I suspect that the way it happened the second time may be similar to the way it happened the first time, but we’ll need to run a double-blind study (once we’ve been able to obtain financing from DoE, DoD, NATO and the Christian Fund For More Babies).
We found out a few weeks ago the day before going overseas on vacation that we have a third one on the way (the oldest is turning 5 next week). My wife and kids are staying for the summer but I needed to be back at work. Lately my wife is complaing that she’s growing too big too soon and is commenting on potentially having twins. Apparrantly there are twins somewhere in her family but not mine. She’ll find out soon enough when she gets an ultrasound but right now I’m attempting to enjoy the solitude this summer because it will soon change. One thing I’m certain of is that I’ll be going under the knife sometime soon.
I had two boys in 15 months. At the moment, my oldest is running around the living room, handing me his spoon, screaming and taking it back, throwing around the bread from his sandwich that he will not eat but won’t let me take to the kitchen either, and trying to climb into his little brother’s swing.
His little brother is busily producing one heck of a poop that I am going to have to change while simultaneously barring big brother from putting his hand in. Little brother is two months old and waking for at least 2-3 hours in the middle of the night, so i am doing all of this with no sleep.
A three year age difference sounds easy-peasy to me. Congratulations.
Re: little kids and grocery shopping. Several of our Dopers in a recent thread recommended the grocery delivery company Pea Pod as a lifesaver when their kids were toddlers. I don’t remember them mentioning that it cost any more shopping through PP, but they did say that it saved their sanity. They only used it for the duration of toddlerhood. Even if it cost a bit more, it’d be worth it, IMO.
Usually I either took my husband shopping with me, so he could amuse the baby, or I had him babysit while I shopped. Bill loves kids, so he was usually more than happy to play with Lisa, either in the store or at home.
I also had a harness for her, which I used when she was a baby and toddler. It worked like a safety belt in a stroller or shopping cart, and could also be used while she was walking, to make sure that she didn’t wander off from my side. I had some snide remarks from strangers on occasion, but most people seemed to think it was a great idea. I highly recommend it.
Same here. Mine are 20 and 18 and there are times I cannot even imagine how I did it.
I know it was hard and the time seemed to move in slow motion. Then they were toddlers, then they were going to school, then they were teenagers and bam they are full grown.
Looking back now it seemed to go so fast, not so much when you smack in the middle of it.
First thing we’d do with the twins is head for the bread department and open a bag of mini croissants. It kept them occupied long enough to get the basics.
Hubby always let them use the mini shopping trollies the store had so “thoughtfully” provided for children. Of course they always behaved for him. The one time I tried it, it was cute for about 5 minutes. Halfway through the excursion, one of them decided she didn’t want the vegetables in her cart any more and dumped them all in aisle 9 so she could put the cookies in. When I finally got through the cash I realized I had brought my daytimer, not my wallet and when they discovered we had to leave all the groceries behind, they both started freaking out. I ended up leaving the store with one over each shoulder screaming their heads off with everyone assuming I was some kind of deadbeat who couldn’t pay for her food :-/
Now I have them delivered