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Monthly Archives: January 2012

What a Fine Mess This Is

Land mines

“Wook, Daddy! YEGOs!!” says my son, holding up the Folgers can of plastic toy bricks I had hidden, unsuccessfully I might add, behind the couch. Then, in typical fashion, he pours the can’s entire contents all over the floor, once again thwarting my attempts to clean up.

I’ve always liked having things neat and orderly. I remember, as a kid, constantly straightening the magazines on the coffee table, making sure that everything was at perfect right angles. It made me happy.

I was somewhat of a dork as a kid. A neat dork, though.

Today I’m not as dorky, but I’m still what many people refer to as a “neat freak.” Although, I’m not so sure what’s so freaky about liking things clean. Cleanliness, as they say, is next to Godliness. And I’m pretty sure the Big Guy keeps his place nice and tidy up there. At least I hope so. Otherwise Eternity’s going to seem like forever.

Living with young children has been somewhat of a challenge for me. Kids are inherently messy; I knew this going in, of course. But I was naive enough to think that I’d be able to keep them in check. I soon learned that that trying to keep up with their messes is fruitless. It’s like trying to bail water out of the Titanic.

With a spoon.

For a while, when it was just my daughter, it wasn’t too bad. She never really cared much for toys, and it was easy to pick up the occasional baby doll or picture book.

Exhibit A

Then along came my son, a.k.a. Hurricane Isaac. He loves toys. He loves smashing them. He loves throwing them. Heck, he loves eating them. He especially likes scattering them all over the house. At one point, fed up with the chaos, I decided to keep his toy cupboard locked all the time just so he wouldn’t keep dumping his puzzles and books and everything all over the place (see Exhibit A).

Now before you start harping about what a horrible father I am…chill out. I don’t keep his toy cupboard locked all the time anymore.

I open it for 15 minutes every other Tuesday.

I blame my wife somewhat for my son’s messy tendencies. She’s a Mess Enabler (M.E.) If she’s in the kitchen cooking dinner and Isaac decides to ransack the Tupperware cabinet, that’s just fine with her. Or, if she’s working in her office and Isaac wants to rummage through her garbage can like a homeless person—again, no big deal. Whatever keeps him busy, that’s what she always says.

Let’s she if she’s whistling the same tune when her son’s in Slobs Anonymous.

And it’s not just toys. More food has ended up on my dining room floor than in my children’s mouths. If we had a dog, it would be morbidly obese by now. “Lean over the table!” I’m always telling them, to no avail. Even if my son somehow manages to keep everything on his high-chair table during the meal, as soon as he’s full he either pushes his plate over the edge or swipes all the food onto the floor in a sudden and rather disturbing frenzy.

He’s not right in the head, that one.

One of the more cleaner days

I’ve pretty much given up on the idea of having a clean house. What’s the point? While I’m putting away the blocks, Isaac’s off somewhere dumping out all of his Matchbox cars. While I’m organizing her dolls on her bed, according to height and hair color, Antonella’s leaving a trail of cookie crumbs all over the house.

I think they may be trying to kill me.

One day, people always tell me, when my kids move out and head off to college and the house is empty, I’ll miss the messiness. And sometimes I think, you know what, maybe they’re right. Then I feel the searing pain as a sharp plastic block embeds itself into my bare foot, and I immediately snap back to reality.

One day, many, many moons from now, I’ll finally have the clean house of my dreams, where everything is orderly and in its place. Until then I’ll just have to learn to live with crumbs and LEGOs underfoot; with wooden blocks and toy cars strewn about; with books and magazines—GULP!—at awkward angles on the coffee table.

Stay strong, Val. Stay strong.

 
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Posted by on January 20, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

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Daddy Strikes Again

“Hey! Where’s Lady?” asks Antonella, speaking of her pet ladybug, which had been residing inside a juice glass on top of the fireplace mantel. That is, until I threw it out earlier that day.

She hadn’t mentioned or even looked at the darn thing in a week. Now, as we’re entertaining some friends on a Saturday night, Antonella suddenly remembers her six-legged pet and begins to comb the house for it.

“Lady! Laaaaaaady!” she calls, doing a room-to-room search. I get a sick feeling in my stomach as I think back to that moment earlier in the day when, just before releasing the bug back into the wild, I debated about first consulting my daughter. Nah, I thought. She’ll never miss it.

“Oh, Laaaaaaady! Where are you?”

Then again…

“Antonella,” I say. “Come here. Daddy has something to tell you.” My wife turns and looks at me, wide-eyed and concerned. I then explain to my daughter how I freed her ladybug earlier in the day while she was napping. “It hadn’t had food or water in a week, honey. It was dying.” Of course, even if it somehow managed not to be eaten by some winter-starved bird, the bug had most certainly frozen to death by this point.

Cue the tears. My daughter falls into my wife’s arms, crushed that her father has betrayed her and cast her beloved Lady out in the merciless wilderness, i.e., the backyard, to fend for itself. I try to justify my actions, but my daughter is inconsolable.

Bread for Lady the Ladybug

Cassie jumps in and tries to diffuse the situation. “How about if we leave some bread out on the back porch for it?” she says.

This momentarily calms by hysterical first born. “Yeah!” says Antonella. “And then we can catch her and bring her back inside.” And so the two of them head off to the kitchen—my daughter with new-found hope, my wife giving me the familiar what-in-the-world-were-you-thinking look.

Later that evening I am sitting on the living room floor working on my laptop when I notice movement on the carpet next to me. Unbelievably, crawling right next to me is a ladybug! Could it possibly be Lady? Who gives a crap? I’m saved! I immediately scoop it up and seal it inside another juice glass, covering the opening with a piece of wax paper and a rubber band.

The next morning I can’t wait to tell my daughter that her beloved Lady has returned. But as I pick up the glass, something’s missing: the ladybug. Then I notice that I had failed to properly seal the opening, creating a means of escape.

Daddy strikes again.

Remarkably, my daughter is disappointed but upbeat about the situation. “Well,” she says, “at least it’s back inside the house now.”

“Yeah!” I say, impressed with her mature optimism. “That’s what really matters.” I just hope she won’t want me to try to find it.

“Let’s try to find it!” she says.

Nella and her Ladybug

Despite a desperate all-morning search, the new Lady is nowhere to be found, and I realize now that I will have to Google “ladybugs for sale” and place my first-ever online insect purchase. Then, the next morning, my wife discovers a ladybug crawling on the dining room wall. Again, she puts the bug in a glass, this time with some food (a leaf from a house plant and an orange slice) and some water, and makes sure to seal it in. But when she presents it to Antonella, my daughter changes her mind. “I don’t want her to be dead,” she says. “I want her to sleep on the wall. Then we can find her that way, and she won’t die.”

How can you argue with that logic?

So what did we learn here? And by “we” I mean “me.” We learned that it is never wise to release your child’s pet into the wild without their consent.

We also learned that we may need an exterminator.

 
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Posted by on January 11, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

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Pet Rocks and Toy Animal Urinals

Antonella’s pet rock

“Where my Oink and my Moo?” asks Isaac, scouring the house for his two favorite toys – a wooden pig and cow – which are actually just broken ice-cream spoon handles.

“Can I keep it? Please!” asks Antonella, picking up a baseball-sized rock next to a sidewalk planter. Once home, she gives her “pet” rock a bubble bath in the sink, wraps it in a wipey, and then adorns it with a purple barrette.

Our house is a garbage dump of plastic, Made-in-China, primary-color madness. It’s an orphanage for dozens of baby dolls of every shape and size. It’s a parking garage for a plethora of toy cars, trucks, and trains. It is this way, largely thanks to my parents and my in-laws, who obviously have stock in Toys “R” Us.

But even though they have all of these things, what my kids love to play with most are random objects, such as filthy, roadside rocks and defective silverware handles. Coincidentally, these were the hottest Christmas gifts during the Great Depression.

Toy Animal Urinal

Issac’s “Oink” and “Moo” were originally handles to spoons from an ice cream gift basket I won in a raffle. There’s also a penguin and polar bear. He broke the spoon ends off almost immediately and has been captivated by the animal-shaped handles ever since. His other favorite toy is an old silver necklace of my wife’s, which he refers to as his “beads”, and which he uses to tether different toys together.

These objects can keep my son busy for hours. He’s always setting them up in elaborate scenes, such as the one shown here, which I like to call “Toy Animal Urinal.”

Besides her pet rock, Antonella also has a pet ladybug that she named “Lady.” After placing it inside a freezer bag, which she had me blow air into, Antonella showed Lady the ladybug a movie on her portable, kiddy-computer-thingamabob, which she calls her “pooter.” Later we relocated the insect to a more comfortable abode—a juice glass with a piece of perforated wax paper rubber-banded to the top. Lady has been “sleeping” for several days now, which doesn’t seem to worry my daughter in the least.

Homemade Etch-A-Sketch

She also created a piece or art recently using a few parts from Isaac’s toy tool bench, a dish rag, and two of her proudest doodles. Personally I think it resembles a crude Etch-A-Sketch. For her next trick, she’ll be making a Rubik’s cube out of some wooden alphabet blocks and a jar of Skippy.

Oh, and she also likes to play with dental floss.

So you see, folks, you don’t have to buy in to the crazed consumerism that corporations are trying to sell to us as the “American Dream.” If you just let your kids use their imagination, they’ll realize that an empty toilet paper roll can be just as fun as a new Xbox 360. Does this mean I’ll never let my kids play video games? Of course not. My Atari 2600 is ready and waiting in the basement as soon as they’re old enough to operate a joystick.

I wish I could see into the future and figure out what free, random objects my kids will become enamored with next. That way I could save money on their birthdays or Christmas and just get them a piece of bark, a broken spatula, or maybe even a new pet stink bug.

Lord knows we’ve got plenty of those.

 
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Posted by on January 6, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

Top Five Posts of 2011

Thanks to all of you who supported me and my writing in 2011. It really was a great year!

Here are my Top Five Posts of the year, according to the number of visitors to my blog…

The Aging Process  (April 2011)

Father-Daughter Bonding… in the Men’s Room  (January 2011)

Hurricane Isaac  (March 2011)

Daddy’s Little Demon  (August 2011)

The Battle of Dinnertime  (November 2011)

 
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Posted by on January 3, 2012 in Uncategorized

 
 
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