Admit
it, you’ve done it too. While enjoying the warm, comfortable glow of
drink and good company, you casually make a commitment you’d think
damn hard about if sober and alone. Which you are, 24 hours later, when
you’re reminded of what you said yesterday and the full implications
settle around you like damp fog.
Here’s
the story. Our oldest friends, Chris and Rachel, were to meet my wife
and me in darkest Worcestershire at the home of mutual friends John and
Claire, who were going away for a weekend to celebrate their tenth
anniversary. Our challenge was to look after their two children: Jess, four, and Alec,
who’s two. Doubtless all you parents out there
are wondering why on earth this should be noteworthy, but from our
perspective as childless 40-somethings, the prospect was distinctly
challenging.
Elizabeth
and I decided years ago that parenthood was not for us. Chris and Rachel
were, I think, quite relieved when it became apparent it was not going
to be for them either. Neither in my work nor my social life are
children a factor. They occupy a similar position in my mind to violent
criminals--I’m aware they’re out there, but I meet them very
seldom and indeed try not to have any contact with them without the
backup of experienced people trained in restraint techniques. And I had,
in appallingly carefree manner, agreed to spend a whole weekend in
charge of two of these strange creatures. It was going to be four adults
to two children--we were heavily outnumbered. How would we cope? Yes,
we’d all met the kids before--often enough to have earned our
honorary titles of ‘Uncle’ and ‘Auntie', but always with the
parents there. This time, we were on our own.
As
Operation Bratwatch drew nearer, Chris and I swapped gloomy e-mails
about the ordeal. We drew strength from the fact that our wives are both
gifted with the kind of ‘can-do’ practicality that laughs at most
problems short of a VCR that needs programming. We were fairly sure that
we could rely on the girls to deal with what seemed the thorniest of all
the problems--that of what we’ll delicately call ‘bathroom
issues’. It was clear to us that when it came to dealing with an
allegedly potty-trained four-year-old girl, and a two-year-old boy still
in nappies, we men were so far out of our depth that salvage crews would
soon be sending down lights and cameras to make History Channel
documentaries. “Definitely a job for someone with ovaries,” we
concluded.
Come
the weekend itself, Elizabeth and I packed carefully, each in charge of
one area of essential resources. She had acquired most of the free
world’s supply of coloured paper and a pack of multi-coloured felt-tip
pens. I had a case of beer and two bottles of whisky. (Chris was going
to bring the wine. And more beer.) I also had two packets of cigars, a
fully-charged flashlight, some distress maroons and an amply-stocked
first aid kit. Sorted.
We
had what the economists call ‘a soft landing’, since by the time we
arrived on the Friday evening, the child-minder had carried out all our
duties in admirable fashion, and the little ones were fed, cleansed,
storied, and asleep in bed. The child-minder was a slim, blonde
thirty-something with a fetching smile. I was tempted to ask her to stay
the weekend for all sorts of reasons, few if any of which would have
found much favour with my dear wife, so I regretfully put the idea
aside. Indeed, it seemed she had to get back to her own brood and so we
were left on our own to peruse the six or seven closely-written sheets
of notes that John and Claire had left us, dealing in great detail with
the various plans and routines that we had to adhere to. I glanced over
the list of emergency phone numbers: psychotherapist, exorcist, The
Samaritans--okay, we were covered. I must admit that if I had spent
longer studying this document, I might have been more aware of the
crucial importance of the correct coloured towels come bath-time, but I
was challenged enough by the prospect of breakfast being required
between 7 and 7.30. On a Saturday morning? Dear God.
We
tiptoed round the silent house for a little while, familiarising
ourselves with the position of the baby monitors and the drinks cabinet,
according to our own individual priorities. We had time for a quick
supper before Chris and Rachel arrived. We showed them the baby monitors
and drinks cabinet, and I’m sure they were impressed by our competent
grasp on the situation. I know I was. In fact, so easy did the whole
thing seem at that stage, that it didn’t appear unreasonable to relax
over a glass of whisky. To discuss the next day’s schedule over
another glass of whisky. To decide, over a glass of whisky,
who would go shopping for essentials like food and more whisky.
By one in the morning, however, the great weight of responsibility was
beginning to tell and so we decided to turn in.
The
fun started before 6 a.m.
Rachel, being an early riser, was first in the
field, so to speak, and reacted admirably quickly to the sounds of
children who were awake and waiting less than patiently for some
attention. Uncle Chris was, I fear, still weighed down by the
responsibility of the previous evening’s whisky, and my wife doesn’t
do mornings over well, which left me to go and assist Rachel. After
taking as much time as possible over shaving, I joined the fray.
I
don’t propose to detail everything that happened over the next two
days. Much of it would be familiar to many of you, and in any event, my
memory is a little blurry in places. Here, instead, are some unsorted
episodes and lessons learned from that strange time. If they seem a
little chaotic and disordered, I assure you that’s entirely
appropriate.
My
own childhood recollection is that adults were a strange, probably alien
species whose habits, motivations and methods were manipulative, obscure
and arbitrary. I am now convinced that I had this the wrong way round.
Just
because a child doesn’t answer sometimes doesn’t mean they haven’t
heard. They might just be busy with something you don’t understand,
silly. And remember that everything is noted down and may be used in
evidence against you at a later date.
I
quickly learned not to engage Jess in debate. Despite her age, she could
put her small pink finger unerringly on any flaw in my argument when it
came, for instance, to why we should all stay at table until everybody
had finished eating. Possibly if I’d trained as a financial adviser I
could have matched her for low cunning, but as it was I left her to
Elizabeth who--with the same womanly armament as Jess plus years of
experience--proved a more worthy adversary. I admired the cut and
thrust, especially when Jess remarked to Elizabeth
that “if you didn’t keep answering me back,
you’d have finished by now.” Elizabeth
smiled serenely and said, “Jess, as usual, your
logic is impeccable,” which earned her at least a breathing space
before the next frontal assault.
I
found Alec much easier to deal with. Maybe it’s that male bonding
thing. Maybe, since I smoke the same brand of cigar as his father, I
smelt right. (Cue damnatory chorus from wives, mothers and aunties.) But
we got along pretty well, and before the end of the weekend he was “my
main man,” which seemed to please both of us. And I have to admit that
we had a lot of fun with the train set, even if the two uncles took
disturbing pleasure in building a track layout that would inevitably
lead to collisions – but you could argue that seems natural for those
used to British public transport. Alec took to the notion with great
relish, at any rate.
Not
that it was all plain sailing, even with him –
at one point I asked Elizabeth
if she had her travelling sewing kit, as I felt an
urgent need for a vasectomy to make absolutely sure I never had to go
through this full time. And the dear boy threw an ubertantrum after bath
time on Saturday night, for reasons still not clear to me, during which
he bit me. I adopted the same technique as recommended for putting drops
into a cat’s ear: wrap securely in a towel and hold on grimly until
the storm has passed. Uncle David’s story-reading was abusively and
tearfully rejected, and my role instead was to keep Jess more or less in
bed (“okay, bouncing counts, but please be careful”) until Rachel
had calmed Alec down and got him into bed. I was afraid that I
wouldn’t be his friend the next morning, but, bless him, when we next
met at some unearthly hour of Sunday morning, he grinned at me hugely
and held out his arms for a cuddle. All the previous evening’s
frustration was washed away and we had a whole new bright day to play
in.
Always
investigate items in children’s hands. Jess played happily for a while
with a small black thing which she said was “hers, and you can’t
play with it.” Whatever keeps you quiet, I thought, and left her to
it. Only later did we discover it was the remote control of the garage
door, which must have been up and down like a yo-yo all afternoon,
doubtless to the bemusement of the neighbours.
Offering
a ‘baby’ knife and fork to a grown lady of four is a mortal insult,
and is a very bad start if you’re hoping for a peaceful mealtime.
‘Shrek’
is a great film. It will keep adults entranced and quiet for ages,
allowing children a blessed opportunity to get on with something
restful, like painting the cat. If this takes longer than anticipated,
let the grown-ups watch ‘Monsters, Inc’ afterwards.
And
so the weekend passed. If not a time of constant peace and harmony, it
was at least ‘a slice’, as they say, and I think there was as much
laughter and contented play as tears and stifled swearing. The Uncles
did manage to slip away to the garage for a discreet beer and smoke from
time to time (“just checking the door is closed, dear,”) and the
Aunties did Aunty stuff too. When John and Claire returned home on
Sunday afternoon, the four temporary substitutes declared with one
quavering voice that we’d never, in all our years of friendship, been
so glad to see them. The children, too, swarmed all over them and
watching the joy and love of the re-united family group, I was almost
tempted not to be recovering from minor surgery in the near future.
Shortly thereafter, however, I was called upon to play piggy-back with
Jess (despite my protest that I did not have the necessary dorsal muscles) and the feeling passed. But it was a near thing. I still
don’t long for children, but I must admit it’s quite nice to be an
Uncle.