
I was bullied as a kid. Head in snowbanks, surrounded by kids throwing kickballs at my head, names without games...You say it, I probably had it done to me. As I got older, I realized that some of it was how I saw the world. Simple misunderstandings. Such as in high school, I was asked if I liked toe jam. I thought I would be received with laughter and high marks for humor when I replied that it was yummy in a dead pan, serious sort of way. Nope. I was tagged as the freshman girl with questionable hygiene who snacked on toe fuzz for my first few months there. Luckily, I've always found a quirky soul to hang with and a patient teacher here and there. I've also had the strength to mature and realize that not everyone is out to get me. Just a few people who have bad senses of humor, don't like toe jam, and don't hum their own tunes to themselves in the hallway.
Imagine my surprise, then, to discover this weekend that sweet baby G is out to get her big brother. Though not in a malicious way. It's more of a little sister trying to keep up with big brother sort of way. Yesterday we took the kids' bikes to the reservoirs and when G tired of her bike, she walked. Then she decided that big M should hold her bike and she should chase little M. Then, when she couldn't catch Little M cruising ahead on his bike, she would cry. Moan. Hide her face in her hands, lean against the wall and curse the sky. Little M, kind guy that he is, would stop, turn around and go to comfort her. She'd leap up and run ahead and shout, "Nananna Boo boo," or some such and stick out her tongue and repeat the whole process when he superceded her. Without fail. He would comfort and she would trounce on his kindness. If you have enough energy to pick on your sibling, you're clearly not being worked hard enough. We put her back on her bike to stop the madness.
Even this morning, at breakfast, Little M ate quietly considering the day of rugby and swimming that laid before him. She, frustrated with the quiet, said, "Your bread stinks." For all I could tell - and I do have that hypersensitive pregnancy nose - it smelled fine. It smelled like honey and peanut butter. Little M was worried, how should he respond? I told him his toast was fine and to ignore her. She said, "Your peanut butter stinks." He asked in tears, "Does it stink?" No, no. I am trying to teach him that kids say rude and untrue things about his food at school and now even his sister says rude and untrue things. That these comments are silly and not worth his worry. If he knows the truth, that his bread is unstinky, then these comments have no bearing. G continued, "You stink." Little M sighed, summoned his patience and said, "Stinky bread makes you strong and smart. You want some?" G laughed and finished his stinky toast for him. They then took their stinky selves and made a meerkat den in the living room.