For the record, I have never seen the above show. I just love the logo for Ali (Grace). So if the show is horrid and rancid and crass and I should be shot for associating it with my child, please let me know. Thank you.

Monday we had lots of discussions about when to say “no thank you” versus “no ma’am”. This was predicated because I was asking her often if her ear was hurting, and she would answer “no, thank you”.

It’s a hard concept to explain for some reason. “If I’m asking you if you want something, you say ‘no thank you’. If I’m asking a yes or no question, you say ‘no ma’am’.”

It was an all day explanation adventure.

When it was time to get ready for bed, she argued with me, and kept telling me she wanted to do something else. I told her that she needed to say “okay, Mommy” and obey when I told her to do something.

She very confusedly scrunched up her nose, looked quizzically at me, and said, “So I don’t say no thank you???”

This communication piece is hard work.

Speaking of communication, I know that it amazes people who DON’T have toddlers how their parents understand them. A lot of it has to do with context. You understand what they are saying based on the context of when they say it, how they say it, and what they are doing when they say it.

For instance. If Ali points to the car radio and says “Play King Cole Ornament!!”, I know that she wants to hear Nicole Nordeman. It’s that simple.

Which means that when they come up with something completely out of the blue, you will be COMPLETELY thrown for a loop. I blogged about this quite a while ago (never did figure out what she was saying then). However, Monday night was one of those times when she was completely not having to do with anything, but I was victorious!!!

We were on our way to dinner (because I had been completely unable to get myself organized enough to prepare dinner after making a last minute doctor trip, and felt horribly guilty about it, but we only spent $6 for dinner so then I felt better), and Ali started urgently telling us something from the back seat, over and over.

“Dottoross (something completely unintelligible) Mommy’s tummy!!!”

“Dottoross blah blah blah Mommy’s Tummy!!!”

We both listened intently, trying to figure it out. She’d say it again, we’d look at each other, confused.

Then I had a eureka moment.

“YOU’RE RIGHT!! Doctor Ross DID take you out of Mommy’s Tummy!!”

And she beamed with delight.

Can we say RANDOM.

Another great thing about toddlers is the assumptions that they form about the world from the evidence they collect.

Tuesday, for example:

We were playing with stickers, and she tore an “M” sticker.

“Mommy to fix the M?”

“I can’t fix it, Honey, it’s broken.”

She looked at me very knowingly, with her chin on her chest a bit sternly and said, “Mommy to get some batteries and fix the M.”

At least it’s just batteries. Soon she’ll think that money fixes everything. Not looking forward to that.

9 thoughts on “The Conversations Went Like This. . .

  1. Very adorable stuff! I love the randomness of their minds some times.

    Now, for the burning question, how the heck did you only spend $6 on dinner????

  2. Thanks all!

    Gift Cards, Jenn! We buy discount GC’s from birminghammenus.com (they come out quarterly) and save a bunch of money. It rocks!

  3. Your daughter is beautiful and I love to hear her toddler talk. They think we can fix anything, don’t they?

    Cute, sad story about fixing things. When my two oldest children were 4 and 2, I lost a baby girl at 19 weeks gestation. About a week after her birth and burial, my four yo asked again about the baby coming home (he just didn’t understand). I told him that the baby had died and wasn’t ever coming home. He asked “can’t you put a band-aid on her so she won’t get killed?”

    So sweet to think that at that age, they think band-aids fix all hurts.

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