This post was originally published on Role Reboot and has been republished with full permission.
Our youngest son moved his berry lips from the dark of my nipple to the paler, smoother skin around the corner and blew a raspberry on my right breast.
He did this intermittently between bits of what could best be described as hum-nursing, or sing-nursing. Sometimes, he would also launch his bum into the air as if in downward dog.
That’s not weird at all.
That was my husband, from across the room.
I know, you probably agree with him.
Our baby is no longer a baby. He’s a toddler. He is a walking, talking, running, laughing, throwing and dancing toddler. He loves pasta and salami, fruit of any kind and cucumbers. He no longer sleeps in our bed, and he carries his sneakers out from his room in the morning. He’s making it clear that he’d like to be treated like the big kids.
He wants to do what his four-year-old brother does. Last week, he took off his diaper in the bathroom and started to pee. I tried to stand him over the “potty” but he wasn’t interested in that little baby potty. He wanted to be at the big toilet. You can imagine this scene unfolding, with him spinning like a renegade sprinkler.