Cartoonist, Artist, Geek, Evil Crafter, Girl Scout Troop Leader and Writer. Also, a zombie. I haven't slept in I don't know how long.

An Obsession With Nipples

Maybe it’s a breast feeding thing, but I’ve recently come to realize that both my children have an obsession with nipples. Well, not Cassie so much. She **had** an obsession with nipples when she was about Sam’s age (almost two) but I think she eventually grew out of it. Sam, however, is in the full height of nipple obsession, which means it will be a while before I can take her bra shopping with me.

Both girls were breast fed. In fact, I just weaned Sam about two months ago. I had planned to let the little fart wean herself, but she had already passed the point that Cassie stopped (18 months) and was not really nursing any more so much as chewing my nipples to death. I think she saw that last before bedtime nursing as a delaying tactic. She would chaw away and rather than drift off to sleep, keep herself awake by thrashing around in my lap, occasionally bashing me in the head with her flailing arms and legs. I got tired of this after a while and decided that since she wasn’t going to peaceably wean herself, I’d just have to do it for her and so I cut out that last nursing cold turkey.

Needless to say, what followed was a couple of weeks of Sam grabbing at my breasts right before bedtime, demanding to be fed. “Nurse! Nurse!” she’d scream. My solution was to hand her to Michael, who’s nipples are too hairy for Sam to chew on. Mine however, are still fair game, and Sam takes every opportunity to point them out when she sees them. If she sees me in the bathtub, Sam will point and go, “Nipples. Nurse.” That is the quickest way I know of for her to end my bath. I can’t get dressed fast enough, especially if I see her jaws open up to clamp down on my recently reclaimed nipples. Not that I think it will hurt if she latches on — god knows she killed off all the nerve endings in my nipples long ago — but I honestly to feel like dealing with the thrashing and beating that came to accompany those last nursing sessions. I mean really, do I need to be beaten black and blue by my toddler?

Sam is also fascinated with her own nipples, much the way Cassie was at her age. She will pull off her shirt to show them off at odd occasions. Again, makes it a little hard to go out with her in public places. And she will point out nipples if she sees them anywhere she goes (like if she sees a shirtless man in a poster or advertisement). Cassie used to do this. I remember one time sitting in zen meditation at home, with my Buddha figurine on the floor in front of me. Cassie walked up to the figure, looked at it and then pointed at the bare side of its chest to proclaim, “Buddha! Nipple!” And that killed that afternoon’s meditation, you can be sure.

Cassie is also the child who once ran through the bra section of a lingerie department in a J. C. Penny’s, screamaing, “Boobies! Boobies!” as she snatched bras off the rack. To this day, I still cannot walk into J. C. Penny’s.

But Sam’s latest fascination is not with anything on my chest, but rather with the small brown mole on my left arm. I’ve had this mole for as long as I can remember, and both kids are obsessed with it, to the point of driving me crazy. They like to poke and prod at it, even though I’ve told them not to. Sam in particular likes to grab at it and shout out, “Nipple!” “No, no,” I say. “That’s a mole.” “Nipple!” Sam insists. I live in fear of the day when she’ll try to latch on. If you ever see me walking around with a toddler fastened onto my left elbow, you know what happened.

Baby Names

I have no idea what to write today, but since I actually have a few moments of free time, I thought I’d do a blog entry. So this is one that’s been floating around in my brain for a while… all the nick names I’ve had for the kids.

Nick names for Cassie:

Cheeze Butt (because when she was an infant, her poop looked like pimento cheese, without the pimentoes)

Cassa-lassa

Sassy Cassie

Sassafrassa Cassa-lassa

Princess

Princess Bucket Head (because we had a toy bucket that we played with in the bathtub and sometimes I’d put it on her head and say it was a crown; it fit perfectly too)

Brownie (for her brown hair)

Little Miss Stinkpot (because she smells all stinky when she wakes up in the morning)

Booger Babe (for when she has a cold)

Farting Beauty from Patootie (because I got really tired of playing princesses one day and I needed something to break up the monotony)

Little Baby Screams-A-Lot (back when she had colic)

Nick names for Sam:

Sam I Am (a play on Samantha Ann)

Sammy Am (a play on Sam I Am)

Da Yellow Kid (she had jaundice when she was born)

Twinkie (again, refers to the jaundice and later on her blonde hair)

T. Willie Winky (a play on Twinkie)

Cuddle Bug (because she always liked to cuddle)

Bruiser (because she can also be a little thug)

Thuggie (see above)

Little Miss Piddly Farts (because I’m her mom and I can call her that)

Blondie (how did I get a kid with blonde hair?!)

Lumpkin (for those moments when she flings her self on the ground like a lump and refuses to move)

Chunky Baby (because she was so rolly-polly for so long)

There are plenty more nick names for the girls. I make up new ones all the time. It’s a habit I get from my dad. He had quite a few for me and my sister – Rumpus McGoon (me) and Rumpus McBean (Carolyn), Helly Jelly Belly (me), Carolina Moon (Carolyn), etc., etc. I’ll add more names to the girls’ lists as I remember them.

Episode 06 – Of freaks and “normal” mommies

CW_toon_20080711

True story!  This has actually happened to me on a couple of occasions.  Thus I no longer join mommies’ groups.  Not that I don’t have a mommy posse.  I do, but we’re all too weird to be a proper mommies’ group.  We’re more like a murderous gang of heathens and freaks.  Seriously, don’t piss any of us off.  We might have to rub you out.  Or else let Mary jab you with a hypodermic needle.  She’s a nurse, she can do that.  She can give you a colonoscopy too, so watch it pal…

Episode 04 – Just Another Day In The Office

We had a fun weekend at La Casa Madden. On Saturday morning, after going through karate and swimming lessons, Cassie suddenly came down sick – temperature of 103 degrees, chills, sore throat, aches and pains. I promptly put the Princess to bed and babied her with juice, sherbet, Disney movies, whatever would keep her content while she rested. She puked once, all over the couch and herself, and complained of being cold and unable to sleep, but otherwise she was okay. Well, not **okay** okay — she was looking pretty pale and scrawny — but I knew with enough viewings of Beauty and the Beast, she’d live.

Cassie’s illness sort of threw all our weekend plans into a tailspin, however. We missed her best buddy’s birthday bowling party that afternoon, and I have heard nothing but, “But I wanted to go bowling!” and “I LOVE bowling!” ever since. Cassie doesn’t even know what bowling is, but man she sure wanted to go to that party. Michael did get some house work done that he’d been planning, but since I spent so much time tending to Cassie, my plans to rapidly accomplish my work went down the tubes real quick. Tasks that should have taken an hour tops took five. I just couldn’t concentrate when all I could hear is this tiny, whiny little voice in the background going, “But I LOVE bowling!” Mary, if you’re reading this, we are taking the kids bowling SOON. Otherwise I may just have to throw myself through a window to escape that sound.

So I was all discombobulated as usual this weekend… the weekend that I had to proof my final novel galley, the weekend that I had to do up promo materials for a convention I’m headed off to in a few days, the weekend I had hoped would go so smoothly. Nothing new. Just another day in the office.

Episode 01 and Welcome!

Welcome to ‘The Adventures of Cynical Woman!’ This is the official home for the Cynical Woman cartoons, written and drawn by Helen E. H. Madden. Basically, this is my life as a stay-at-home mom and erotica writer. If you like the cartoons, feel free to print them out or pass them on to your friends. These cartoons are protected under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. That means you can share it, but you can’t sell it or take credit for it. Thanks!



Cookie-gate Resolved (And I Cut Off The Tip Of My Finger!)

Since I just know people are sitting on the edges of their seats waiting to hear all about how Cookie-gate turned out…

It turns out I blew up all over nothing.

Yep, yours truly got all wound up and frothing at the mouth over a misunderstanding. It seems that the preschool teacher got too many cookies from all the various moms last week, so she decided the class would have two parties – one last Friday before Easter and one later this week. She handed out the homemade cookies on Friday, since they weren’t sealed in packages. Thus Cassie’s cookies were ‘the wrong type of cookies.’ Because the cookies I picked up were sealed in a plastic container, Ms. D. thought they were more likely to stay fresh until next week, so she set them aside for the second party. But Cassie, being five, didn’t understand this and so that’s why she was upset. But she’s much happier now that they’ve had the second party and she’s gotten to share her cookies with the rest of her classmates.

And do I feel like a dumb-ass about all this?

Well, maybe…

I do think I’ve had more than a few bones to pick with Ms. D., and justifiably so, but this particular incident just goes to show the hazards of feeling antagonistic toward a teacher. Fortunately, I realized that there might be some sort of misunderstanding going on before Monday came around, so I made sure that Michael was the one who asked about the cookies that day instead of me, because I was still in an uproar even then. Michael’s got a much cooler head than I do, and I know this and I rely on this, which is the best proof I have that yes, I do actually have a brain. That and the fact that I took Mary’s advice to calm down and not go in with guns blazing over two packages of cookies. Good advice, by the way.

Meanwhile, this whole thing makes me realize a few things. First, I shouldn’t let previous incidents color my understanding of current goings-on between Cassie and her teachers, especially when my knowledge of current goings-on comes only from Cassie. She’s five. She’s smart. She’s honest. But she’s **five**, and she gets confused.

Second, I’m still way too stressed from the previous weeks leading up to my major mental freak-out the other week. I need to calm down. But it’s hard to do that when…

Third, I’ve quit breastfeeding and my hormones are on a rampage. My emotions are just running amok and I get pissed over every little thing still. Plus my boobs hurt and I somehow gained five pounds in one night which was really uncomfortable for a few days. The extra weight did disappear, but the hormones are still doing their freaky-ass thing, so I need to make extra sure I don’t bite off anyone’s head unnecessarily.

And finally, I need to remember that above all else, when my hormones are out of control and I’m in a bad mood, I should be extra careful when slicing onions because I just about julienned the middle finger of my left hand on Saturday night, and that’s making it rather hard to type right now.

Therefore, I’m going to bed.

Now I’m Mad

I had planned to write tonight about how nice my week has gone. I’ve slowed down, quit worrying about the housework, I’ve taken naps most afternoons, and spent more time with Michael and the kids. And it’s been nice… really, really nice.

But now I’m pissed.

Cassie had an Easter party at her pre-school today. I got the request to bring in cookies last week. Being overloaded and short on time, I thought I’d buy some nice cookies from the store. Not just any old box of Oreos, mind you, but actual Easter cookies with decorations from the bakery section.

So I bought the cookies yesterday, Thursday, to make sure they’d be reasonably fresh. No point in buying cookies a week in advance just to have them go stale before the party, right? Because no one should have to eat stale cookies at a party. Then Thursday afternoon when I went to pick up Cassie from pre-school, one of her teachers, Ms. D, asked me if I’d forgotten to get the cookies.

“No, I got them this afternoon. Cassie is bringing them in tomorrow morning.”

“Oh!” said Ms. D. “See, we expect the moms to bring stuff in a few days before, so we know we’ve got it all.”

“Well that’s the first time I’ve heard of this,” I replied.

“Yeah,” Ms. D went on. “All the other moms have been bringing stuff in all week long. We just thought maybe you forgot.”

“No,” I said, a little annoyed. “I bought Easter cookies today, and Cassie will bring them in tomorrow. If you needed them earlier, I’m sorry, but there was nothing on the note you sent out saying anything about that.”

“Oh well, I guess it’ll be okay.”

After that conversation, I was a little annoyed about not being told to bring stuff in earlier in the week. But only a little. I figure, it’s no big deal, right? Let the matter drop.

So Cassie went in this morning with two boxes of Easter cookies, and let me tell you, they were nice cookies – shortbread in the shape of eggs and lilies and rabbits with lots of sparkly pastel sprinkles and dipped in chocolate on the back. And they were BIG cookies, and when Cassie saw them, her eyes lit up and she got really excited about bringing them in and sharing them with her classmates, and I thought, “Yeah, I picked out some good cookies. The kids are really going to enjoy these.”

Only they never got the chance.

I picked up Cassie at pre-school around 4:30PM today. Ms. D sat in a chair, watching the kids’ afternoon movie, and said “Hi” but that was it. I took Cassie home, made her and Sam a snack, Michael brought home dinner, we watched a movie, yadda, yadda, yadda. At bedtime, Cassie came downstairs to kiss me good night. “How did your Easter party at school turn out?” I asked. “Okay, but Ms. D wouldn’t hand out my cookies.”

What?

“Uh, what do you mean?” I asked. “Daddy did hand her the cookies, right?”

“Uh-huh, but Ms. D decided not to hand them out at the party, so we only ate Sally’s mommy’s cookies instead.”

Say what?!

“Why didn’t Ms. D hand out the cookies?” I asked, starting to fume.

“She said they were the wrong kind.”

Cassie was visibly upset about this, and I was suddenly struggling to keep my cool, because I could just imagine Ms. D giving Cassie a stern lecture about how the cookies were the wrong kind and there was no way she was handing them out so quit bugging her and go sit down. Obviously, I don’t know exactly how it went, but I’ve dealt with Ms. D before, and I think I’ve got a pretty good idea of how she probably bulldozed over my kid over something small and stupid. And it pisses me off, because this is not the first time we’ve had a situation like this.

There have been a few times over the past year and a half that Cassie has been in that class that Ms. D has informed either Cassie or myself that we have not met some sort of unwritten standard. The first time was way back in January 2007, right after Cassie had moved up to the 4-year-olds’ class, and Ms. D complained that Cassie could barely write her name. Now I specifically asked before allowing Cassie to be moved up if there were any prerequisites that she needed to have before going in there, and I was told no, that Cassie could sit still and pay attention for more than five minutes so she was more than ready. But Ms. D seemed to think that Cassie had a learning problem because she couldn’t write her name perfectly within the first month of joining the class. She wasn’t even four yet, for Christ’s sake!

Later on the following summer, we had the “bag lunch” incident. Cassie’s class went on a field trip. I got a note saying to pack a bag lunch. I thought, “I’ll get a cooler bag for Cassie so that her milk and the cheese in her sandwich don’t go bad.” That afternoon after the field trip, I got a lecture on how it’s too hard for the teachers to deal with cooler bags and I should have known to pack everything in a disposable grocery bag. Except how am I supposed to know this when it wasn’t specifically stated? When I went to school, you didn’t use grocery bags for lunches, you used a METAL lunch box, and you certainly didn’t throw the damn thing out after one meal.

Since then, I’ve heard complaints that Cassie can’t color in the lines, which apparently will cause her to flunk out of kindergarten next year because in kindergarten they take those things very seriously. Imagine the horrified look on Ms. D’s face when I told her that I was a professional artist and that I consider coloring in the lines to be a sign of creative death and dictatorial brain-washing. And no, I wasn’t joking.

Then we had a lovely incident over the holidays when another child accused Cassie of tearing a paper pop-up play-set that she had brought in. This child swore that Cassie had torn the play-set, so Ms. D put Cassie in time out, and when I came in, she told me that Cassie had torn the play-set and had gotten into trouble for it. And I, believing that this was exactly what had happened because Ms. D surely wouldn’t have put Cassie in time out otherwise, gave Cassie a stern lecture about being careful with other people’s property and then I made Cassie apologize to the other child. Then, just as we were leaving, the other child’s mother showed up, and I took the opportunity to offer to pay for a new play-set, and the mother said, “Well, let’s look at the damage first.” And she pulled out the play-set and set it up and looked it over and couldn’t find a single thing wrong with it. Nothing was torn, nothing was out of place. It was as good as new. And then the other child looked at it and couldn’t find the spot where Cassie had supposedly torn it because it wasn’t there. So that child had to apologize to Cassie, and I apologized too for lecturing her when she hadn’t done anything wrong. But Ms. D? Oh, she just got this funny look on her face and walked away.

Yeah…

Oh, and let’s not forget the time Ms. D told me that Cassie was probably ADD and would most likely be culled from kindergarten because every now and then, Cassie spaces out in class. And this is how I found out about THIS particular issue…

Ms. D: “Just so you know, Cassie’s not been paying attention very well in school this past week.”

Me: “Well, that’s probably a hold over from too much TV at home over the holidays. We’re back on a stricter schedule, so I’m sure she’ll straighten out soon. If you have any problems though, please let me know.”

Ms. D: “Oh, we’ve been having this problem since day one. It’s just that lately, it’s gotten a lot worse.”

Me: “Huh?”

Ms. D: “Cassie always spaces out, she’s always the last one to finish up her meals, always has to be reminded to finish up her work… You know if she continues like this in kindergarten, they’ll probably diagnose her as ADD.”

Me: “And this has been a problem for HOW LONG?”

Ms. D: “Since her first day here.”

Me: “That was over a year ago. And you’re telling me about this NOW?!”

Please explain to me, what kind of fool notices a problem and says nothing about it for over a year? Oh, and for the record, kids can only be diagnosed by doctors, not by teachers, and our doctor told me that no one would even consider looking at a child and labeling them as ADD if they were younger than six, and even then, it’s questionable.

But we’ve moved past the ADD thing, and the coloring thing, and the Cassie-can’t-write-her-name thing and the Cassie-got-punished-for-something-she-didn’t-do-thing, and now we’re on the Cassie-brought-in-the-wrong-cookies thing. And I’ve about had it. Yeah, it’s a stupid little thing, but here’s my beef. First, if there was a specific type of cookie that was considered “wrong” as opposed to “right,” then why wasn’t that specified in the note that was sent out? The only problem I can think of is that the cookies had chocolate on the back of them, so the kids might have gotten their hands a bit messy, but isn’t that what napkins and paper towels are for? And doesn’t the classroom have a sink with soap and water? And aren’t the kids required to eat IN THEIR SEATS LIKE GOOD LITTLE MINDLESS ZOMBIES SO THEY CAN’T POSSIBLY MAKE THAT MUCH OF A MESS ANYWAY?! Oh, and if Ms. D didn’t pass out the cookies to the class at the party, what did she do with them? Pass them out to the other teachers and staff? Eat them herself? She sure as hell didn’t hand them back to me, the person who paid for them.

So I want to know. What was wrong with the cookies? Where are they now? And why did I have to find out about this whole mess from my daughter instead of her teacher? Hmmmm? Let me tell you something. Come Monday afternoon, when I arrive to pick up Cassie, I am going to find out the answers to those questions, and then regardless of what happened to the cookies, Ms. D is going to say thank you to Cassie for bringing them in, especially if those cookies got eaten by the staff instead of the children they were meant for. And if Ms. D doesn’t say thank you to Cassie, then one of the pre-school administrators WILL because I’m tired of this garbage, and Ms. D is going to find that out in no uncertain terms.

I’ll let you know how it goes…