My sweet amazing baby boy is now a tween. You know, that stage where mums are not quite as smart or cool … or necessary as they once were? Sure, they want you to get them a glass of water when they’re in bed. Sometimes they’ll throw you a bone and ask you to lay with them when they’re freaked out by some scary character they saw in a trailer on YouTube. Yep, they have to settle for horror movie trailers because that same annoying overprotective mother (you) said they weren’t old enough to watch Final Destination or SAW. (Smart choice)
Actually, tween really is the perfect term, as they’re truly somewhere between “Mummy will you come in my room?” and “Mum my room is off limits to you.” They’re between, “Mum I think Katie likes me because she always says ‘Hi,’ so what do I do now?” and Mum overhearing him tell some friends he wants to date Chastity because she puts out. (This is why you should never name your child Chastity … because irony is a bitch.)
I remember when the shift into tweenishness occurred. It was last year when he returned from sleep-away camp. He was able to fall asleep without me coming in. He was able to make decisions without conferring with me first. Damn stupid independence inducing, freethinking fostering camp! This year he’s not going, which I’m secretly thankful for (fingers crossed he’ll regress just a tad).
So the other day, in my son’s foray into tween-hood, he looked at me with those same wide eyes that once asked, “Mummy, when I’m older will you marry me?” and asked “Mum, I’m getting older, doesn’t that mean I should start wearing Hollister?”























