My husband permanently excused himself from any sort of advanced homework help when he glanced at our then sixth-grade son’s math worksheet and airily said, “Oh, I don’t know how to do that. Go ask your mom.”
Far from admitting any weakness, this move of my husband’s was pure genius. I wish I’d thought of it first.
Like it or not, I’m now the sole information desk for kids with ages in the double digits. It can fry the brain cells, I tell you. (Not to mention the nerves.) Concerning math, my career ended in high school long, long ago. I have the dubious distinction of having graduated from college without ever taking a math class. (Yay, AP calculus!)
Yet math is everywhere, right? So in an effort to brush up on my skills, I present the kind of math that abounds in our household. I can thank the first vivid equation for inspiring me to think in such mathematical terms.
• A 4-year-old who seldom flushes + 1-year-old who loves to splash = a 97-decibel scream of discovery, 15 towels and a mid-afternoon bath (thus rewarding 1-year-old who loves to splash). Sigh . . . (and no, I was not calm enough to take a picture!)
• Kid with candy + dad in the room = “Daddy tax.”
This sum is the same as: Kid – candy.
• Teenage boy’s hunger is directly proportional to amount of food in the house.
• Teenage boy burns more calories repeatedly opening fridge and pantry doors than can be replaced by the food he hopes to find.
• No matter how many days, or even weeks, a child knows about a school assignment, homework can be done in one hour – as long as it’s the eleventh hour.
• There is no way to evenly divide a pan of brownies among five kids. Especially when you factor in one chocolate-loving mom.
• A 1-year-old + a clean room = a messy room.
• Each pair of so-called helping hands in the kitchen increases meal preparation time by 25 percent. Clean-up time increases by 75 percent. (Amount of helpers now drops precipitously.)
• Number of laundry loads rises as the temperature outside plummets. (Who ever promoted dressing in layers, anyway?)
• Items normally used as pairs will become fractions the minute you need them: shoes, socks, mittens, etc.
• Every new child adds 20 minutes to estimated departure time – forget arrival time!
3 comments:
Jennifer! What a great blog! I laughed myself silly! You should write a book!
I love it! So true and so funny! It seems like my math skills are right where yours are! I'mso glad you have a forum now for your insigtful, humor-filled writing! Can I put a link on my blog?
Jennifer, I don't have a blog yet, so I guess I can't automatically see when you update yours. Please let me know when you do new posts, and I'll be sure to come visit! I love your humor!!!!
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