Every Sunday my family heads off to Greensboro for a lunch out and a
trip to the kids very favorite place: The Greensboro Children's Museum.
It used to be we just went to the museum, but we found that the kids
would get hungry, and thus very whiny right after we arrived, even if
they had eaten at home just prior to their arrival. Apparently only
fast food can satisfy their immense Sunday hunger. Ok, whatever works.
I like eating out too.
We decided on Mcdonalds, mostly because
we could all eat there for under $18 and it has a huge, beautiful
Playplace. Jaymes has recently overcome his terror of Playplaces and
has discovered that his life was devoid of meaning until he began to
fully appreciate the charms of the gigantic mass of twisty tunnels and
plexiglass windows.
I have noticed that very little eating
occurs at Mcdonalds, and what does seems to go on inside the playplace.
I'm sure the McD's employees just looove me. Jaymes prefers to grab a
handful of fries or part of a burger and disappear into the depths of
the playplace, only to re-emerge when he's run out of food. I had
assumed he was eating most of the food, until I was unceremoniously
forced into climbing into the placeplace to rescue Sierra and found a
long trail of fries and ketchup following my little man.
Yes, I
did mention rescuing Sierra. While Jaymes did overcome his fear, Sierra
is not at that point yet. She wants very badly to enjoy thr playplace,
but it's too intimidating for her. It would have been nice if she'd
have figured that out BEFORE going halfway up and realizing she was
stuck (and banging desperately on the plexiglass screeching
"Mommmmyyyyyyyy!!!!!" over and over), but that's not really Sierra's
style. Of course there were other families there, so I had no choice
but to rescue the baby.
I recall loving those stupid playplaces
as a kid. I have fond memories of playing in them. What the HELL was I
thinking? As you climb in, the first thing you notice is how hard the
plastic tubes are, but you really don't get a chance to dwell on the
pain they're going to cause your knees, because those same knees have
suddently made friends with the many rock hard plastic grippers that
help you climb through the tunnels. If that weren't painful enough, the
grippers and tube itself are studded with little metal bolts. All over.
By
the time I got halfway up, to where Sierra was now happily playing and
giggling, my knees were feeling like they have been run over by a
truck, then doused in battery acid.
No point going down, may as
well go all the way through and go down the slide, right? Less painful
perhaps? Not quite. Another uphill climb through a stabby, metal
studded tunnel of agony, the knee pain disappearing every few seconds
when a violent static shock jolts your entire body everytime you touch
the walls of the tunnel or your own clothing. Then, a cramped trip
through a series of small rooms with big windows, where all the other
parents get a great visual of one's now sweaty rear end being dragged
through spaces much too narrow for it. It crosses the mind that
hopefully the thing is soundproof, so no one can hear the stream of
cursing and exclamations of pain coming from the previously peacefully
eating parent shoved into the plastic deathtrap.
At the top, Jason is waving cheerfully to us, and the other parents smile as if to say "aww, how cute"
STFU.
Finally,
the slide! But oh, how narrow it is. Hmm. First attempt gets me stuck
sideways with Sierra kicking me in the ribs wanting to slide down.
Second attempt has one leg bent back in a way that would have resulted
in an ER trip had I slid down in such a position. Third attempt landed
me on my back with a baby on my chest, going way too fast down a way
too twisty slide. hit the end, can't get up because it's still covered.
Slide on rear end slowly out, and finally manage to stand up in spite
of the back/neck/knee/butt pain. Jason whispers "Your hair..."
Static and hair. ARG. Time to go!
That
finished, we headed off to the museum. We always get there right at
opening at 1pm, and there is always a line. The guy at the front desk
knows us by now, and he has noticed how different Jaymes is. It used to
be we came and left, Jaymes kicking and screaming bloody murder. now
Jaymes comes in excited and leaves with only a few disgruntled moans.
The museum has done great things for Jaymes. Used to be we could only
play with the train tables, but he's slowly branched out to playing
with other things too. The main portion of the time spent there is
still trains, but I can live with that.
This time, Jaymes
decided to go to the Theater section first. This is a room with a small
stage, and carpeted stair type seating. There is a podium with buttons
for sound effects and lighting, and costumes out behind the stage.
Jaymes
has never willingly put on a costume- not ever. Halloween wouldn't be
Halloween without his screams of protest as i wrestle him into whatever
sute disguise I've purchased for the occasion. And yet this day, he
walked onto the stage, grabbed a full body cookie monster suit, and put
it on. Even the hood.
I melted with the sheer cuteness. And the
cuteness didn't stop there, no it did not. He wouldn't take it off, and
wandered the museum for the rest of the 3 hours wearing it. He was so
sickeningly cute that everyone turned to look at the sweetness. Other
kids said "Cookie Monster!!!" and got excited. Jaymes ignored them and
played on the train tables. He tossed his pink blankie over his neck
like a scarf, and got very angry everytime his cookie monster hood fell
down.
He played blocks, he tossed balls, he blew bubbles. All in
his suit, all happily and willingly and without yelling. When finally
he did get too hot, he slithered out of the costume and went on with
his fun.
What a cool day. I have video, but AT&T is being
stupid and I can't send the videos to my email, so you'll have to wait
on the visual. It's worth the wait, believe me.
Oh, and the best
part: At the end of the time there, he took off his shoes and plopped
down in the sandbox. Jaymes has never ever sat in sand willingly
before, and here he sat with the other kids, scooping sand into a cup
with a spoon. He was happy, he was serene, he was just like all the
other kids. He didn't mind that he was getting sandy, nor that others
were around him, he was just peaceful.