Close Menu
  • Home
    • About
    • Masthead
    • Links
  • MER Journal
    • Latest Issue
    • Back Issues
    • Subscribe to MER!
  • MER ONLINE
    • MER Quarterly
    • MER Literary Folios
    • Poetry
    • Fiction
    • Creative Prose
    • Essay
    • Craft
    • Interviews
    • Book Reviews
      • Bookshelf
    • Authors’ Notes
    • Art Gallery
      • Special – Hybrids
  • News & Events
    • News
    • Poem of the Month
    • Events
      • MER 18 Virtual Reading – Voices From HOME
    • Currents
      • Announcements
      • Highlights
  • Shop
    • All Issues
    • One Year Subscription
    • Two Year Subscription
  • Submit
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
MER – Mom Egg Review
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube Tumblr Threads
  • Home
    • About
    • Masthead
    • Links
  • MER Journal
    • Latest Issue
    • Back Issues
    • Subscribe to MER!
  • MER ONLINE
    • MER Quarterly
    • MER Literary Folios
    • Poetry
    • Fiction
    • Creative Prose
    • Essay
    • Craft
    • Interviews
    • Book Reviews
      • Bookshelf
    • Authors’ Notes
    • Art Gallery
      • Special – Hybrids
  • News & Events
    • News
    • Poem of the Month
    • Events
      • MER 18 Virtual Reading – Voices From HOME
    • Currents
      • Announcements
      • Highlights
  • Shop
    • All Issues
    • One Year Subscription
    • Two Year Subscription
  • Submit
NEWSLETTER
MER – Mom Egg Review
You are at:Home » Alexandria Faulkenbury – In My Toddler’s Room

Alexandria Faulkenbury – In My Toddler’s Room

0
By Mom Egg Review on May 28, 2023 Prose

Alexandria Faulkenbury

In My Toddler’s Room

 

In my toddler’s room, the internet stalls and sputters and gives up halfway through loading a page on my phone. I drop it into my lap in frustration. The darkness envelopes its illuminated screen, and I can no longer see it even though I still feel its warmth on my thighs. I stare at the wall where bursts of light dart across the dark space like a kaleidoscope.

It is bedtime. Nay, it is well past bedtime. And I am trapped.

Any parent who missed the memo on how to lay your child down “drowsy but awake” and now must endure the merciless prison of sitting in a small human’s room until they are fully unconscious will understand my dilemma.

The faulty internet isn’t actually the problem. In here, even the smallest hint of light elicits desperate cries of, “No light! Light off! Sleepy time!” This last phrase uttered while my toddler attempts to tap dance along the rails of his bed.

Wireless headphones, you say? Have you ever tried listening to music while simultaneously singing to a toddler? It all becomes Baby Beluga in the end. And don’t get me started on audiobooks or podcasts. The pauses required to procure a drink of water or tuck in an untucked blanket or fetch the stuffed dinosaur who was, not two minutes ago, hurled across the room because he wasn’t the stuffed bear? Forget it.

So, I keep singing in a voice only a child could love. Meanwhile, my back hurts from the odd angle I’m slouched in to enable me to hold his hand, rub his back, or pat his head as requested. As the sound of a fake ocean blares on, I make a mental list of all the things I’ll accomplish when he is finally asleep and I can tiptoe across the room, careful to avoid that one squeaky floorboard, and make my escape. It’s so close I can almost taste it. He hasn’t asked me to sing a new song for a good five minutes. His blanket rises and falls in that steady sleepy rhythm.

But then.

A cough. A roll over. I hold my breath.

“You lay down with me, mamma?” Ah, the bitter taste of defeat.

I squeeze myself into the sliver of space between him and the mountain of stuffed animals that have now taken up residence on the mattress, and something strange happens. My pulse slows and the tension in my shoulders melts into the elephant pillow wedged behind my back. Is it me or does the whoosh of the sound machine seem a little quieter from down here?

My toddler puts his hand in mine and snuggles right up against my chest. He smells of a day’s worth of picking dandelions, finger painting, and rubbing peanut butter and jelly in his hair. The little furnace of his body warms me when I didn’t realize I was cold. There’s a calm in my bones that I can’t place, though I’ve felt it before.

And then, all at once, he’s asleep with his tiny hand in mine and his wispy hair tickling my nose. I slide slowly off the bed and tuck the blanket around his feet, which still rest against one of the bed rails, just in case he gets the urge for another round of tap dancing before I go.

 

 

Alexandria Faulkenbury’s writing has been published in The Maine Review and HeartWood Literary Magazine, among others. She holds an M.A. in literature and lives in central New York with her husband, two rambunctious kids, and one ornery dog. More of her work can be found at alexandriafaulkenbury.com

 

 

Back to “The Little Things”

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleAshley Knowlton – Sprouting Specks
Next Article Annie Marhefka – You can’t belong to the sky

Comments are closed.

Recent VOX Posts
May 30, 2026

Poem of the Month – June 2026 – Laure-Anne Bosselaar

May 10, 2026

Heather Haldeman – “Pick Up the Phone!”

May 1, 2026

Poem of the Month – May 2026

April 3, 2026

Poem of the Month – April 2026

March 14, 2026

Motherhood as Noise and Silence

March 14, 2026

All the Small Things by Rachel Beachy

March 14, 2026

Lost Constellation: Noctua by Jessica Bozek

March 14, 2026

To: E by Anna Crandall

March 14, 2026

A Topography of Motherhood by Alexis David

March 14, 2026

Silent Treatment by Andrea Deeken

March 14, 2026

Ignore Them: Memorial Day by Carol Dorf

March 14, 2026

The Stone Sits Down to Dinner by Caitlin Gildrien  

March 14, 2026

Early May by L. Bellee Jones-Pierce

March 14, 2026

Fracture Season by Amy Lemmon

March 14, 2026

A Small Goddess by Xiaoly Li

March 14, 2026

Her Voice in the Wind by U-Meleni Mhlaba-Adebo   

March 14, 2026

I will burn with it by Jane C. Miller   

March 14, 2026

Boundaries by Donna Vorreyer

March 14, 2026

The Perfect Stage by Sara Wallace

March 2, 2026

Poem of the Month – March 2026

February 13, 2026

Mothers and Family II – Creative Prose and Art Folio

February 12, 2026

Bethany Bruno – Love, Without the Ashes

February 12, 2026

Kathy Curto – Cool and Low in the 70s

February 12, 2026

Susan Finch – How to Mourn Your Father When You’re a Mom

February 12, 2026

Alisha Goldblatt – Tracing the Faultlines

Archives
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube Tumblr Threads
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Submit
  • Contact
MER - Mom Egg Review
PO Box 9037, Bardonia, NY 10954
Contact [email protected]

Copyright © 2025 MER and Mom Egg Review

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.