I have some bits and bobs that I didn't think could stand individually as a post, but together, maybe they're something.
1. In trying to describe to Paige Teddy's behavior in the 4:30-5:00 blood sugar witching half hour, I accidentally coined the word "appetude", which is a mashup of appetite and attitude. Teddy is one of those kids who can behave horrendously when he's hungry. What's amazifrustrating (not a typo) is that it takes an astonishingly small number of bites of food for him to make a Jekyll-to-Hyde transformation. In fact, the next time he's sporting a bad appetude, I'm going to try to take a video so you can see how quickly he can recover.
2. Late winter sun blinding you from reading the comics, son? Don't worry about it. Dad will build a sunshade for you out of sugary cereals. That'll help.
4. Finally, who doesn't love a second-grader's polite note about something he wants packed in his lunch? Pittsburgh Popcorn is pretty amazing. I'd want their chocolate covered pretzel popcorn packed in my lunch, too.
The subject with his science fair project about the impact of introducing drag on paper airplanes
Charlie (11) has long planned to be a professional athlete. As solid as this plan sounds, we have been a little concerned that a child as, ahem, bulk-challenged as he is may not be NFL wide receiver material. We've talked to him about having a backup plan, and to keep us quiet, he has settled on mechanical engineering. Concurrently, he has angled for sports announcing jobs at school. We were surprised at the very tail end of his fifth grade year to discover that he'd been standing up at morning assembly and giving a Pirates report for weeks, maybe since the season started in April of that year. We don't know how it began; his principal happened to love him and to encourage bold students. Now in sixth grade, he has become the backup announcements guy over the PA system in the morning. When the assigned eighth grader cannot fulfill his duties, our guy makes the morning student announcements. Naturally. A sixth grader in a 400-student middle school. Emboldened by his substitute spot, he pitched giving a Pirates update at his middle school. His principal accepted his proposal, and he's chomping at the bit for the season to start so he can take to the airwaves. The other day, he mentioned sports announcing as a fallback in case he's not drafted by the Steelers. In ten years, I'll probably pull strongly for mechanical engineering, but from the safe vantage point of his (and my) relative youth, I love the idea. He's particularly well-suited to it. He loves sports and has narrated his way through his imaginary games for as long as we can remember. He loves people and the storylines of teams and players. He has a "Dad, remember the second spring training game we went to in 2007 when David Ortiz came to the plate..." kind of sports memory. He also reveres the history of sports. For fun, he has watched DVDs of the Pirates 1971 and 1979 World Series games. Ask him what the weather was like for game 2 in Baltimore in 1979; he might know. So, it's important for a young man to have choices. So far, we have A) 6'1", 160 lb. wide receiver, B) sports announcer and C) mechanical engineer.
Although I shouldn't give any time to prooftexting dirtbags, I was shocked at an Internet rabbit trail discovery this week and just had to share/vent. So, : A friendposted this note about the Mars Hill megachurch's pastor promising to make changes in his life. This time, he has to make changes because his publisher might have bought a ton of copies of his latest book in order to manipulate bestseller lists. I say that to distinguish from an earlier plagiarism scandal. Needless to say, this beefy pastor is a real peach. Anyway, in trying to find out more about this dishonest dude, I found myself watching this treatise on Stay-at-Home Dads:
Here, we find Father Frat and his lady wife telling us that a stay-at-home dad is "worse than an unbeliever". Mrs. D. tells us that it's "hard to respect a man who won't provide for his family". (As I typed that I couldn't help but think of this: "All the pain inside amplified by the fact/That I can't get by with my 9 to 5/And I can't provide the right type of life for my family", but that was written by a brilliant person.) Then we get a nice dose of "Men can't raise children. Silly. Ha ha!" But then it gets really specious. On the face of it, what she says next might not be that ridiculous. But wrapped in a spiritual church leader patina, it's flat out dangerous. "As women, we're built to be home with our kids." What I hate is that she makes this blanket declaration in the midst of talking about scripture, which makes it sound like she's saying Biblical. Of course, she doesn't point to a verse that says "And God made the woman specially to stay at home while the man earned an honest wage for an honest day's pay." One reason she doesn't is that THERE ISN'T ONE! I can't really go through every point without boring you and making myself unduly angry, but Father Frat's bombshell at 4:00 is that if a man in his congregation stayed at home with kids while his wife worked, unless there were "extreme, extenuating circumstances", it would be a matter for church discipline. Note to self: don't become a member of a church led by batshit crazy people. They base their whole argument on I Timothy 5:8, a verse for which I checked a few translations. I'm not a Biblical scholar at all, but In two mainstream translations (the New International Version and the New Revised Standard Version), the pronouns are all gender neutral. The New American Standard, I uses male possessive words in a way that feels very generic, but the subject of the sentence is "anyone". It's not "a man" or "he". It's "anyone who does not provide for his family...". The NIV, which is used most commonly renders it this way: "Anyone who does not provide for their relatives, and especially for their own household, has denied the faith and is worse than an unbeliever." While this is grammatically incorrect, it's emphatically gender-neutral, which makes it a poor verse on which to base a far-reaching gender-based argument. That's the problem with this clip. Mark Driscoll and his wife wrap a personal interpretation of a verse of scripture in a whole mess of unsubstantiated opinion. The other thing Father Frat repeatedly says is that "statistics show" kids need mom barefoot and pregnant in the kitchen raising them. It's only credible to cite statistics if one also cites their source. They treat the Bible as though it were written at the dawn of the streetcar era when suburban work/life divides became possible. Or possibly in the 1950s when good roads and a postwar urban housing crisis kicked suburban development up ten notches. Then they say that it's our perverted culture that leads men to make these horrible decisions that harm their families. it's all very genderist. It's hard enough to make a counter-cultural choice that we in our family feel is the best thing for everyone - mom, dad and kids. It's harder still when celebrity pastors pump out BS like this. Several people have called Newt Gingrich "a stupid person's idea of what a smart person sounds like". I fear that Mark Driscoll can hoodwink thousands of people by being a stupid person's idea of what a holy man sounds like.
Our boys have been intensely interested in Minecraft for around a year. With cousins and friends who play Minecraft and the strange world of Minecraft parody songs (e.g. the Lady Gaga "Poker Face" parody "Creeper Face"), they've played a tiny bit and talked a bunch. We recently gave them permission to buy the game. It turned out they had enough saved between the two of them to buy one instance of the game, so they're sharing it. The photos at right depict how happy they were to finally get it loaded on our family computer. [Notes: 1) Very similar shirts are a coincidence. 2) Note the pride of place of Teddy's Seahawks football he bought with his own money.] We don't have pictures of our faces when we discovered that Minecraft explained Charlie's slow progress on his science project. It's that time of year in sixth grade, and both Paige and I had spent time helping Charlie structure his project and think about how to execute and document his experiments about the effects of adding drag to paper airplanes. When he would show us his draft or his work product for what seemed like large blocks of time working on it, we found that he'd produced far less than we expected. It kept being incomplete and we kept prompting him with the next step to improve toward a good result. We went back and forth between a) sympathetic head-shaking about how hard it is to structure a full-on, open-ended, serious science project when a young man hasn't done that before, b) blaming the teacher for not giving enough instruction and c) blaming the boy for just not being able to focus.
When his mother woke up from a Saturday afternoon nap and went to check on him, and found that he was in the exact same place in his science project as when she'd fallen asleep, she asked him what was up. First he said he “spaced out,” and when she replied that it had been a long time and he hadn’t made progress and he needed to tell her what he had been doing, he admitted that he’d played Minecraft during that time. He did own up to it when confronted. That's what the cusp age of 11 looks like: devious enough to play video games instead of working on homework, but not so devious as to lie about it when he knows he's caught. It was an affront, though. We felt like we really had to come down hard on this because we'd both been expending such effort to shepherd the science project along without doing the work for him. We also looked back at the assignment packet for the science project and realized that if he'd been consulting that all along, he should have been able to make much better progress than he did ignoring it. It wasn't the teacher's fault, after all. We contemplated different lengths of Minecraft embargoes and settled on a month. He was a little surprised at the length of time, but we hope that it really gets his attention. We executed it by having him tell us his password and creating a new one until his month is up. This seems to be a digital rite of parenting passage these days. This is more of a punishment than a consequence to use the language of Parenting with Love & Logic. It is, however, a punishment that hits right at the disobedient behavior. We hope that the next time he's tempted to play when he's supposed to be doing something else, he remembers that we can take it away. In fact, still on our agenda is a discussion with him about how tempting it is to lose oneself in a digital escape rather than keep plugging away at something that bores, taxes or tires us. An unintended benefit of this is that little brother gets to keep playing while big brother is grounded from Minecraft. That means he can jumpstart his skills and creations, which can only help the never-ending race-without-a-headstart that he lives every day being four years younger.
This all broke last weekend. When people asked Monday how my weekend was, I told them that my oldest child chose that weekend to become a pre-teen. As the car chinks its way up the first incline of the parenting-a-teenager rollercoaster, I'm grateful to share it with a partner with whom I can work together on the bewildering new challenges. Please keep your arms and legs inside the vehicle until it comes to a complete stop.
Everyone thinks of Pharrell Williams as the music impresario with the crazy hat at the Grammies. He's certainly prolific with the catchy hooks. He's worked with Madonna, Gwen Stefani, Kanye West and Justin Timberlake His biggest hit - Happy - bubbles with positivity. Heck, it's on the Despicable Me 2 soundtrack. It shows real mucisianship and features an inclusive call to join in Mr. Big-hat's fun:
Clap along if you feel like happiness is the truth Because I’m happy Clap along if you know what happiness is to you Because I’m happy Clap along if you feel like that’s what you wanna do
Three songs before "Happy" on his album "G I R L", however, we find "Hunter". The song is so generally sexually forward that it might have been on George Michael's 1987 album "Faith". Our culture is that much more saturated with sex now than when "I Want your Sex" and "Father Figure" dominated MTV (a cable network that used to show music videos to teenagers whose parents were at work). Maybe "Hunter" doesn't even stand out in today's pop music. One line, however, brought me up short. In the middle of his promise of pursuit, he intones: If I can't have you, nobody can. Excuse me? In the middle of a pop song, however sexual it is, I was shocked to come across the most classic threat of a domestic abuser. It's not right to just throw off that line in the midst of a pop song. I might be even more sensitive to this if I had a daughter, but I can tell you that my sons won't be allowed to buy "Hunter" for their iPods. No one else seems upset by this. Reviewers say "Hunter" evokes the musical styles of the Bee Gees and Prince. NPR says "Even when Pharrell dares to come off as slightly predatory, as in "Hunter" — about tracking a woman — it's all done in the mildest manner possible." Again, excuse me? What makes the jealous murder threat mild? Does this song make anyone else uncomfortable?
The name of this blog is a political statement about fatherhood. Regardless of the progress toward gender equality that has occurred over the last several decades, one stereotype persists and may be getting worse: moms are good parents and dads are incompetent boobs who sometimes babysit. Poppycock, I say. Or an excuse for dads who would like to be viewed as numskulls so that they don't have to parent their kids. Dads are parents too, and I know some who are very good at it.
I'm neither a stay-at-home dad nor do I work full time. I work part time, and I'm the primary parent for the foreseeable future. The primary competent parent, I hope it is not presumptuous to say.