I wish I could hook him up to a tape recorder, if such a thing still exists, so I could capture the funny, crazy, silly, ridiculous stuff that he blurts out. I am amazed at the way his brain works, not only as a testament to the inner workings of his very being, but the sheer shift in how times have changed.
Just a sampling of things I know I did not say when I was 5-years old:
- This one time, in Chinese class...
- My German teacher said...
- That water is zu heiss!
- I think we need surround sound.
- Whale is a three-way homonym.
- But's a homonym too.
- That hair is called blonde, not yellow, Deal.
- I'm a LEGO architect.
- Actually, Mommy, that is a crustacean.
- My brain must be smart because my head is hard, not mushy.
- Take my picture! Now can I see it?
- Can you please pause the TV while I go to the bathroom?
- Can you please fast forward through the commercials?
- More proscuitto, please.
- I'd like to have mussels for dinner tonight.
- Do those popsicles have high fructose corn syrup in them?
- The guy in that Hummer thinks he's so cool.
- That huge car is bad for the environment.
- Here are my plastic sandwich bags to wash and reuse.
- Every animal has a job to do on our earth.
- Sometimes you don't know who's a man and who's a woman because boys can have long hair and earrings.
- We need some more olives.
- Smoked salmon for breakfast? Only if we have capers?
- Super heroes don't exist. Someone just made up the stories to teach us stuff about being strong and respectful.
- That house is obnoxious!
- Today in school we learned about nanotechnology.
- Don't forget to pack the beer for the grown ups!
- Sometimes the truth makes people feel bad.
- Are you going to blog about that. Mommy?
- Are you going to tweet what I just said?
So tell me, what are your kids saying that floor you?
6 comments:
He is funny. And apparently a GREAT eater.
My son says, I want to see the picture after I take one, I am making a sugar free cake, we are big on not eating a lot of sugar. Those are the only two I can think of early this morning.
I loved it when my oldest was only 2.5, we'd go to the park and she'd say "look - a conifer!" Thanks to They Might Be Giants "C is for Conifer".
Now she's 4, she comes home from school talking about isosceles triangles and isthmuses. I'm pretty sure the church preschool I went to didn't get much beyond singing the ABCs and counting to 20.
He is extra-awesome. The salmon withe capers one about had me rolling on the floor.
When asked why he wants to get one computer as opposed to the other, "That one has a faster processor!"
I think I like "I am a Lego architect" best (even though it is not solely a 21st century sentiment).
My kids learned how to titrate at summer camp last week. Landisdad said, "I don't think I did that till I was a junior in high school!"
I said, "ti-what?"
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