I know I am a good mom when I pack a small bpa-free plastic container (festive, purple bottom/green top) with homemade meatballs and peas and rice and I remember the spoon too for our late afternoon trip to the park. I sense he is hungry and suggest a snack. He complies. He sits on my lap. I have one arm wrapped around his waist, holding the open container, with the other hand, I am scooping up spoonfuls of food. He has a grip on my wrist, guides the spoonfulls into his mouth when he is ready for them. Some rice grains fall off the spoon, onto my container-holding hand. He picks the grains off and puts them back in the container. I use my spoon-holding hand to help him with this.
I bring his new, expensive, Sigg sippy with us, the one he’d thrown a tantrum about a few weeks back, because I know the toddler friend we are meeting there has the same one. Jonah sees Laszlo drinking from his Sigg, and thus happily drinks the diluted apple juice in his own with no complaint.
At this same park, there is a massive brigade of sun-faded ride-on toys of nearly every imaginable size/shape/description. Nearly all of them have broken wheels, but they all still work. Several have been corralled underneath the play structure which is a series of wooden platforms joined by bridges. An abstract expressionist boat.
Jonah spots a Thomas the Tank Engine ride-on as soon as we arrive. As he toddles towards it, an older, faster boy runs around him and jumps on. Jonah is sad at first, but we find other things to play with: bucket loaders, dump trucks, etc.
Later another older boy has the Thomas. He is whipping it down the cement pathways at the closest to lightening speed that this toy and child could ever achieve. Jonah is desolate. He really wants to play with this train. No, I tell him. It’s that boy’s turn.
Half an hour later, Jonah still wants the train. I approach speedy-mc-speedyson and ask. “You’ve had the train for a long time. Jonah would really like to have a turn.”
At first the boy says no. Then mumbles something about just wanting to push it to the bench.
Okay.
Amazingly, he pushes it about two feet, and then relinquishes.
Pure. Joy. Ensues.
I take pictures with my camera phone and try to send them to Scott but coverage is spotty at this park.
Jonah plays with and on the Thomas for a while, until not only does he seem tired, but I realize it’s time for us to go home. I tell him we are going to go home now.
Again, amazingly, he doesn’t struggle. He gets off of the Thomas and says goodbye to it.
He’s sad though.
Wait, I tell him, we have pictures of you and Thomas!
I whip out the cell phone.
A huge smile spreads across his face.
Pure. Joy.
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I would like this to be the next meme to sweep the Internet. Do you have a good mom story? Anything, no matter how small. It all counts. If you would like, please tell me your good mom stories in the comments fields below — or write it on your own blog and post a link here.
Thank you.
What a great mama you are! What a wonderful afternoon at the park with Jonah!!!
I came here to leave my link and it’s already in the comments! fancy.
I loved your post — it’s so important to celebrate those victories!
Hi Julie! I came here from the link on Mayberry’s post. I did this meme, too.
Jennifer’s last blog post..I know I am a good mom when…
What a wonderful way to pat ourselves on the back for a change, instead of smacking ourselves on the forehead as per usual!
Courtney’s last blog post..i know i’m a good mom when…
What a wonderful post. Yesterday I would have said I didn’t have any good mom stories, but today I didn’t yell once, went on an adventure walk, cuddled more, took my kids out for lunch for no reason other than to celebrate their awesomeness…and it was a great day…and I was a great mom.
This morning was my good mom moment.
I take my son on the bus to preschool, and he does love that. And we’ll sometimes go what we call “the fancy way” to school after we get off the bus — slight detours on the way. Or we’ll jump over cracks or walk along the short concrete walls. So it’s pretty fun already. But this morning… this morning there was a sewer truck working right near his school. So we stopped and watched for about 15 minutes. Even though I kept saying every few minutes that we’d need to leave in a little bit so that he could get to school and I could get to work, I really did want to stay to watch the whole time. And so we did. When the guys were done working, they came over to say hi and to talk to my son about what they were doing (how cool is that?). Then it was time for us all to say goodbye.
Awesome way to start the morning.
I was bracing myself for something bad to happen–things were going TOO well–and I was SO happy that only good happened! I love this idea. I will think on it and write something, too.