IMG_2033_edit

There is nothing like an afternoon nap. And by afternoon nap, I mean lying face down on the carpet while two wound up crazies jump around me. If I can manage to shut my eyes for a ten whole minutes, I consider that a win.

However, I do consider this as a form of gambling. Being able to feel slightly recharged to face the evening witching-hour-before-dinner-shenanigans is a high pay out for getting ten minutes of shut-eye. But a high pay out doesn’t come without high risk. Sometimes, I don’t get the short nap. Me lying on the floor can be an invitation for them, yes “them,” to come and aggressively jump on me and pretend I’m an airplane, a boat, or a dead donkey.

“GET UP DONKEY!” Ellie will shout.

Other times I actually do fall asleep, I never know what I’ll wake up to. It’s amazing what can happen in ten minutes. Chloe once colored her arms and legs with a marker. Another time she drew pictures on the wall. Other times someone might not have pants on (I usually do). One time, every book they owned was scattered around the room that I thought I woke up in a Barnes & Noble stock room. On the other hand, there are times I wake up and it’s eerily quiet. Chloe might be peacefully reading books on one side of the room while Ellie’s doing the same on the other. It’s remarkable, but almost too remarkable that has me feeling uneasy for the rest of the afternoon.

You might be asking, with such an inconsistent outcome, is the ten minutes even worth it? YES, Absolutely! Except, well, except this one time…

I decided to join them in the playroom to work on puzzles, but as soon as I sat down I knew sitting wouldn’t cut it. My legs felt like I just ran a marathon, my neck and back were stiff, and my eyes felt like Rocky’s after a fight. “Cut me, I can’t see!” I knew I needed to lie down. Just for ten minutes, that’s all.

The girls didn’t protest much and kept playing around me. Chloe was sitting at their kid table drawing on the white board. I remember taking a mental note feeling like that could be problematic, but I made no effort to adjust it. Sleep was closing in.

Ellie, on the other hand, announced she had to go to the bathroom. It was time for her 3pm deposit. She can usually be found singing Taylor Swift’s Shake it Off, or Let it Go from Frozen while she “works” (no joke). You can set your watch to her. I mumbled an “ok” with closed eyes and a shmooshed face on the carpet. With Chloe quiet and blissfully coloring, I began to relax more as I started drifting off. But before I had officially lost consciousness I heard a flush, followed by Ellie saying, “Uh oh, daddy…”

I knew this wasn’t anything to be alarmed about. This toilet clogs easily, and well, I may or may not have been in there before Ellie (that’s really not important to this story though). Anyway, I wasn’t worried and grumbled to her to leave it and that I’d fix it later. Her response to this was to flush it again, not once, not twice, but FOUR times in rapid succession.

But before I could protest to her over flushing, I heard the sound of water splashing against the cold tile floor.

Untitled2

“DADDY DADDY!!!” She yelled.

And I yelled back, “ELLIE ELLIE!”

I’m not going to lie. It was bad. With shag carpet still imprinted on my face, I grabbed the plunger and started working the obstruction while used toilet water kept spilling over the edge like the angry sea during a storm. After I opened the airways of the throne, I heard the secondary watery sound. It was like a river flowing in the distance. The toilet was free and clear, but all of the water that pooled up on the bathroom floor was draining through to the basement. Right into the room where I was storing parts of my freshly painted piano.

I just wanted to shut my eyes for ten lousy minutes, I thought.

I couldn’t even panic, I just stood there and watched in horror as the cloudy water dripped down into the basement. Ellie watched and curiously (and not concerned at all) asked, “What’s all that water from daddy?”

Needless to say, for the rest of the afternoon I cleaned and disinfected not only the bathroom, but the basement and everything in between. While I scrubbed and scoured, I had my little “manager” keeping me motivated. “Daddy, the bathroom is so dirty. Daddy, you need to clean up all this water.”

Really? I hadn’t noticed.

My friend is always crabbing on my ten minute naps. “Only ten minutes!? That’s such a tease. I need at least 90 minutes,” she’ll say with such authority as if she’s a professional napper with a Master’s Degree.

Ninety?!  If all this happens in less than ten minutes, Lord knows the crap I’d wake up to after ninety!!  Lucky for me, my kids will probably never give me the opportunity to find out…

One thought on “TEN MINUTES DOWN THE DRAIN

  1. ” “Only ten minutes!? That’s such a tease. I need at least 90 minutes,” she’ll say with such authority as if she’s a professional napper with a Master’s Degree.”

    Ha! Awesome.

Leave a Reply to Tim Brandt Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published.