Monthly Archives: December 2013

Humor Sentiments

Gimme a “Y!” Gimme an “O!” …gimme a second to catch my breath. Gimme a “U!”

 

You put the “mom” in “awesmom! And you made me stay in school, which turns out was a good idea.

 

If we didn’t have you, Mom, we’d be eating cereal out of bowls made by Dad of duct tape.  But other than that, it would be bad.

 

I came across a ball of yarn the other day, and I have to say, the cat is really on to something.

 

I’ve always wanted to brew my own beer, but it turns out you can buy it already made!

 

Hope your Valentine’s Day is everything you dreamed it would be… in your twisted little sex brain that you should never speak of

 

You have nothing to fear except all the coyotes, mountain lions and bears that are encroaching on suburbia.  Go to the city on your birthday.  It’s safer.

 

You guys are like two flowers that make all the other flowers want to barf with all your P.D.A.

 

Thanks to middle school phys ed, I know that failure is indeed an option.

 

Achieving true success in life takes time, effort, preparation, persistence and a “can-do” attitude built from a solid foundation of self-confidence.  So, yeah, count me out.

News Headlines

  • The Chinese moon rover has begun exploring the lunar surface, and is learning that everything everybody already knows about the moon is, in fact, true.
  • Former heavyweight boxing champion Evander Holyfield is has joined a group to help try to solve the social turmoil is Syria. When asked what he would be able to bring to the table on the Syria problem, Holyfield said, “hopefully they need boxing.”
  • French President Francois Hollande has announced that he will not attend the upcoming Olympic games in Russia, shortly after Germany’s president Joacaim Gouck announced he would not attend, in protest of Russia’s record of human rights abuses. So that’s 2 fewer seat fans in the stadium, which should fix all human rights problems in Russia.
  • Spanish pro golfer Sergio Garcia has won the Thailand golf championship. He says he owes his victory to his girlfriend, because those Spanish really know what to say to a girl.
  • A new report is listing the 10 best places to spend Christmas. It differs for each person because you enter some information and it tells you the 10 places where your mother-in-law is least likely to be.

Humor Sentiments

My inner child hardened into a goiter that I had removed last year.

 

Pretending to be busy is pretty hard work.  Is that irony?  No work, and no irony, for you today.

 

You can have my drink when you pry it from my cold wet hand. Also, please don’t.

 

I think there’s something wrong with my thyroid.  Or my spleen, whichever makes me fat. Pancreas?

 

You’re never too old to have a miss-spent youth.

 

The only thing more precious than the sound of children is when they’re not making any noise at all.

 

So…I’m waiting in line to buy an alarming amount of beer, and I realize you and I haven’t talked in a while.  I wonder what made me think of you.

 

We put the “Boom!” in “Boomer!” Also the “ouch!” and the “yawwn!” and the “where the hell did I put my keys?!”

 

Are we too old to try new things?  I hope so.

 

Your love has kept me from becoming a rogue outlaw, living on my motorcycle, and bar fighting for money.  Well, your love and my generally squishy disposition.  But mostly your love.

Notes On Fatherhood

Tummy Ache Revisited   As I should have expected – in fact should have inked into my calendar ahead of time, my wife and I both contracted the stomach bug brought into our home by our unwitting son. He just bounced into the house, all smiles, meaningless news from school, and bacteria. We all know that a child’s body is a traveling carnival of maladies. And a school is the United Way of infection. They air drop it in to our tiny peaceful villages and we run to it, cheering. And 48 hours after his endless rivers of puke, flowed our own, his mom and me.

For us both, it began at 2 a.m., and lasted all night, just as I had lamented it did with our boy. And the next day, we moaned and complained and shoved our misery outward in every direction, just as I complained he had done. Two days earlier I was rubbing my son’s back and telling him it would be okay. It would pass. There was nothing to worry about. His problem was little. It was solvable – one of the great triumphs of parenting a young child is that virtually all of his problems are solvable.

But now I was swimming in the misery which I had all but dismissed in him so recently. And it was real, and terrible. Of course I knew it would pass, it would be okay. My concerns were not long-term. But I was still feeling my guts rung out like dirty dishtowel. And intense illness can become its own sweat lodge of alpha state thinking. The experience did bring to light for me a simple and what should already have been obvious truth – that my son’s problems, no matter how small or incidental they may be, are real. Real to him, and so, real. For what is reality but that which we think it is?

But less esoteric than this thought of reality was the experience itself. The discomfort was extreme, the exhaustion absolute. I have a longer gaze than my son, and so I can see ahead to 3 days from now. This bacteria which my body must eject so violently would be gone in 24 hours or so. I know this, so my calm doesn’t slip like my son’s does. But even aside from the science of it, in my son’s mind, now equals forever, so being told that his misery will pass tomorrow is like telling him he should start saving toward a secure retirement. That’s fine but it’s a ways off. But this big-picture thinking I have earned with years did get me thinking about my perception of other aspects of my son’s life.

He often climbs in the car after school and announces with total certainty that he had just experienced his worst day ever. Now, a child’s words and thoughts are generally hyperbolic, so these statements tend to roll off. Of course I care. Of course I want to know, to sooth, to solve. And his hyperbole has as much to do with his limited communication skills as it does with his limited perspective. That’s why kids live moment to moment. They don’t know how to think long-term because they have not experienced what long-term is.

Some stupid kid with some stupid older brother who knows everything said something stupid and it has upset my son because he doesn’t realize it’s stupid. That’s five ‘stupids’ in one sentence to describe the unfortunate hypothetical 5th grader whose argument I write so that it will fail in the face of mine. The truth is I don’t give a rip what some idiot 5th grader thinks about the rules of kickball or the color of backpacks. But Idiot 5th Grader has given me a gift. He has opened a door to a conversation, an opportunity for my son to question and for me to answer. Thank you, Idiot 5th Grader. Now stop telling my son he’s wearing the wrong color of sneakers or I will find you and destroy you.

And no, my perspective was not suddenly lost in the last few sentences. I’m sure Idiot 5th Grader has his fine qualities. I’m sure he participates in all mandatory school charity work. I’m sure my son will in 2 year be Idiot 5th Grader. I realize all too well that I was once Idiot 5th Grader, and in some ways, still am. Therefore I do not judge him except in the most obvious ways that he clearly deserves.

There’s nothing like a little bit of time on this earth to earn you some perspective. Time, a low-grade fever and a nice little bout of gut-twisting puke.

Notes On Fatherhood

Why does the tummy ache always come on at 2 a.m.? And always last all night long? It’s a normal part of parenting to lose a bit of sleep sometimes, and to ignore your own nauseating fatigue, and do no more than purse your lips over endless rivers of puke. His mom was just back from business travel and wiped out, so cleaning last night’s mac and cheese out of the carpet was on me this go-round. Super-happy-fun-time-night.

And now, mid-morning, I’m home, and not voicing how bored and miserable I am, too. He’s complaining enough for 8 or so of us. But, I’m also keeping quiet about the fact that watching Muppet Treasure Island at 10 a.m. on a weekday is a little bit awesome. Those guys still crack me up. And Tim Curry seems to be actually enjoying himself.

I’ve gotta feel bad for the little guy. I mean, we’ve all been there. And every parent has that tiny nag in the back of our head that won’t shut up about maybe things are getting worse instead of better – a tough diagnosis in these first stages, especially for a worried parent who knows as much about medicine as the 9-year-old patient. “Is it a hard, pointy, ‘ouch’ feeling? Or is it a soft, yucky, ‘bletch’ feeling?”

And amid the continued heaving, we’re deep into negotiations about when the next sip of ginger ale is allowed. 15 minutes after the last chuck, and just a sip or two at most. Okay, 12 minutes, and just a third sip. Applesauce soon, but please stop begging for milk. That’ll end up so gross and horrible, you can’t even imagine.

Humor Sentiments

The new year is a perfect time to start over, except for my job and my house and my friends and my habits.  I want new clothes, is what I’m saying.

 

For me, Christmas isn’t about materialism, unless that means you like getting gifts, because then it totally is.

 

There’s no knitting-related problem that knitting can’t solve.

 

I like to think that the “Hang in there” kitty hung in there, and is now living happily with the Family of a courageous fire fighter.  I also like to think about fire fighters.

 

A relaxing drive is a great way to clear your head, especially if your problem is the kind you can run over with your car.

 

My upcoming anniversary is my diamond anniversary. I don’t care what number it is. I put up with a lot.

 

If they don’t want me to get Botox, they’ll have to do better than “it’s poison that’s never killed anyone.”

 

I don’t want to get too sentimental on your birthday… But you’re kind of an ass sometimes. (I think that went well.)

 

People say “Little Miss Perfect” like it’s a bad thing.

 

I think there’s someone I need to get in touch with and forgive.  And that someone is that bitch Jenny Perkins from 10th grade and it’s not gonna happen.

News Headlines

  • The school board of Houston, Texas is the latest to ban all mascots thought to be offensive. The gain in popularity of this trend has students at Finger Lakes Middle School concerned they may lose their beloved mascot, “The Middle Finger.”
  • The body of Nelson Mandela was returned for burial to his boyhood hometown of Qunu. The people of that town say, “Qunu is where Mandela always belonged.” Members of the former Apartheid regime that Mandela toppled in Johannesburg added, “we think so, too.”
  • The man who faked sign language translation during Nelson Mandela’s memorial service has a criminal past. It has been discovered that he used to translate for American tourists to non-English speakers by just yelling really loud English at everyone.
  • The Chinese spacecraft has landed on the moon. Mission scientists plan to spend the first day driving the rover around knocking over all the other flags that are already stuck in the ground everywhere.
  • A group of gun rights advocates in Rhode Island is voting to recall some city council members for changing some gun laws. Most residents of Rhode Island responded by saying, “there are gun laws?”
  • Khloe Kardashian has filed for divorce. Everything was going fine in her marriage, but she says that divorce is just totally in right now.

Humor Sentiments

My mother always told me never to say “hate”, so let’s get together and talk about people we would enjoy murdering.

 

You really impress me, but to be honest, I’m still kind of blown away by the invention of the spatula.  I mean, come on, that thing is genius.

 

I’m pretty sure the key to happiness is to not think too much about anything ever.

 

Life has its ups and downs and its turns and bumps, but sometimes there’s a bar up there on the left, so life is good sometimes, also.

 

I’ve been trying to convince my boss to wear a bell.

 

I like to think of my dating life as more of a catch and release program for wild morons. Next time you’re at a bar, avoid guys with tagged ears.

 

I look back to when we were younger, and I really feel like I owe you.  But your birthday is not time to focus on revenge.  That will come sometime later.  When you least expect it.

 

You’re living proof of how high a person can rise from such humble, awkward, smelly, pimpled, webbed-footed, hunch-backed beginnings.

 

You’re the kind of sister that most people write stories about.  With titles that usually start with Return Of, Revenge Of, or Curse Of.

 

The truth is that you’re not nearly as ugly as all the wilderness animals I will continue to compare you to.  Happy Birthday, gorilla arms.

Notes On Fatherhood

Find Your Meatballs

A friend recently asked me about how she could bond with her new step-son, who is a preteen with a new step-mom, and so the answer is: it’s impossible so don’t even try. But having made her sit through so many of my coma inducing stories about my kid over the years, she had earned the right to ask how she, too, might make her own stories boring enough to fade the color of the wall paint as she told them.

And so after my internal reaction of “don’t bother,” my answer was “find your meatballs.” She of course thought I was being a wise-ass, which of course I was, but knowing that she was sincerely reaching out, I was being a wise-ass in delivery only and genuine in meaning.

My son and I sometimes make meatballs together. I’m second generation Italian American. Think “The Sopranos,” if they were middle-class and obeyed the law. Actually, think of every Italian American caricature from the Sopranos who wasn’t in the mob. That would be about right.

So, meals, cooking, food in general were a massive percentage of my childhood experience. Grandparents next door, aunts and uncles up the street, cousins everywhere. Mom and aunts in the kitchen all afternoon, their nonstop chatter over the white noise hiss of breaded groceries frying in olive oil. You get the idea.

I live far away now. No cousins down the street for my son, no grandparents next door. I try to give him some sense of this family experience by cooking together whenever we can, which is pretty often. He’s young enough to still want to hang out with his dad, and I do almost all the cooking in my house.

Many years ago, when my wife, then girlfriend, and I moved in together, she asked me if I wanted my pasta ‘al dente,’ or ‘cooked.’ I told her to get out of the kitchen and to never cook for me again as long as she lived. She immediately agreed, and we have been generally happy kitchen-wise ever since. Here I need to say that she’s got a few good meals down, because she does, and because I would like to avoid getting throat punched in my sleep.

Making meatballs with my son is a long process with many steps and it requires him to concentrate, to do as he is told (whilst handling raw meat and such), and to have a thing to do with his dad that he likes. And the pay-off is meatballs, the awesomeness of which should go without saying. And I will risk bragging by saying that our meatballs are better than most (yours). Let me know if you want the recipe. And they are one of the very few high calorie non-crap foods he will eat, which a lot of parents know is a victory of ‘Impossible Dream’ proportions.

We don our aprons, lay out our supplies and ingredients, and we become a professional level duo of meatballers, a Guinea Batman and (half-Guinea) Robin that I’d put up against any surgical staff or Olympic bob sled team for seamless work process.

And thus we make meatballs. Lots of meatballs. At least 50 at a time. They freeze great, and they are the go-to conversation starter at every dinner which features them (“This was a good batch. Not too heavy on the breadcrumbs. Nice browning,” etc.).

My friend told me that her step-son doesn’t like to cook, but that doesn’t matter. My son and I have meatballs. She needed to find whatever they could do together that would hold his attention. It would be even better if on the surface the activity has nothing to do with her – her participation incidental, but her presence necessary.

Some time later, she told me she had actually started making meatballs more often. He enjoys them, which increases the likelihood of a pleasant family dinner experience, and she schedules those dinners on the nights when it’s his turn to clean the kitchen. She stays to help him move things along, which gives them as much as an entire hour in the same room together.

Maybe they talk, maybe they don’t. Maybe they solve a problem, maybe they load the washer and go their separate ways. But he’s doing something, and there she is. He feels her presence in his life. Not pressing to finish homework, or to get off the computer already. No explosive arguments where the kid discovers new ways to be insulting and disrespectful. She’s just there. And during those early teen years, that’s often what a kid needs, and maybe the best a parent can hope for.

I’m sure my kid won’t want to make meatballs with me in a few short years, and I’ll have to just be present and bite my tongue, which won’t happen and we’ll have those explosive fights I just advised my friend on how to avoid. But maybe I can at least threaten my son with meatball deprivation. I’m sure it won’t have the desired effect, but maybe it’ll give me something to write about in a few years. Even when kids are good for nothing, they’re always good for that.

News Headlines

  • British researchers estimated the amount of alcohol consumed by the character of James Bond, and determined he would be an alcoholic. Also, he’d be a mass murderer, and he’d have roughly 300 children. And he would have been killed five minutes into the first movie anyway.
  • Experts in cyber etiquette say it’s impolite to take a selfie at a funeral. And it’s especially rude to do rabbit ears behind the corpse.
  • Prince Harry and his team of adventurers have reached the South Pole. Let’s see his stupid perfect big brother do that!
  • The world leaders who attended Nelson Mandela’s memorial service are being praised for braving the rain. It’s not quite as brave as enduring 27 years of prison and then peacefully toppling an oppressive government, but still, it was raining.
  • Beyonce has dropped a surprise album. Apparently she woke up this morning to find she had recorded, mixed and produced it in her sleep. She hasn’t seen the videos yet, but they’re probably good, too.