How the Latch Key Mom
Came to Be
I’m the Latch Key Mom, or at least that’s what I’m now calling
myself, because I had to come up with a cool name for my blog. Okay – maybe it’s not exactly cool, but it
does describe me and my mommyhood. I’m
fortunate to be the mother of four wonderful children. One of my babes has autism and he likes to
explore. I’m the warden of my own personal Cuckoo’s
Nest, so I wear my house key on a lanyard around my neck, to lock in all our
craziness. And believe me, it can get
crazy.
A few years ago, we lived in a typical subdivision, on a cul-de-sac,
with lots of neighbors close by. As my
son with autism (Bear – short for Barrett) got older, he discovered that our
backyard fence was easy to scale; that our door locks were easy to manipulate; and
that there was a great big world out there, which we’d sheltered him from. Fortunately, we were lucky enough to have
some very kind and patient neighbors. On
both sides of our house, we had empty-nesters, which in addition to always having
an eye on everything, also seemed to find amusement in our little
explorer. Before I even knew he was
gone, my phone would ring with a call announcing, “Barrett’s outside!”
Once upon a time, Bear walked right past an adult (who will
remain nameless, but it wasn’t me), on our back porch, while in his pajamas, as
it was past bedtime. The adult was
actually on an emergency business call, and honestly never saw Bear walk past. It was getting dark and Bear walked down the
back steps, scaled the fence, went up the hill and entered the house of some
neighbors with whom we were still only acquaintances. Yes, he just opened the door and walked in,
like Goldilocks! He looked around – and
I’m speculating here, because there’s no proof to this portion of the story – probably
investigated the pantry, used the facilities and looked for a computer. Not satisfied with what he found, he ventured
upstairs. At this point, I do have
eyewitnesses, so I’m revealing the facts.
He entered the family’s master bedroom, where mom, dad and three
children, dressed in their jammies, were gathered on the bed for story
time! My Bear got so excited; he jumped
on the bed to join them.
Back at the ranch, the adult on duty got a call...talk about
mortifying! I swear to God, my husband
called a real-estate agent, because a sign was most certainly going up in the
yard the next morning. Those neighbors
were so understanding and lucky for us (and Bear, who made many more uninvited
entrances into their home), they became close family friends. Who knows?
That may not have happened, if not for Bear’s breaking and entering.
He’s been caught with his hand in neighbor’s cookie jars,
literally. He’s hidden out in a neighbor’s
basement, to play with their dogs. He’s
streaked in the cul-de-sac…more than once.
He’s tip-toed in the tulips. I’m
telling you, I could go on and on (and on).
Now this may make us sound a bit incompetent, but we do have
four children and it’s often hard to keep a beat on all of them, all of the
time. And honestly, Bear has some
serious stealth. It doesn’t just happen….he plans it. That being said, we did make attempts to secure
the premises – I swear. Bear couldn’t be
in the backyard alone and his siblings were instructed to keep an eye on
him. We also made both the front and
back doors keyed locks, so the kids would have to ask us to open the door for
them. The garage, still presented a
problem, since the interior door did not have a key lock. We had a second refrigerator out there and
shelves for pantry over-flow, so we didn’t want to put a key lock on the door
for convenience sake. But we put a lock
box on the buttons that opened the exterior garage doors. Well,
accidents still sometimes happened.
There were times when we’d forget to close the outside doors, or they
were open because the other kids were playing out front, so there was still
opportunity. Then we put a code lock on
the interior garage door. See? We really did try.
Not all neighbors understood. One couple wasn’t very happy that Bear seemed
to LOVE their backyard garden. And we
did have to call 911, more than once, when he went missing, so we kind of developed
a reputation. Eventually, this factored
into our decision to move (not exclusively, but we did relish the chance of a
fresh start for Bear).
There was a short period of transition, when we rented and
were quite frankly very vulnerable on the Bear security front. There was a horrible incident when he went
missing for quite a while – I lost years off my life, believe me. I still can’t really talk about. It was awful.
Then we found our dream house. We are so lucky. Lots of land and a big house, with lots of
doors...uh-oh. Yeah, big problem. I won’t bore you with all the different
security scenarios we came up with, but we settled on keyed locks for all the doors. Doors are locked at all times – and yes, I do
occasionally have nightmares about the dangers of that. It ain’t easy.
So how’d the key end up on my neck? Well, in the beginning, I flippin’ lost my
keys all the time and it sucked when someone was at the front door and I couldn’t
answer it. It would be so embarrassing
when a delivery man or a neighbor would ring the doorbell and I could see them
and they could see me, but I couldn’t find my key to open the door. Then they would watch me panic, running
around like a chicken without its head, looking for a key, all the while
pleading with them to “hold on.” Or, I’d
be in hurry to go somewhere and couldn’t kind the key. Then there was the time a friend dropped me
off and left, and I didn’t have my key. Blah,blah,blah. So now I wear the key around my neck all the time. It’s convenient and so unfashionable!
People always ask me why I have a key around my neck – so
there you have it. If someone has a
short answer I can give, for the next time I’m asked, I’d love to hear it. Snarky or cute will work!
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