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With my little boy growing up fast, there have been a number of household activities that have become casualties of my toddler. 

One night, when he was precisely twelve months and two weeks old, completely out of the blue, my little boy Rafferty stood himself up and took twenty one wobbly steps across the room. It was his first real attempt at walking and he certainly looked very pleased with himself for making it that far on his little baby legs. I’ll never forget that moment, I was so elated but sad as well because it heralded the final days of my itty bitty baby and the dawning of a new era.

An era that means I cannot relax for one second.

A month later and we have a one hundred percent toddler on our hands. He walks rather than crawls, constantly falls flat on his face and has discovered the many, many exciting objects that are now within reach of his curious baby fingers. If he can grab it, he can destroy it, you can count on that.

Now that we have a toddler in the house, there are some things that my husband and I have abruptly had to kiss goodbye to for the foreseeable future.

Things we once so jovially took for granted are now lost to us as we adjust to living by Rafferty’s Rules:

Going barefoot in the house
What used to be floor is now a booby trapped obstacle course that must be negotiated with utmost care. Cookie cutters, Lego, plastic figurines and forks are just some of the things that really really hurt to stand on. I finally understand how my mother developed an obsessive habit of tidying, but it took a flesh wound involving the potato masher to get me there.

Using the oven
I can’t cook a roast or bake a cake unless Rafferty is asleep, because his endlessly inquisitive nature means he’s more than likely to yank open the oven door and attempt to cook his own head before I can stop him. Once that oven light goes on he is drawn to it like a moth to a bug zapper. Separating him from the kitchen with the help of a baby gate just results in climbing injuries so it’s frying pan (handle turned out of reach) and counter top slow cooker all the way.

Whole sentences
“So you’re not going to believe this, the other day – DON’T TOUCH THAT!!” Have you ever noticed parents of cartoon faced tots under the age of two can’t actually hold a conversation? It’s impossible to sit and have a chat because the second you look away the crafty rugrats are scaling the stair rail with a pair of scissors in their mouth. My poor friends don’t get to say much either – it’s not that I’m not interested, it’s just that I have to put the convo on hold so I can stop Raff from shoving my lipstick up the dog’s bum.

Hot drinks
I pour it. I sit down. I spend ten minutes trying to keep it out of the grasp of my toddler. I give up, tip it down the sink and have a swig from his milk bottle instead.

Any sense of household order
Generally before visitors come we all do that trick where you rush around with a vacuum cleaner then shove things into cupboards and make your house look like you don’t actually live in it – to at least present the illusion that you’re in control of your home and possessions.
When you have a toddler you can try to do this but before you can say “Bibbidi-Bobbidi-Boo” there is an upturned box of cereal on the kitchen floor, an unravelled roll of toilet paper in the bathroom and a puddle of milk because ‘yay’ – the baby has learned how to unscrew a lid.
Chaos reigns for the time being at my place – but so long as you don’t get the rats moving in it can actually be a little liberating to just go with a bit of untidiness. Life has changed and our house is a bombsite but at least it’s filled with love.

What has changed in your house now that you have a toddler?

 

  • Oh the joys of parenting…hehe
    I loved my eye level oven when my kids were little…it was a blessing

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  • He pulls whole cupboards apart. Toilet paper rolls in the toilet, permanent marker on the cream carpet, TV remote in sink, plastic toys in the oven that werent discovered until had heated it up and could smell them. The list goes on but as I write this he is into something else. Must go. lol.

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  • Omg our toddler is like a cyclone!!
    Nothing is safe from his throwing arm including the game machine hooked up to the TV!
    We have gates up and fences to block him from the TV, kitchen, our teen daughters room and no he’s managed to unlock the gates so they are tied shut!

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  • Uninterupted toilet time. Sigh. Also a full 3 minutes on the telephone with yelling out or being yelled at lol.

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  • I can’t have any vases with flowers on my coffee table or white covers on my lounge I’ve lost countless times of my little one spreading her grubby hands all over my freshly washed white sheets

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  • great article i remember those days oh so well, had to use kiddy locks where there had been none before and remember not to open them in front of my intelligent! Nothing was safe and climbing the order of the day, OH but how i missed him when he went to school!

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  • My house has been “toddlered” as well. What she said about the oven is so true! What’s the attraction? Luckily my oven has a lock on it so he can’t turn it on accidentally. He also likes to get plastic bottles out of the recycling. The worst is the tantrums and having to watch him constantly because they will always pick the most dangerous object to play with.

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  • Oh! I have so much to look forward to!

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  • Oh my Rafferty Rules, you had me smiling, laughing and cringing all at once through out the article. All the best of wishes to you and your family, and thanks for sharing your honest article/story.

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  • Great article!

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  • Great article, I can relate to all of above. But I\\\’d have loved that flesh wound from the potato masher any day over the incident when I slipped on a plate he was playing with, with laptop in my hand. Long story short, the laptop flew out of my hands and the display got spoilt. 🙁

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  • Kids, so spontaneous and you never know what they have in store for you next!

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  • So real and honest, great blog!

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  • OMG! This article made me laugh. I have 3 kids but I think its only with #3 i have learnt what trouble a toddler can get into. Anything I dont want him to touch he does. He pulls whole cupboards apart. Toilet paper rolls in the toilet, permanent marker on the cream carpet, TV remote in sink, plastic toys in the oven that werent discovered until had heated it up and could smell them. The list goes on but as I write this he is into something else. Must go. lol.

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  • Hahahahaha. i loved this. what a wonderful look at all the fun things.

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  • same here, and they just dont listen. they just want to do it…haha, thats why they have so much fun/. lol

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  • At 16 months DR started opening cupboards and was told to shut them. Now when we open them we have to be quick before he closes them. The same now applies to the fridge. He helps get the milk out of the fridge and put it back. At 16 months he found the buttons on the dishwasher at his Auntie’s place. The last time the result was dishwashing without dishes. As it is rarely used it was turned off at the power. Because of the pets the bedroom doors are shut most of the time. If you leave them open he shuts them, the bathroom and the laundry. When he knows it time to take his sister to school he often says “shoes on”. (there is a big age difference). He has had a fascination with lights since he was a small baby. Standing on tippy-toes the light switches are suddenly reachable at his Auntie’a house within the last month or so. He closes her doors too.

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  • lol thanks for a great read 🙂

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  • my daughter is experiencing the same with her little one

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  • ah yes, it is a long time before you get to taste hot coffee again

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