Category Archives: Fatherhood

Ho Frickin’ Ho

Call me a Scrooge if you will but I’ve never been much of a "Yippee it’s Christmas!" guy.  Not sure why that is, but it has always been the case.  Luckily for the last 15 years I’ve been balanced out by my wife who usually gets into the spirit about 2-3 weeks before Christmas.  That means our tree is usually begrudgingly wrestled into place by yours truly 5-8 working days before Christmas.  If I’m feeling generous I’ll also do the lights and then the kids and Celeste will take care of decking it out as they listen to cheesy Christmas songs while I find something useful to do around the house, like watching a football game.

This year’s been different because Celeste hasn’t been infected with the spirit of the season either.  I’m not sure if it’s stress from work, the unseasonably warm weather, or the lack of peace on Earth but for whatever reason it’s been a very businesslike holiday season in our house, which means there hasn’t been a push to get the tree up this year.  Thankfully our kids are now old enough to take matters into their own hands and the result is that my oldest, Michael, wrestled the tree into place as I was working in my office last night.  By the time I wound things up at seven I came down the stairs to find the tree up and fully decorated.

Do I feel guilty?  Heck no! I’m elated that I didn’t have to do my normal back breaking, cursing routine as I tried for the 85th time to get the tree to stand up straight.  How festive is that anyway?  Now that I know that I’m not needed for the tree torture I think I might actually start looking forward to Christmas a little sooner.

Or not.  As Esbee pointed out people start getting surly around this time of year and I still have shopping to do.  Bah, humbug. 

Daddy’s Not-so-little Girl

PhotoToday’s the day that my little girl officially enters that frightening universe known as teenager-hood.  She turns 13 and I think she thinks she’s turning 31.  We’re already arguing over makeup, short-shorts, boys, you name it.  Barring the invention of a time machine I guess I’m just going to have to adjust, but some things are not changing and will never change and for that I’m thankful.
PhotoFirst of all she’s always going to be as beautiful a creature as you can lay your eyes on.  Yeah, yeah, I’m biased (shoot me) but take my word for it.  She’s also always going to stand up for herself (she’s the only one of our three kids who’s yelled back at me) and she’s always going to be whip-smart (straight A’s so far in middle school).  She will always possess a laugh that can be heard two counties away and will never be mistaken for a “polite” laugh.  She will always be a faithful friend, sister, daughter, niece, cousin and granddaughter.  You can bank on it.

And some day she’ll be some lucky guy’s girlfriend, fiance and eventually wife.  Hopefully those days are a long ways off, but when they come she’ll still be her daddy’s little girl.

Happy birthday sweetheart.

How to Know What the Hell Your Kids Are Talking About: Part 1

Okay, I finally have to admit that I’m not just behind the times, I’m way not-cool.  Increasingly I realize that I have no idea what the hell people under the age of 30 are talking about, and forget understanding what teenagers are saying.  Their language is a sea of acronyms and obscure IM and gaming references and I find myself trying to translate their words by studying the context in which they’re said.  Unfortunately one of the victims of modern culture is the ability to speak or write in fully formed sentences, much less paragraphs, so it’s kind of like trying to interpret what someone is saying to you over a bad mobile phone connection.  Example:

Me: What’s going on?
Other: I…crack…house.
Me: You’re at a crack house?
Other: No, I…itched…a crack…in…sister.
Me: You’re doing what with your sister?

Later I’m told he was patching a crack in the walkway in front of his sister’s house.  You get my drift.  So anyway I’ve been reading all these terms that I really don’t get like "n00b" and "pwned" which make me say to myself, "WTF?"  So I did a little research and I came up with an essential tool for my "Parenting a Teenager Toolbox."  It’s the Wikipedia page dedicated to internet slang and it’s an absolute must though FWIW I suspect it’s probably several steps behind the current slang.

Off the Pole and the Pipe

Whilst perusing youtube I found a clip of Chris Rock on The Daily Show.  Jon Stewart asked him about being a dad (he has a 9-month old daughter) and he said his only goal was to "keep her off the pole."  His overall parenting advice is to keep your daughter off the pole and your son off the pipe.

So if my kids don’t end up strippers or crack addicts then I can consider myself a success. When you look at it that way parenting doesn’t seem too hard.

Just Me and Justin

Tubing_with_eddie_nevins_and_justin_julyCeleste and our two oldest kids are at Laurel Ridge this week for summer camp which means that our youngest has had to endure a week alone with me.  I had business in DC late last week and early this week so on Thursday we drove up and I dropped Justin with our good friends the Nevins.  He spent the night with them on Thursday and then after I was done working on Friday he and I spent the weekend with the Nevins.  We went boating on Saturday with Ted (Nevins patriarch), his two boys Eddie and Daniel and Ted’s parents.  The picture is of Eddie, me and Justin (hand up) tubing on the Potomac River.  We also went to see Pirates of the Caribbean on Friday and just kind of hung out on Sunday, which allowed us to spend some time with Jane (matriarch of the Nevins family) and the Nevins’ girls, Delia and Tess.

On Monday and Tuesday I was working all day in Bethesda, MD so we moved to a hotel in Chevy Chase on Sunday night and my Mom and Bert (her significant other) came up and stayed in the same hotel as me and Justin.  They took him to the International Spy Museum and the newly reopened Smithsonian American Art Museum on Monday and shopping on Tuesday.  Since Mom loaded him up with books I don’t think he minded the shopping at all.  Sunday evening Justin and I ordered room service and then watched a pay-per-view movie and on Monday we had dinner at Clydes with Mom and Bert and then ordered another movie in our room.  Justin is now under the impression that business trips are all about figuring out where to eat and then watching movies in your room.

Last night, after having dinner with Mom, Bert, my brother and his family we drove home and listened to the CD of spy movie theme music that Mom bought him at the Spy Museum which was a hoot.  We have two days at home before Celeste and the other kids get home so I’ll be bouncing between working and doing some more fun stuff with Justin. This is the first significant amount of time that Justin and I have ever had just the two of us.  We’ve always done lots of stuff with his siblings and I’ve coached one of his soccer teams when he was little, but this has been a unique experience and it’s been an absolute blessing for me.  He’s a great kid, I’ve always known that, but the one-on-one time has allowed us to do more uninterrupted talking in one week than we probably get in the normal course of one or two months.  My new goal is to do something like this with each of the kids as much as possible and I’m hoping that Celeste will get the chance to do it too. 

What a great week.

Whiplash Parenting

One of the things that isn’t covered in the old parenting manual, not that I’ve read a parenting manual, is the speed at which you have to adjust to your childrens’ varying travails and triumphs. It’s enought to give you whiplash. That’s particularly true now that the two oldest aliens, I mean children, living in our house have entered the hormone zone.  One minute you’re laughing and the next minute you’re repairing the hinges on your daughters bedroom door after she slammed it because you had the temerity to inform her that "vegetable" is NOT spelled with a "d".

Anyway, what brings me to write about this are the events of the last 24 hours, plus or minus a few hours.  It all began yesterday morning when I was mowing our lawn and almost had my leg removed at the knee when I ran over an empty soda can and it shot out from underneath the mower at a remarkable velocity.  It being Sunday I limited my cursing to three or four f-bombs and stooped to pick up the can.  That’s when I saw the other four cans in close proximity to the mower and took a closer look at them.  All of them were empty of soda, yet still had sealed tops.  They also had several holes in the side and BBs inside which meant my genius 13 year old son had decided to take target practice with full cans and hadn’t even bothered to cover up what he’d done.  He’d managed to pull off the trifecta of almost killing me, leaving trash in the yard and wasting five perfectly good sodas.  I didn’t bother to restrain my cussing at that point.

So I finished cutting the lawn and went inside to get a drink.  There I found a trashed kitchen and my two other children biding their time, watching TV and waiting to go to the pool.  At this point I let forth a vituperative outburst worthy of the oldest, saltiest sailor while conveniently forgetting that my youngest son had a friend visiting. The poor kid was a little shocked and scurried off to play some video games while our semi-retarded dog found his favorite hiding place under one of the kids’ beds.   Celeste got me to go back outside and finish working on the yard while she informed the kids there would be no trip to the pool and there would be housecleaning.  I love that woman.

My genius 13 year old son was at a friend’s house so he wasn’t around to see Hurricane Dad hit land.  As luck would have it my college roommate and his family came over for dinner so I had the chance to cool my jets, which was a God-send for my genius 13 year old son (and everyone else).  After our guests left I was asked by my daughter to check the website of the soccer team she just tried out for the day before to see if she’d made the cut.  Unfortunately she didn’t (she’s a very good athlete and this is the first time she’s ever tasted failure) so we had to do a little bucking up and encouragement before bed time.   Also, we had to remind her that she’d just shown us interim reports that indicated she has a great chance of ending the year with straight As for all four quarters.  You win some, you lose some.

Meanwhile my genius 13 year old son had a science project due that involved designing and building a thing-a-ma-jig that utilized two simple machines that would allow 200 grams to pick up 600 grams.  Before I go on let me remind you that I was an English Lit major…I don’t do engineering, or metrics.  Let me also mention that he was part of a group of kids on this project and somehow he got stuck having to provide all the materials with the exception of a coat-hanger that one of his group members kindly donated.  Guess whose parents ended up at the craft store buying dowels, spools and other junk?  Remind me to never let my genius 13 year old son negotiate on my behalf.

So anyway there we are at 9:00 on a Sunday night trying to drill holes in wood and create a contraption that uses a pully and wheel and axle combination to lift some piece of metric crap with another piece of metric crap.  It did not go well, but we muddled through and created something that looked like it was built by a Cub Scout on acid.  I will say that my genius 13 year old son did know how to calculate how much load his machine could take, which is a heck of a lot more than I ever learned so I was pleased to see that.

Oh, and Celeste helped us even while she prepared pasta salad and cole slaw for our youngest son’s field day that was to be held the next day.  I don’t know how she does it, but I’m happy to report she can be as vituperative as me when things like this are going on.  Hell, sometimes she makes me blush.  She’s a miracle worker.

Cut to this morning, the first day of the last week of school.  No one got up on time and our two boys missed their buses.  Our genius 13 year old son discovered that someone had tried to flush paper towels down his toilet and thus had to deal with a clogged toilet.  This marked a landmark moment in our household as it was the first time that it wasn’t me, The Turd Man of Alcatraz, who caught the floater.  My youngest looked like a refugee who’d be keel-hauled so Celeste made him take a shower before she drove him to school.  I drove my genius 13 year old son to his school and weathered the only traffic jam that occurs anywhere in this whole damn city and it’s right in his school’s parking lot.  I was thinking, "It’s gonna be a great day."

Back at the house I went up to my office and did a little work (felt like vacation) before Celeste and I headed over to the youngest boy’s fourth grade picnic being held in Shallowford Square.  When we got there we were almost immediately accosted by the PTA-supermom-from-hell, all 2 feet 4 inches of her with short blond hair and massive SUV.  She was in charge and letting everyone know it, and I flew to the other side of the square before I lost control and stuffed her in a high chair and stuck a pacifier in her mouth. 

After a few minutes the kids walked over from the school and the festivities began. All the kids ate and then the teachers took each of their classes and did a little awards ceremony.  I’m proud to report that our boy got the award for reading more books than any other fourth grader (not just his class) and he got a $25 gift certificate to Barnes & Noble.  He was also voted by his classmates the most "Courageous" kid in the class which was great.  On top of all that the mother of the friend that my genius 13 year old son had been with when I almost severed my leg told Celeste that he was the most respectful, well-behaved boy and she loved having him around as an example for her boys.   (Her daughter is in our youngest’s class). Suddenly it was hard to remember how mad we were just a few hours earlier.

We took the young’un home from school and not long after that the other two got home on their bus.  The afternoon was peaceful and I was able to get a lot of work done and Celeste and the kids went off to swim practice.  Things were definitely improving, but I was a little worried about dinner because that was when I’d decided to "fire" the kids.

You see the night before, after much discussion, Celeste and I had decided that
our "Freakonomics"-inspired system of allowance/chores for the kids
just wasn’t working.  The way the system worked we started out each week "owing" the kids $10, but as the week went on we would assign each kid points for things they didn’t do (homework, chores) or did do (talking back, fighting, arguing, etc.).  Each point was worth fifty cents and at the end of the week we would tally up the points, multiply by 50 cents and deduct the total from the original $10.

We had a couple of problems with the system: the kids had figured out that even if they had a bad week they generally made $5 AND we were horrible about being consistent with the point assignments. Through our poor management and their lack of motivation we had a broken system. So even though it was both a management and labor foul-up we decided that as managers we needed to "fire" the labor and go into reorganization; hey if it’s good for United it’s good for us.  Besides I was still kind of pissed about almost losing my leg.

When we sat down for dinner, chicken nuggets and potato salad since I was "cooking," everyone was in a good mood.  I let that go for a while and then I dropped the bomb.  Of course they were a little surprised when I said "You’re all officially fired," but they handled it well (I worry they might be pacifists after all) and they didn’t even flinch when I told the older two that if they wanted some cash they would have to get some babysitting and lawn mowing gigs.  The youngest immediately recognized his lack of money-making opportunities and offered to apprentice himself to his older siblings. They also took it well when I told them that they would still have to do all their chores, but without the opportunity to make money.   

At this point Celeste caved slightly and suggested that as part of our reorganization we might come up with a different compensation system, perhaps a pay-for-performance model.  I was a little disappointed because I was really enjoying watching them squirm, but Celeste long ago proved to be the wiser of us so I guess she was right.

Despite all that we had a great dinner, with lots of laughing and no slammed doors or arguments. Celeste and I left to go pick some furniture up from my aunt and when we got back we found a clean kitchen, and my genius 13 year old son had left a note asking us to evaluate a marketing flyer he’d developed for his mowing service.  He’d also emailed me a PowerPoint slide about North Korea he’d created and needed me to print for him to turn in tomorrow.  Did I tell you that my genius 13 year old son is sharp as a tack, knows more about the economy of North Korea than most college students and does a heck of a job mowing a lawn?  He’s also pretty good on a computer.  Let me know if you need any work done as he’s definitely a little hungry for it at this point.

Like I said, it’s whiplash parenting.  It’s also a lot like the weather in Florida; if you don’t like it just wait fifteen minutes.

Work Then Play

Well, I’m officially coming off my longest break since starting this ol’ blog.  Last week was my client’s annual conference and I was responsible for the exhibit hall which meant I was responsible for all things related to the 50+ exhibitors and sponsors.  It was really my first time managing an exhibit/sponsor operation of this scale from end-to-end (I’ve done the sales side but not the logistics side before) and I have to send a big shout out to Michael Ferenc at Freeman Company who really helped me out.  If he hadn’t done such a good job my life would have been hell.  As it was I was literally buried for the last month and I’m just now coming up for air.

The conference was held at the Disney Coronado Springs resort so I had Celeste and the family fly down on Friday (my work ended on Saturday afternoon) and we did four Disney parks on Sunday and Monday.  Sunday was Animal Kingdom and Epcot and Monday was MGM and Magic Kingdom.  I turned off the phone and didn’t boot up the computer after Saturday so it was a great catch-up time with the family.  I’m sure I’ll have lots to write about but for now here’s a pic of everyone at Animal Kingdom:

P1010037_1

That Little **** Is an Idiot

I’m not going to name names in this post because I don’t think it would be fair to blast a defenseless 12-year old, as much as I’d like to.

Here’s the deal:  a beautiful, brilliant girl who got lucky and was not cursed with her father’s looks, or ADD, came home and sought out said father.  This conversation ensued:

Father: "Hey honey.  How was your day?"

Daughter: "Okay…well not that good."

Father: "Why?"

Daughter: "Well, <little **** she has a crush on and is ‘friends’ with> said he knows lots of girls prettier than me."  Her eyes start to well up.

Father: Tongue almost bleeding from being bitten because his first instinct is to say, "That little MF-er doesn’t know what he’s talking about and you shouldn’t even think about what that little, no-good s***head thinks."  But of course he doesn’t.  Instead he says, "Well, do YOU think you’re pretty?"  Brilliant, huh?

Daughter: "No."

Father: "Well you are.  In fact I’ve had friends tell me how pretty they think you are."  It occurs to him that this might sound a little creepy to a 12 year-old girl so he digs the hole deeper in an effort to de-creepify it. "And you know we all have been around a long time and have known lots of pretty girls so we know a whole lot better than <little ****>."  He’s worried that he’s really making it worse, but she’s beginning to smile so maybe he’s doing okay.  "Look," he says, "I know it doesn’t mean much coming from me or my old-fart friends but you really are a beautiful girl.  Really.  And on top of that you’re smart, kind, friendly and a lot of fun to hang out with.  The problem is that boys your age just don’t know what they’re doing (thank God he thinks to himself) and so they say and do really dumb things."

Hitting his stride he continues, "Let me ask you this: Do you know boys that you think are better looking than <little ****>?"

Daughter: "Yes."

Father:  "See it’s just an opinion and what does it matter because you still like <little ****> even though you know other boys that are better looking, right?"

Daughter: "I guess so."  Smiling.

Father: "Okay, so don’t worry about his or any other boy’s opinion.  If you know you’re pretty and a good person then it doesn’t really matter what they think.  And if they don’t treat you the way you want to be treated just ignore them and don’t give them the time of day, okay?"

Daughter: "Okay…thanks Dad!" She runs out with a big smile on her face.

Father, utterly exhausted, mutters to himself, "Where the sam-hell is that bottle of Scotch when I really need it" and sincerely hopes he doesn’t meet <little ****> in the near future.  He is also very, very afraid of the next decade or two.