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Getting the soap ready to wash out her mouth

Our friend Cami stopped by yesterday for dinner, and we purposefully made something other than salmon for the meal. Because the last time we made salmon we neglected to look at the sell-by date on the label, and it turns out that even if you freeze fish it can go bad after two years. I still cannot get that taste out of my mouth.

While we were sitting there trying to figure out why it tasted so bad, so horrifying, Jon asked if I had looked at the date on the package. And I was all, why does it matter? It was in the freezer. WHERE IT WAS FROZEN. Isn't that a standard in cooking? A scientific principle? Nothing can go bad in the freezer, right? There's a reason murderers choose meat lockers to store their victims. I see it on "Law and Order" all the time!

And that's when he rolled his eyes so hard they knocked his head backward, and he fell out of his chair. How many times do I have to remind him that I know nothing about cooking? Do not leave me in charge of food that can go bad! This was not my fault! I don't know whose fault it was, but maybe I should sue the maker of my refrigerator FOR DEFYING SCIENCE. The nerve!

Anyway, Cami is on a kick of abbreviating almost every word that comes of out her mouth, and when Leta attacked her with requests to play she said, "Leta, give me a min." Leta looked at me immediately for a translation, so I told her that I was pretty sure Cami needed a "minute" to set down her purse and catch her breath. Although I could have been wrong, maybe she meant something entirely different. Maybe she needed a mint. Or a mind reader. Or possibly a tiny militia of minutemen to reenact certain battles in the American Revolution: The British are coming! The British are coming!

("One if by land, and two if by sea, and I on the opposite shore will be"— SORRY. 4-H speech contest flashback. Now I'll be repeating that poem in my head for days. STUPID CHILDREN'S ORGANIZATIONS.)

You never know with her. I mean, she was wearing ankle boots, men's basketball shorts, and a biker jacket. AND SHE STILL LOOKED HOT.

So we were taking a min on the couch as Leta pranced around in a giant, multi-colored tutu, and Cami out of nowhere blurts out, "Leta, is that a freakin' tutu?!"

Right. As if she had any business being shocked at a tutu as she sat there in knee-length, opalescent blue basketball shorts. Like the fancy material you see lining high-end caskets.

A freakin' tutu. Because she goes to BYU. I was just so glad it wasn't "a fetchin' tutu" or "a friggin' tutu" which would have been unacceptable and punishable by death. Preferably by blunt force to the head with the DVD case of a rated R movie.

Leta's response? "It's not a freakin' tutu, Cami. It's just a tutu."

Now, this is not the first time Leta has been exposed to just-touching-the-edge language. Okay, fine. Leta has been exposed to A LOT of way-over-the-edge-gone-splat-at-the-bottom-blood-and-guts-and-smashed-brain-on-the-concrete kind of language. But something about this exchange tripped her creative wires, and next thing you know she's in the kitchen grabbing on to the knobby pole of Marlo's bouncy contraption, pretending it's a microphone, and she's singing, "IT'S NOT A FREAKIN' TUTU! IT'S NOT A FREAKIN' TUTU!"

Over and over again, and then she starts adding verses and emphasizing certain words, like, "IT'S JUST WHAT I'M WEARING TODAAAAAAAAY! THIS NOT FREAKIN' TUTUUUUUUUU! YOU THINK IT IS ONE! BUT IT'S JUST A TUTUUUUUU! AND NOT A FREAKIN' ONE!"

All out of tune. All shrieking.

Jon looked at me, I looked at him, we both looked at Cami, and each one of us was trying to give the others the strength to hold in the laughter. Because five-year-olds who are just about to turn six take any and all laughing personally. Laughing at a five-year-old is not unlike punching a puppy in the face.

But none of us could handle it, and I don't remember who did it first, but someone let out a little ripple of air through their clenched teeth, and then we all lost it. Which of course sent Leta into fits of IT'S NOT FUNNY.

And I go, Leta, you're being really cute, why isn't it funny? And before I could even get the question out she angrily roared, "BECAUSE IT'S NOT A FREAKIN' TUTU."

02.01.2010 Daily, Leta, Parenthood 84 comments

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  • PunkinP said:

    I think we need to see a photo of Miss Cami's ensemble. Am I right? I'm just about dying to see this outfit!!!

    02.01.10 - 02:46 PM / 1
  • adrienne jackson said:

    i'm already in the it's not funny stage with my three year old, i have to 'not laugh' about four times a day .....and yes, a picture of that outfit?

    02.01.10 - 02:52 PM / 2
  • Just Jill said:

    I appreciate the lesson regarding frozen fish. Thanks for that. And I have a 7 year old who sings out crazily as well. I understand you can't laugh, but don't even look at him - and that's the hard part cause he's so damn cute!

    02.01.10 - 02:52 PM / 3
  • Cheeky Muffy said:

    I think what Cami meant to say was "fucking tutu." That is what she really means so she should just say it. I don't buy the whole Mormon flip, fudge, fetch replacement for fuck. The intent is the same, just say fuck.

    And I mean that in the nicest way possible.

    02.01.10 - 02:59 PM / 4
  • pinkbrain said:

    Cursing my mother for calling my girl parts "tutu".
    Freakin tutu making me blush...

    02.01.10 - 02:57 PM / 5
  • AndreaP said:

    Haha. I love it when kids swear! Well almost swear. And being that I am known for my foul language, it's usually me that causes it.

    Andrea

    02.01.10 - 03:00 PM / 6
  • medwards said:

    out of the mouth of babes.... I got a freakin really good laugh at that, thanks.

    02.01.10 - 02:59 PM / 7
  • smithie1996 said:

    ...ready to ride and spread the alarm
    to every Middlesex village and farm..."

    Thanks a lot.

    02.01.10 - 03:07 PM / 8
  • hegwer said:

    I hate to break this to you, but Betsy Ross would look HOT in ankle boots, men's basketball shorts, and a biker jacket.

    02.01.10 - 03:13 PM / 9
  • MissCaron said:

    Oh. My. God. I FREAKIN' love it! That's definitely one you wish you had on video to play at her wedding some day!

    02.01.10 - 03:14 PM / 10
  • Shana in Texas said:

    Yeah, why are 5 year olds so freakin' sensitive about laughter when THEY are being funny (and know it!)? They're so damn sensitive and won't acknowledge the difference between "laughing at the cute thing you are doing" vs. "laughing at you". Gah! So many freakin' fun moments have been ruined as we reassure Her Highness that we weren't intending to be MEAN.

    02.01.10 - 03:16 PM / 11
  • susanruffin said:

    The child has lawyer written all over her. Priceless!

    02.01.10 - 03:17 PM / 12
  • agablack said:

    I probably should not be saying this in public, but I would have most likely peed myself if in Heather's place. As it had happened once, or twice, before when LOL was highly inappropriate and I was forcing it back inside.

    Yes to the photo of Cami! For inspiration... not?

    02.01.10 - 03:18 PM / 13
  • mommica said:

    My daughter is only two and she doesn't think anything is funny. Except when I am sternly telling her not to spit/throw food on the floor/pull the dog's tail. Then she grins and says "funny" over and over again. She gets it from her father, I'm sure.

    02.01.10 - 03:21 PM / 14
  • Megan Ellen said:

    That would have been one to have on film...in case she does go rogue someday and become a Mormon.

    02.01.10 - 03:22 PM / 15
  • Dbbdnns said:

    LOL. Brought back a memory from the late 90's - trying not to laugh while my then five-year-old niece sang Spice Girls - highly inappropriate AND she kept messing up the lyrics. But if we laughed she was so distraught she did look like a puppy who had been punched in the face.

    02.01.10 - 03:24 PM / 16
  • Soapourri said:

    I really related to the "looked at me for translation". This happens constantly in our house, even with teenagers. Their dad will say something, and they'll look at me. I guess the reason is, "everything starts and ends with Mom!!"

    02.01.10 - 03:27 PM / 17
  • itcouldbelove said:

    I seriously wish you had a video of all of this. That would be golden.

    I third/fourth/fifth/sixteenth the notion that we want a picture of Cami's outfit.

    02.01.10 - 03:28 PM / 18
  • SerenityNOW said:

    But I have salmon in my freezer that says "January 10, 2009." So, what you're saying is that I shouldn't use it? Un-freakin'-believable.

    02.01.10 - 03:33 PM / 19
  • hoosiergirl1962 said:

    One day Leta will be a famous Speed Metal Diva and you will be singing along with "Its Not A Freaking Tutu"..

    02.01.10 - 03:39 PM / 20
  • liefie said:

    how is there no video of this?! i thought you had a camera attached to your head specifically for this reason?
    on a completely unrelated note: the spam filter is asking me for the word "quinones"? really? good thing i'm a science geek...

    02.01.10 - 03:47 PM / 21
  • Absent Minded H... said:

    "Freakin' tutu"? What an ignert thing to say about a perfectly acceptable article of clothing to wear in your own home.

    02.01.10 - 04:00 PM / 22
  • Absent Minded H... said:

    I keep my tutus in chester draws.

    02.01.10 - 04:01 PM / 23
  • brandyn said:

    Your world makes my world a better place.

    02.01.10 - 04:14 PM / 24
  • josephine said:

    @#5 pinkbrain - I just about died laughing reading your comment. I will never think about tutus the same way. :)

    Love this post Heather - I agree with many others - accompanying pictures are desired! (though not technically needed, thanks to your mad story telling skillz)

    yikes, did I just write skillZ with a Z? i meant it though, i really did!

    02.01.10 - 04:18 PM / 25
  • Vander said:

    Can you PLEASE tell us how you got that Rubik's Cube attached to Chuck's head? PLEASE?

    Also, one of these days, I am going to remember my log-on info. I swear.

    02.01.10 - 04:29 PM / 26
  • Vander said:

    Whew. Found the answer in Community. Thanks.

    02.01.10 - 04:31 PM / 27
  • Andie10 said:

    That was freakin' funny! :)

    02.01.10 - 04:35 PM / 28
  • Mandy said:

    God that's funny and so cute. It's sooo hard to not laugh when they swear! Considering we aren't adverse to a bit of swearing in our house, it's surprising how long it took for my five year old to spice his language up a bit.

    As I tend to use it in the car, 'Fucken Hell' is Pascal's favourite. I tell him that I shouldn't really say it and it's just wrong coming from a five year old so he'll do the singing thing. He'll be playing and murmuring/singing a little ditty about transformers or ben 10 and slip in a sly 'faaakeeeen hi-ell' and I'll look at him and he'll say 'what?' and I'll keep looking at him and he'll roll his eyes and say 'muum, I said faaar' or sometimes it's 'bucken' or 'ducken'...now he's got 'friggin' from somewhere which he says when he's angry (which is when I find it the hardest not the laugh). He'll go 'You're such a friggin!'

    The other night he couldn't sleep and came up into the loungeroom where we were watching Curb Your Enthusiasm. No sooner as he sat down, Larry David dropped the F bomb and Pascal looked at me half smiling half pretend shock and said 'He said the F word' then he shook his head and said 'I don't like how this show is designed' and told us he wasn't going to say it again. And actually, he hasn't..

    02.01.10 - 04:41 PM / 29
  • table4five said:

    That's hilarious! It's not a FREAKIN' tutu, it's just a tutu!

    I love this month's banner!

    02.01.10 - 04:43 PM / 30
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