Last night, she made the third trip to the potty afer she'd already been tucked in. As Jason was taking her to bed, she did the old "melting kid" bit so that he couldn't pick her up. "I want to sleep here!" she said. Unsure of what to do and not wanting to cause an eruption that might wake up Addie, Jason told her she could sleep in the hall as long as she didn't move. (It's important to note that we were watching TV and she can see almost the whole house from where she was.) She moved her head. "Zoe, if you'tre going to sleep here, you can't move." She put her head back down to see if he would let that slide, and he did.
So, we thought, we'll let her stay there and as soon as we turn off the TV and lights to go to bed, she'll be wanting to get in her own bed, too. Not so. Well, maybe if we step over her to say goodnight to Addie and then to her as well. Nope. Still there. Okay. But when our bedroom light goes out, that'll be it. Still not true. Mom gives in to go talk to her. "Zoe, are you sure you want to sleep out here with no pillow or blanket?" "I want a pillow right here," she says as she points to the only unvaccuumed part of the house." "Well, sweetie, pillows have to stay on your bed. Do you want to go lay on your bed with pillows?" "No. I don't want a pillow." "You're a silly willy." "Yeah, I'm silly." Well, at least she knows.
Addie cries and Jason goes to settle her. He walks into the room and sees Zoe climbing down from her bed with Cordy (her favorite stuffed animal) in hand. "I was just checking Addie," she defends. "That's sweet, baby." Knocked a little off guard by that and the crying baby, he missed the chance and she went back to her spot in the floor. "Zoe, Cordy can't sleep in the hall. He's got to go back to bed. Do you want to go with him?" Zoe stands, puts Cordy back in bed, and returns to her place. Wow. "Zoe, I said you could only sleep here if you didn't move, but you got up and went into your room. But this realization came too late for Daddy, and she knows it. "Tell you what. I need you to go sleep in your bed tonight. But sometime soon, you and I, and maybe even Mama can have a campout in the living room, with sleeping bags and everything. How does that sound?" Giggles erupt, regardless of the fact that she doesn't know what campouts or sleeping bags are. It doesn't matter. It must be something special, past her bedtime, and in the living room with Mom and Dad.
Just what she needed to hear. Off to bed she goes, a mere two hours after we told her goodnight.