Ahhh, I have learned my lesson when it comes to allowing the kids to play together during their rest. Not a good idea (at least at this age). Apparently, even the most obedient, compliant children can find a way to get into trouble, as evidenced by Leah and Hunter on Saturday afternoon in March.
Now keep in mind that I did have both monitors on, and could hear the kids, but, as most any mom will tell you, you don't focus on every single word. Instead, I listen for if the kids need help with something or seem to be in distress/upset. Since I never heard anything but giggles and happy sounding kids, well, I thought nothing of what was taking place upstairs.
Which is why I was floored and speechless when I walked upstairs to get the kids up. My first clue should have been hearing Hunter say, "Mommy, look at my hair!" But again, I paid no mind... until I SAW his hair plastered to his head with Vaseline. And not just a little bit-- almost an entire large tub of Vaseline.
"We were playing hairdresser, Mommy," Leah informed me with a grin, proud of her work, (at least scissors weren't involved) while I surveyed the mess before me: Vaseline smeared on the walls, the dog kennel, the carpet, the footstool. I just wanted to sit and cry (for Scott was working that night) or shout but instead I just opted for: "Get into the bath. Right now," which the kids happily obliged.
The Vaseline was so thick, that I couldn't even comb it; Hunter's hair did not MOVE. I sudsed him up and rinsed about five times but to no avail. At that point, I figured the only way to get it out of his hair was to reduce the amount of hair to begin with, so I grabbed the hair shears and started snipping here and there, my goal simply to shorten the hair so that I could work out the grease helmet. (Thankfully, the random snipping didn't result in the butchering I had anticipated; his haircut wasn't perfect, but it certainly wasn't as obviously bad as I had expected.)
Suds and rinse again. And again. Then I remembered: Google it. Course, I didn't want to step away from the tub long enough to run downstairs, conduct a search, and run upstairs all the while leaving the kids unsupervised. So, thanks to a phone call and my dad, I soon had a solution: olive oil, Dawn dish soap, and conditioner.
Well, that worked, but again, it required several cycles to make a difference. When I thought I had washed it all out, I pulled two very wrinkled kids out of the tub, got them dressed, then took them to my parents' house so that I could clean up the mess in Hunter's room. Not until we arrived at their house did I notice that their hair (for apparently Leah had a bit of Vaseline in it, too) still looked wet. And when I picked them up about an hour later, I noticed the same thing. After all that scrubbing and sudsing and repeating, their hair STILL HAD VASELINE IN IT!
But at that point, I knew it could wait for the morrow, for I was done.
And so, what have I learned from all this?
1. Even good kids have their moments.
2. Rest time is to be an independent "activity".
3. Don't leave a tub of Vaseline (lotion, shampoo, toothpaste, etc) unsupervised in reach of curious children.
| Not the clearest photo, but you get the idea. This is how I found him after Leah had "styled" his hair. |
| At least HE was all smiles, despite several shampoos and an impromptu haircut. |
| Notice the empty tub. That's how much was on my boy's head. |
| And this is what his hair looked like THE NEXT MORNING! |
| But how could I stay angry at a face like this? |

1 comment:
Seems like the kids really enjoyed playing hairdresser. lol! I could imagine what you have gone through, washing off that much vaseline from his hair. kinda cute! :) Well, I just love the part wherein you grabbed the hair shears and started snipping Hunter's hair. :D Did you use the Saki Katana hair shears? :)
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