Exactly a week before we left for our trip, I was making breakfast in the kitchen. The husband had just left for work, the four year old was playing with a doll, and the two year old was…oh crap, where’s the two year old and why is he so quiet?
I did a quick scan of the house. Oh there he is, sitting in the middle of the dining room table throwing Duplos across the room.
I rushed over to pick him up off the table, swung around, and started walking….directly into the base of the solid wooden bench at the table.
I had a momentary thought of “this is going to hurt”…and then I looked at my toe.
If most of my toes were pointing north, my middle toe was pointing distinctly northwest and slightly up to the sky, as if flipping an angry toe bird to my life before children.
Turns out, I broke a bone in my middle toe. Probably not the best way to start off the trip, but whatcha gonna do?
And it wasn’t all that bad. Lufthansa Airlines (German for “Air Lasagna”) took pity on me and wheelchaired me to the gate, which was pretty fantastic for me because I got to sit back and relax all the way through security. My poor husband had to deal with both kids and handle all the various carry-ons by himself. Sorry honey.
We made it to the gate with time to spare. So, my husband walked all the way back across the airport to grab food while we waited to board; leaving gimpy me with the two kids at the gate, so what could go wrong?
And here is where the fun begins… enter the 2 year old…
The kids had their faces glued to the window leaving sticky kid handprints and toddler sauce (a combination of drool, snot, and whatever else is stuck to their face) all over the windows while they yelled “Airplane!” every single time they saw one…meaning about every five seconds, because…airport.
When that got old we played on Snapchat.
Anyway, food was taking a while, so the kids ran around a divider to look out the windows on the other side of the seating area, to scream anew about the same airplanes. I hobbled over to where they were just in time to hear my son, the two year old, start crying.
There are two large steel support beams rising out of the floor of the airport extending up through the ceiling. There is a small gap between them, just less than the width of a toddler’s head, which he was in the process of measuring for himself… using, what else, his own head.
So, of course, he had somehow managed to get his head firmly stuck between the columns. Not happy with the results, he was now yelling for Mommy.
Now, it didn’t look all that bad. I calmly hobbled over to him, so as not to freak him out, I reassured him a little and then tugged at his little body to extricate him. He didn’t budge.
Okay.
I panic a little.
I try again.
Oh crap, nothing.
Now he’s really crying loudly and a few people have come over to help, except nobody knows what to do! His head is really in there and how in the hell did he do this?!?
I’m wondering do I call 911 now? Are firemen going to have to cut him out? Is this going to be on a reality show about bad parenting?
I’m freaking out internally but trying my best to stay calm for the little guy.
Finally, a man calmly sitting nearby gets my attention and says, “ I think he went in the other way. I think he put his body through first.”
It takes me a second to make sense of his words.
I pick up his little body, rotate it so the shoulders will fit between the columns and push him back through.
It works!
He’s like a puzzle! One of those little country horseshoe or twisted nail puzzles you get at Cracker Barrel. Apologies to all of you who have no idea what a Cracker Barrel or a horseshoe puzzle is.
Anyway, crisis averted and now we have a new party trick.
Made it onto the plane. The flight was pretty uneventful if you don’t count two hours of turbulence while we ever so slowly cross the jet stream as we entered Canadian airspace – thus incapacitating my husband and daughter with airsickness; while the 2 year old party trick exclaimed, “fun!” with every bump and jolt.
In general, the flight was 11 hours of trying to get the kids to sleep so that we could sleep but then realizing that we couldn’t sleep because the only way they would sleep is draped across our bodies in such a way that we couldn’t move.
I found myself watching whatever was on the monitor of the person in front of me through the little crack in between seats because that was more appealing than moving and possibly waking a kid so I could turn on my own seat back television.
All was going great as we approached the Frankfurt airport. Everyone was well fed, the kids had actually slept a few hours each, and we’d made friends with our angry German flight attendant (mostly by my husband trying to practice his German with him) so he wasn’t angry anymore.
The flight attendants had started readying the cabin for landing and the four year old suddenly has to go the bathroom.
One superpower that kids have is the ability to go from 0 to “I have to pee!” in 0.0003 seconds. I swear, it makes no difference if you take them to the bathroom every time you see one or ask them every few minutes.
So the 4 year old is doing the pee pee dance in her seat with a panicked look on her face, the flight attendants look like they are still running around picking up trash, and so the husband picks her up and whisks her to the bathroom. At this point, angry German flight attendant comes around the corner and starts yelling, “what is he doing? We are ready to land!” He then starts banging on the bathroom door screaming, “You have to come out right now!”
The flight attendant runs over to me and yells, “Because of your husband we are going to have to divert this flight!”
I manage to eek out, “We thought we had time, my daughter really had to go!” The flight attendant rushes off to bang on the door again and then goes to the galley and I hear him yelling, we have to divert!
I’m slinking down in my seat and I can feel the hot stares from the other passengers. My husband and my daughter make it back to their seats just in time apparently as the flight was not diverted, we still get to Frankfurt early, and angry German Flight Attendant went back to being…well, angry at us.
Oh, and that is not the end… we just catch our connecting flight to Dresden, finally get a rental car from a Hertz attendant trying to double the price of our reservation, and arrive at our Airbnb in Dresden.
21 hours door to door!
So far feeling less like Anthony Bourdain in “Parts Unknown” and more like a Griswold in “European Vacation.”
Next up: Chapter 3 – Dang It! Nobody Speaks English here!