Kid Konversations with Kara

Sometimes the conversations I overhear coming from the next room over are absolute comedy gold—sparkling nuggets of nonsense that make me laugh out loud mid-coke sip (which is always a dangerous game in a house with a long haired dog). Other times, they make me cock an eyebrow in quiet concern, like, should I intervene or just let Darwin handle this one? And every now and then, a few special exchanges make me stop everything I’m doing and seriously reevaluate how the human race has made it this far without just giving up and handing the planet over to the dolphins.

This morning’s gem falls somewhere in that magical middle ground—hilarious, humbling, and deeply educational. The kids had just finished their gourmet breakfast of what ever flavor packet of oatmeal they grabbed and a suspiciously sticky banana (seriously, how does fruit get that sticky?), and I had sent them off with vague but hopeful instructions to “clean up.” You know, the kind of parenting that feels responsible but is really just a clever way of buying yourself seven minutes of uninterrupted sitting.

From the kitchen came the clink of dishes being clumsily stacked, a spray of running water, and then—right on cue—the kind of quote that could only come from the feral minds of my offspring.

“Wow, you’re so good at dishes!” said Slayden, in a tone that was half amazed and half deeply confused, like he’d just witnessed a squirrel doing math.

There was a brief pause, and then Kara, the reigning queen of smug wisdom in our home, replied with utter certainty and no hesitation whatsoever: “Slayden, girls are just better than boys.”

Now let me paint you a picture here. Slayden is my tank. He’s the one most likely to break a door handle just by existing too hard near it. He’s seven years old, built like a mini M1A1 Abrams, and wakes up every day with the energy of a Red Bull-fueled jackrabbit. He doesn’t walk through the house—he charges. And yet, despite all that bravado and brute force, he looked at his sister with awe. Not anger. Not argument. Just acceptance. Like some tiny part of him went, yeah, that checks out.

Kara, for her part, didn’t even look up. She just kept rinsing a spoon like she was a lady Solomon. Cool, collected, and handing down gender-biased truth bombs without flinching.

Slayden after receiving the highly sophisticated and gilded smackdown of the century, took a moment to process what had happened to him, and the ran into the Living room, and returned with a pillow, holding it aloft and declaring, He was better at something in this life, No one could contest that the pillow he held aloft could be held up any better by anyone else, ever.

And indeed, in that moment, I let him hold that belief. Hold on to that pillow Slayden, and don’t let the man, or in this case, the sister get you down!

It’s moments like these that remind me that my kids are growing up—and faster than I’m ready for. They’re figuring things out in their own wild, unfiltered ways, and I’m just the lucky bystander with a front-row seat and a running notepad.

Welcome to Kid Konversations. God help us all.

hope todays a good one,
-austininva

My Little Toothbrush Tyrant

There is a clear hierarchy established within our household. The order of authority and roles is as follows:

  1. Me and Jo
  2. Moira
  3. The dog (Which one, depending on the day.)
  4. Probably Slayden
  5. Kara if she hasn’t tattled
  6. Logan when he’s not hiding snacks
  7. The vacuum

Around bedtime, however, the list becomes chaotic, and it turns into a free-for-all. Everyone scatters with an agenda that must be completed before sleep is possible. It’s never the agenda I have planned, though. Moira may be the worst; she has reached the age where she thinks she knows best. Two years old. This night, Moira’s agenda revolved around teeth. You see, Moira believes—no, knows—that bedtime is when she becomes the family dentist.

It started simply. I was teaching her that we brush our teeth before bedtime, you know, normal life. She let me brush her teeth, spit a tiny amount into the sink, and we wiped her mouth. “All done,” I said, not knowing how I had just set the stage for future torments. She grabbed a toothbrush and said, “Dada, open mouth.”


I thought it was cute.
It was not cute.

She jabbed me deep in the tonsils, as though she was desperately trying to clear a stubborn drain. Not just any drain, but one from the 1920s, long forgotten and choked with tangled roots and a century’s worth of grimy buildup. Toothpaste bubbled and foamed uncontrollably in my mouth. My gag reflex surged wildly, threatening to overwhelm me. It felt as if my very soul was being scrubbed clean and forcibly pulled from my body. Then, almost as suddenly and abruptly as it had begun, I was instructed to spit. She calmly wiped the corners of my mouth with a gentle cloth and, with a contented smile, happily went to bed.

Now it has become a nightly routine that we both follow without fail. Every single night, I carefully brush her teeth, making sure to be thorough and gentle. Then, without missing a beat, she takes over and brushes mine. But she does it with an intense vigor, almost violently, wielding the toothbrush with the same strict authority and urgency as a TSA agent working during a high-stakes red alert situation.

The older kids observe this strange ritual with a mixture of quiet horror and disbelief. Kara, feeling uneasy, asked if she could “just floss instead” to avoid the unsettling process altogether. Logan, ever the helpful one, quickly chimed in with a practical suggestion, “You should wear a mouth guard,” trying to offer a solution. Slayden, curious and wanting to join in, made an attempt to get involved once, but was immediately met with a fierce, intimidating stare from the princess, effectively shutting him down.

Jo just sighs deeply whenever I start to complain and then calmly reminds me, “Well, you did let her start it in the first place.”

And she’s right. I did.

So now I end every night being waterboarded by a toddler with Paw Patrol toothpaste and a look in her eyes that says, “I know your dental history, peasant. Don’t forget to floss.” For someone who doesn’t even have a full set of teeth yet, she is quite adamant about tooth brushing!

Hope today’s a good one
– austininva

Ruin Your Day with Toilet Paper Confetti

(A.K.A. Why My Sons Are Banned From Sam’s Club Until Further Notice)

by austininva

It started, as these things usually do, with a nap time gone wrong.

“Well… we were bored. And toilet paper is really fun.”

Now, “nap time” is one of those sacred parental traditions—like pizza night or “forgetting” what time Chucky Cheeses closes. It’s a moment of peace. A desperate gasp of air while drowning in toy shrapnel and snack wrappers. But peace, as history has taught us, is fragile.

So there I was, basking in the blissful silence of midday, convinced for a brief moment that I had won. Slayden and Logan were tied down in bed. Kara was in her room doing “quiet time,” which in Kara’s world means rearranging her dolls and horses by political affiliation.

Then… silence. But not peaceful silence. It was the eerie, ominous calm. The kind of silence that makes your dad-senses tingle. That “there’s either sleep or a felony in progress” kind of quiet.

I crept down the hallway, cracked open Kara’s door—and stopped cold.

There, in the epicenter of chaos, stood Slayden and Logan, knee-deep in what could only be described as the aftermath of a Charmin blizzard. The floor was covered in tissue. Toilet paper was draped across furniture like party streamers at a birthday party thrown by raccoons. A pillow had been mummified. Kara’s dollhouse was now fully insulated. It looked like someone had tried to host a winter wonderland festival using every single roll from the 48-count mega-pack of toilet paper I had just bought. The last one in stock. At any Sam’s Club within a 2-hour radius! During COVID!

This was wartime toilet paper. Black market levels of valuable. The golden fleece of the pandemic era. And it had just been sacrificed on the altar of “Nap time is boring.”

When I asked why, Logan blinked at me like I was the one with problems and said with all the sincerity in the world:
“Well… we were bored. And toilet paper is really fun.”
Slayden added, “We were making snow world. For Chickee.” (One of Kara’s stuffed animals.)
I stared at them. They stared at me. The snow world stared back.

Now, let’s talk about the cleanup.

Do you know how hard it is to vacuum up toilet paper snow? You can’t. It just clogs the vacuum like a backed-up toilet on Thanksgiving, when you had to rely on Chinese take-out. Sweeping? Nope. The static cling alone made me look like I was fighting off haunted dryer sheets. For every piece I gathered, three more floated away like guilt from a toddler’s conscience.

Kara stood on the dresser like some kind of paper policewoman and proclaimed, “This is why girls don’t nap with boys.” She wasn’t wrong, just about 30 minutes late with her verdict.

Jo came in, surveyed the damage, and walked right back out again with the whispered prayer, “Not today, dear Jesus, not today.”

I eventually filled three trash bags with soggy, crumpled tissues, mourning the $22.99 plus tax lost that day. As I wondered what would take its place on the roll, the idea of Poison Ivy for the boys floated into my mind. I set the thought aside—it needed time to develop, perhaps to resurface at Logan’s wedding.

So yes, the boys are fine. The house is mostly intact. But the next time you think nap time is quiet and peaceful? Go check. Or better yet, hide the toilet paper.


Moral of the Story:
If it’s too quiet, someone is either asleep… or redecorating a room with your emergency supplies.

Hope today’s a clean one,
austininva

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