Here’s Wooking at You, Kid

February 12, 2008 @ 6:11 pm | Filed under: Wonderboy

"Watch me, Mom," says my son, a hundred times a day or more. This isn’t the typical four-year-old’s "Look what I can do!"—what he means is Look at me because I want to tell you something. He doesn’t grasp that I am not hard of hearing; I don’t need to watch his lips move to be sure of what he is saying. He needs to see my face to "hear" me best, and naturally he assumes the reciprocal is true.

If I don’t turn quickly enough, he takes hold of my chin with one firm little hand, turning my face toward his. Yanking it, sometimes. Wookit me, Mom.

He is cuter than ever to wookit these days, thanks to the spiffy new glasses he is sporting.

Dontthrow

Sometimes I spike up his hair so he looks like the kid from Jerry Maguire. This makes me laugh. I glance at him in my rear-view mirror and expect him to ask me if I know the human head weighs eight pounds.

When I went to put the glasses on him the first morning, he wasn’t at all sure he was on board with this plan. Then Scott put on his glasses—I wear contacts, so Scott is the only bespectacled member of the household—and the boy was all of a sudden thrilled to don his own specs. You didn’t tell me it was a MAN thing, Mom! Bring ‘em on!

From that moment on it has been smooth sailing, though there are certain logistics he has yet to figure out, such as what to do with one’s man-glasses while one is observing the time-honored man custom of sacking out on the couch on a Sunday afternoon.

Nap

 

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  1. Alli ~Mrs. Fussypants says:

    Aw, Wonder Boy looks adorable!

    Man-glasses issues while napping on the couch is a life long hassle.

    I sneak up to Hubs and gently remove his before he crushes them! ;)
    “Wookit me, Mom” -precious!

  2. Sheila says:

    That was the dearest entry about the dearest boy!

  3. coffeemamma says:

    So cute! Our youngest (now 7yo) has been wearing glasses since she was about 18mos. Cracked me up every time she would fall asleep with them on, twisting them all “wonky” on her face- hee!

  4. JoVE says:

    What? only on Sunday afternoon? the men in my family sack out on the couch after lunch EVERY DAY. When no couch is available (like at work), even just putting his head on the desk. But a nap every day was something I thought all men did.

    The glasses are great. And he does look a lot like the kid in Jerry Maguire.

  5. Meredith says:

    He is just precious!! I love the sleeping pics, they’re always so sweet!!! Like father, like son :)

  6. Amy says:

    He’s so beautiful, Lissa!

  7. Jennifer says:

    He is so darn cute!

  8. Becky says:

    WB is adorable. Will he be my Valentine?!

    When he figures out that glasses thing, let me know. I have that problem on Saturday evenings, lying in bed reading and watching the late show and getting very, very sleepy.

    When my boys (now 7 and 8.5) were younger, they realized that Daddy wore boxers, not briefs, and to this day they wouldn’t think of wearing briefs. Because, you know, it’s a guy thing :)

  9. Mary Beth P says:

    So cute! Michael wears glasses,too (he’s almost 6 and has had him since he was 4). I can tell you this- they WILL be replaced frequently, at least 4 times per year!

  10. KC says:

    He’s so cute and that last picture is so precious!

  11. Joan Peterson says:

    What a Great Step. Hope he likes his pictures. We do. MOM & DAD P

  12. mamacrow says:

    aw, him asleep on the couch - too cute!

    He only need to really worry if he marries a girl who wears glasses. Then he’ll find (as we did) there are all sorts of other interesting things to figure out!

  13. Mary says:

    Awww…he’s adorable.

  14. Nicole in MN says:

    What a precious cutie!
    We have a 3yo boy who has worn glasses since infancy and he has the same problem during the impromptu naps. I’m sure you will get to know the eye glass technician very well!!

  15. 2008 in Posts — Here in the Bonny Glen says:

    [...] Wonderboy got glasses. [...]

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Book Log 09


The Ten-Year Nap
by Meg Wolitzer

The Uncommon Reader: A Novella
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World Made by Hand
by James Howard Kunstler






Book Log 08


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The Art of Simple Food: Notes, Lessons, and Recipes from a Delicious Revolution
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How I Live Now
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The Great Turkey Walk
by Kathleen Karr
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The Trees Kneel at Christmas
by Maud Hart Lovelace

A Reader's Delight
by Neil Perrin
(a book I have savored, essay by essay, all year—thank you again, sweet friend who sent it)

Ethan Frome
by Edith Wharton

The Ransom of Red Chief
by O. Henry
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Sign of the Beaver
by Elizabeth George Speare
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Stitched in Time: Memory-Keeping Projects to Sew and Share
by Alicia Paulson

Bend-the-Rules Sewing
by Amy Karol

Understood Betsy
by Dorothy Canfield Fisher
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The King's Fifth
by Scott O'Dell
(middle-grade novel about a young Spanish cartographer's travels with Coronado in search of the Seven Cities of Cibola)

A Murder for Her Majesty
by Beth Hilgartner
(I posted about it here)


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Haystack Full of Needles
by Alice Gunther
(Here's my post about it)

The Highwaymen
by Marc Bernardin and Adam Freeman

Number the Stars
by Lois Lowry

Swallows and Amazons
by Arthur Ransom

A Street in Marrakesh
by Elizabeth Warnock Fernea

Knight's Castle
by Edward Eager (to Beanie)

(a sequel to Half Magic)



The Creative Family
by Amanda Soule

The Losers (Vol.1): Ante Up
by Andy Diggle and Jock

Green Arrow: Year One
by Andy Diggle and Jock

Outside Lies Magic: Regaining History and Awareness in Everyday Places
by John R. Stilgoe
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Two-Part Invention: The Story of a Marriage
by Madeleine L'Engle

Dogger
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