between my sons, not that you'd know it.

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  5. My husband is 'the voice of the absurd' also.
    It works, although there are times where he has both boys rolling on the floor laughing and I'm standing thinking "huh?". Boy humor. Don't get it.

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  6. Oh my word. This is hysterical. We encourage twisted humor in our house. It just makes things much easier!

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  7. Thanks - I will never be able to eat a grilled cheese sandwich with thin slice of ground up fairy I MEAN TURKEY again.

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  8. I play "smell my bum" with random strangers every day... works great at the DMV!

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  9. Ground up fairies, huh? Interesting...

    I love that book, by the way.

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  10. I Love that Book! My grandma bought me a calendar based on it when I was 10, and the book for my 16th birthday. I still have it.

    As for the fairy sandwich, we have conned our 4 year old into eating tuna for the last 2 years by assuring her it's "mermaid" food. Since they actually put a mermaid on the can, it's pretty easy to convince her.. and she always eats what mermaids eat.

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