Monthly Archives: December 2009

5 Tips for Traveling with Children

Tip 1: Don’t.

So what’s wrong with vacationing in your house? There’s nothing wrong with it, besides the fact that your kids want to kill each other because they’re routine-bound and besides the fact you’ve started to wax poetic about the lives of your childless friends. Take it from someone who took her twins on two round-trip, trans-Pacific flights before they were thirteen months old: don’t.

If Junior can't complete it in ink, do everyone a favour: stay home

(cc) KitAy, Used under a Creative Commons ShareAlike License

Tip 2: If you must travel, wait until your kids can complete the New York Times Crossword in ink.

And, unless your kid is Ben Pall – a 14-year-old who created a crossword that was published in the Times last month, then you’re safe for a few years. By the way, Pall could recite the alphabet at the age of two…backwards. Freak.

A Remote: More Essential Than Your Kids

(cc) Rick Audet, Used under a Creative Commons ShareAlike License

Tip 3: There’s only one button that matters: repeat play.

It doesn’t matter if your kid can recite all the words to Finding Nemo. After all, look at Ben Pall.

Tip 4: If you have a choice, travel before Christmas.

Your arsenal of discipline-techniques increases greatly if you can use Santa as a threat. Put him on speed dial. If you have to travel outside of December, throw out nutritional expectations and food pyramids. Candy makes a great second-level threat.

Tip 5: Seriously, don’t do it.

Pregnant in Bangkok: remembering

There are things that scare me more than pregnancy, such as raising children or having a camera crew chase me around as I attempt to parent. But even after disasters such as lying face down on a golf course amidst a spectacular lightning storm (and I don’t even golf), pregnancy still ranks up there on my list of things-that-freak-me-out. It’s not so much the pregnancy itself, but my memory of being eight months pregnant with twins during the hottest season. In Thailand.

While Bangkok might be called the City of Angels, it sometimes feels more like the City of Smells. Waste disposal techniques include dumping sewage in the local canal so pedestrians (also known as targets) can smell it. Especially if you’re pregnant, the variety of stenches presents a multitude of problems, not the least of which is eating without upchucking. Imagine walking along Sukhumvit Road, one of Bangkok’s main arteries. The sidewalks themselves are an obstacle course. Not only does the congestion necessitate having to step over two-foot curbs, but also requires dodging vendors who are selling a range of goods, from pirated Shania Twain CDs and pineapple with chillies, to deep-fried bugs and sex.

If she were pregnant in Bangkok, she wouldn't be smiling this much

(cc) Roger Price, used under a Share-Alike Creative Commons License

If the partially decomposed bat clinging to an overhead wire doesn’t make me puke my Green Curry, maybe it’s the stench of rotting garbage or the sight of a Chihuahua-sized rat. And if my lunch hasn’t climbed all the way up my esophagus yet, then it surely will after seeing a seventy-year-old Westerner lip-locked with a sixteen-year-old Thai from upcountry.

Indeed, as I continue my waddle up the street, ignoring tailors who salivate over how many yards of fabric it’d take to clothe me, I feel a slimy connection to those tourists.

A Bangkok scene: Pregnant expat vs. Western tourist

(cc) baby-gaga.com, used under a Share-Alike Creative Commons License

Let’s face it, in Bangkok, pregnant women have a lot in common with tourists.

We both sweat a lot.

We’re both overweight.

We’re repulsed by Bangkok’s street smells.

We’re drawn to wearing ill-fitting clothes, perhaps to further tempt the tailors.

We trip on uneven sidewalks.

We long for a foot rub.

We’ll walk miles off course to search for a clean, Western-style toilet.

We look bad in a bathing suit.

We struggle to carry our extra baggage.

We realize the anticipation of an event is often better than the reality.

We both crave an ice cold beer.

And I didn’t even say anything about sex.

Don’t get me wrong, I still love Bangkok, especially now that I no longer live there. Everything people say about Thai people is true. Heck, they’re even nicer than Canadians. And now that I’m  back in Canada with -40 winters, Bangkok is smelling pretty good.

Gingerbread DysFUNction

It seemed like a good idea at the time. You know, in that same category as opening another bottle of wine or giving your phone number to the guy who’d later become your husband.

It was a bit of synchronicity really. My husband saw a gingerbread kit at the supermarket. Then my neighbour – who makes Martha Stewart look lazy – announced she was making a gingerbread village.

Never Trust a Company That Can't Spell "Easy"

So, I took the plunge and purchased a gingerbread train assembly kit with an “E-Z Build Tray.” I should’ve known better than to trust a company that can’t spell easy.

***

“You’re in the middle of what?” my husband asks. I believe he nearly dropped his cell phone.

“Putting together a gingerbread house-thing,” I say, starting to doubt my already-weak confidence.

“Good luck with that,” he says. “I’ll be home soon.”

I pick up the box to see what I’m in for. Now, you know you’re in trouble when the instructions on the back direct you to watch a video. This isn’t an “add water and stir” muffin mix; this is a twelve step program. Since the nicely-manicured hand on the video constructs the train and caboose in just over two minutes, I am optimistic. Plus, given the gingerbread is pre-baked and the icing is pre-made, what could be so hard?

If the video doesn’t scare me off, the phone should when it rings again. It’s my neighbour – the Martha Stewart one who’s not only crafty but also kind and beautiful. She has just finished baking her umpteenth batch of cookies, bonding with her children. Can her daughter come over and play?

“Of course,” I say, before realizing there’ll be a witness to the carnage that is bound to happen.

I watch the video two more times, answer the door when her daughter arrives, and start peeling the plastic off the kit.

“Have you done one of these with your mom yet?” I ask, making conversation.

“Actually, my dad’s the one who usually makes it.” Excellent, now I’ll be compared to her dad, not a gourmand like his wife, but a let’s-build-a-dresser-and-paint-the-room-on-my-day-off type of guy.

I reread the directions on the box. The volume level in the kitchen is rising in direct proportion to the amount of candy that’s being pilfered from the gingerbread kit.

“Quiet,” I yell. “I need to think.”

This whole experience is bringing me to my knees.

First, I’m supposed to snap the pieces in half. I do this and the pieces break, but not where they’re supposed to. I end up using the icing to glue most of the pieces back to a recognizable shape. I let the kids eat a couple of wayward hunks.

Then my eight-year-old neighbour says, “You cut the hole on the icing bag way bigger than my dad does.” Uh oh.

Icing is everywhere: all over the pieces, all over the counter, all over me. I am now putting icing on the wrong pieces, and eventually resort to smearing it on with a knife. I construct something that resembles a train. You just have to use your imagination.

Finally, near exhaustion, I tell the kids to stick the candy on. They take pieces out of their mouths and plunk them on the icing.

If you tilt your head, it almost looks straight

“Is it leaning?” I ask, tilting my head.

“Yeah,” my neighbour says. “You forgot to let the icing dry first.”

“Okay, you three, go play,” I say. Then I lick the icing off the knife, eat the rest of the candies, and look up to see my husband walk in.

He examines our construction. “Nice outhouse – no offense. Do you know it’s leaning?”