If you’ve read this blog often enough, you’ve seen my posts about how hard motherhood can be—like the time one kid trailed poop after her all over the house, or the long length of time breastfeeding was insanely hard, or the roughly 12 months I didn’t sleep more than 3 hours in a row. But sometimes motherhood is awesome.
Take, for instance, the other day. Peeper and I made cookies for absolutely no reason other than the fact that sugar and chocolate chips are delicious. When they were done, the heavenly smell of perfectly browned cookies filled the house.
Shockingly, Kiwi was still asleep—couldn’t she smell the chocolate chip cookies?—so Peeper and I got some more one-on-one time.
I decided to teach her a vital life lesson.
Dunking cookies and bonding
Some life lessons are hard to teach—like that friends aren’t always nice to you, or that there are people in the world who value girls less than boys. This was not one of them.
I poured two cups of milk. I placed two chocolate chip cookies on plates. I sat Peeper down at the table.
And I taught her how to dunk a cookie in milk.
Peeper had never dunked a cookie, but the practice combines two of her favorite things—dessert and milk.
She and I ate our milk-softened cookies, still warm from the oven, and giggled. It felt as if we were sharing a beautiful secret. The feeling of doing something special just for us filled the room like the scent of baking chocolate.
Cookies and milk and motherhood
Kiwi woke up a few minutes later. I still try to limit her sugar as much as I can, so before I got her from the crib I cleaned up the evidence of cookies and milk.
When Kiwi and I rejoined Peeper in the living room, Peeper looked up at me and smiled. She had a smear of chocolate on one cheek. As I smiled back at her I thought, Motherhood is awesome.
I love this! I am really love the stage Piper is in (12 months) but I am so excited for making memories like this when she is a bit older. Also, milk and cookies are delicious and now I want some myself 🙂
Aw what a lovely memory to cherish. I make an effort to spend time with each of my children doing small things, teaching them small things but making lasting memories.
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