Babies are terrifying. And they TOTALLY always mess with me.

Before I had kids, it absolutely made my stomach turn when parents offered my their babies to hold.  It was nothing but awkward for me . . . and yet you really cannot say no.

When that happened, my thought process was always something along the lines of . . .

“How the hell do I hold this thing?”

“Isn’t there some neck support stuff I’m supposed to be aware of here?”

“Am I hurting it?”

“If I look at it wrong will it cry?”

“What do I do if it cries?”

“Should I rock it or bounce it or will that also hurt it?  How does that work with the neck support stuff?”

“What if it pees on me?”

“Aren’t they like dogs and bees and can smell my fear?”

“If it smells my fear, won’t it cry and pee on me?”

“Well it hasn’t cried or peed on me so far, but what do they do, anyway?  This is a little on the boring side.”

“How long do I have to hold this sack of meat?”

“Uh oh, its mother is watching me – quick, make faces and noises like you like her kid.”

“Hmm . . . that was embarrassing.”

“Maybe faces and noises but with less enthusiasm.   More manly-like.”

“Wow, that’s didn’t work AT ALL.  Now the baby’s upset and I’ve somehow managed to look even less manly.  Now what?”

“Quick – find a grandmother or a single woman in her 30s.  They’ll be all over this baby like Ke$ha on an unprotected shot of whisky.”

And now?  Now that I have kids and another parent hands me their baby to hold?

Well, the only thing that’s changed is that I know how to hold it.

(Sort of.)

Ewwwww, gross. Let’s touch it!

Way the hell before I had kids, when I was about 11 years old, my friends and I found a sweet little swamp in the middle of a farmer’s field just outside of the city.

It was just barely within biking distance, and therefore within our immediate universe.

Swamp

No, no, no.  I’m not talking about a nice, big, marshy ecosystem worthy of environmental protection and deserved of the Swamp Proper label . . . no, more like a big, smelly, disgusting hole full of fetid standing water that we referred to as a swamp.

In fact we referred to it as “The Swamp” – creative bunch we were.

This thing was disgusting.

It was full of garbage, slime, mold, some old rotting mattresses and lord knows what else. In other words pretty much a 11 year old boy’s MOST BESTEST THING EVAR.

Another Swamp

Naturally, there were rumors that The Swamp contained a Dead. Human. Body.

Believing this was not at all unusual.

As a pack of ill-behaved 9 year old boys in the era of Stand By Me, we assumed that pretty much any body of water deeper than a paddling pool contained at least one dead body.

During the many, many hours we spent at The Swamp, we fashioned rafts to carry us over and through the fantasmalogical world that was our own little Water World.

Note: by ‘fashioned rafts’ I really mean ‘found pieces of dirty Styrofoam large enough to temporarily keep us from drowning.’

Like any good mother (and my Mom is and was a very good mother), my Mom allowed me to go to The Swamp with the other boys, but ABSOLUTELY FORBADE ME from riding on the Styrofoam rafts (or any other rafts for that matter).

Now, being a very well-behaved young man (I was, in fact), I honored my Mom’s rules for several months, and many, many trips to The Swamp.

Being an 11 year old boy, however, I was eventually goaded into taking “a quick ride” on one of the rafts.  Something along the lines of “hey Carey, what are you chickenshit you little Momma’s boy?” was probably the oratorical technique employed to sway my stance.  And really, what debater can stand up to such an engaging argument?

Happy Fun Ball

So I took a ride.  It was fun for a while.  Then my “paddle” got stuck in the mud, I grabbed for it, it didn’t give . . . and I fell in.  Face first.  I got precisely what I was supposed to get at Japanese Language Camp – total immersion.

And after a 20 minute bike ride home, dripping with stinky, swampy mold water, probably lousy with head-to-toe Giardiasis bacteria, and quietly sobbing the whole way home because of the monumental amount of trouble I was going to be in for disobeying a direct order, I showed up, shame-faced and slime-faced, at our back door.

And how much punishment and scolding did I endure?

CatO9Tails

None whatsoever.  Because Mom knew me well enough to realize that I had already spent an excruciating half hour heaping more scorn upon myself than she could ever hope to inflict.  I’d more than learned my lesson.

With my own children, I only hope that I am granted a whiff of that subtle genius of being able to take into consideration not only what my child has done, but also to fill in the blanks in terms of what my child really needs at any given moment.  I have big shoes to fill indeed.

I got cleaned up, never contracted Beaver Fever, and never went anywhere near a Styrofoam raft again.

As for The Swamp?  The city has since expanded and that area is now a suburb.  Last I heard, that batch of houses has had mysterious, chronic problems with water in the basements.

(No word on whether or not they report an above-average number of hauntings.)

It’s like turkey bacon – good, but just not as satisfying.

Before I had kids, I had a bit of a potty mouth.

And let me tell you – it is so very unsatisfying to have to censor oneself in front of the children, particularly during incidents involving stubbed toes, burnt food, the PVR cutting off the last 4 minutes of an overtime game.

Because you see . . . it’s just not the same without the cursing.  Observe:

Stubbed Toe:

SHHHHHNITTLEWIZARD!  Oh fripple that hurt!  MOTHER Hubbard!

Burnt Food:

AWWWW Snippity SNOOP SNAP.  SHHHHUT THE FRONT DOOR. PIDDLEBITS on a CRACKER! that is a real bumjob.

Missing the Finale of Overtime Playoff Game:

Are you kidding me?  ARE YOU KIDDING ME!?  GODZILLA that’s a DIRTY PIECE OF PIE.  I’m gonna FUNT a MOTHERFUNBAG all over the place.  I CANNOT BELIEVE this SHUTTLECOCK!!  HOOTIE and the BLOWFISH I cannot believe I missed the end of that game.  JESPER PARNEVIK that’s a big, fat steaming SHELTIE.

A crying baby coulda got OJ convicted FOR SURE.

The life of a child is really just one big, long negotiation to wear down parents to the point of giving in to more chocolate, fewer vegetables, later bedtime, and more allowance.

How do kids stack up to other groups in terms of . . .

Best Negotiators

(Click to Enlarge)

Most Effective Negotiators Chart

I’m not proofreading this post – it grosses me out.

Our son is at that magical, charming, endearing age where he is not yet old enough to be potty trained, but is plenty old enough to prefer not to hang out with a diaper full of his own filth.

His latest “hinting that he wants to be changed” technique?

Sticking his hand in his diaper, pulling it out and holding it up as if to say “see?  I need to be changed, like FOR REAL!”

(Yes, that was the non-graphic version.  You’re welcome.)

Now, I’m sure some parents will tell you “oh, it’s not disgusting, it’s just a part of being a parent – I really don’t mind, because he’s just such a little miracle and I’m just oh so very blessed that scraping poop off of 4 square feet of baby parts is really not a chore, it’s just a different kind of blessing.”

Those people are known as alcoholics.

In reality, this sort of thing is disgusting on a level that non-parents cannot possibly understand.

Oh no, not in that condescending “OMG you’re not a parent you COULDN’T POSSIBLY UNDERSTAND” sort of way.  No no, I know that non-parents could not understand this because if they did . . . if explosive diarrhea was really covered in the “So You Want to Procreate” brochure . . . nobody would ever do it.

No children would be created.

This holiday season’s craze wouldn’t be the Furbee or Tickle-Me Elmo, it would be Mass Vasectomies.

You really want to fuel the abstinence movement?  Forget fear of Hell . . . bring the fear of poo-smearing toddler into the mix and that whole unwanted teen pregnancy thing?  Like, totally solved.

Am I Too Sick to Parent: Flowchart Edition

Remember calling in sick?

Yeah, it’s a whole lot easier to do so when your job is not actually to keep human beings alive and healthy.

Can you ever call in sick from being a parent?  What better way to answer that question than with this handy “Can I Call in Sick” flowchart . . .

(click to enlarge)

"Can I Call in Sick" flowchart

Card players are good at lying, especially to themselves.

Before I had kids, I played a lot of poker.

I played online.

I played in casinos.

I played in scary underground card rooms.

I not only played – I studied the game.  I read books, I posted in online strategy forums, I learned everything that I could about the game, its intricacies, player psychology, game theory, you name it . . .

I got to be an excellent poker player.

I tracked all of my hands and studied my hand history databases.  I took the game very seriously and got to be a highly skilled player.

Now that I have kids though, I hardly ever get a chance to play poker.

And let me tell you – having that extra money sure comes in handy.

They haven’t yet learned to double dog dare me . . .

Before I had kids, I used to drive pretty fast.

Now that I have kids, they say things like:

“No, don’t take Mommy’s truck, let’s take Fun Car!”

and

“Faster Daddy, faster!”

and

“Daddy, your car goes frontways, backways . . . and sideways!!”

So basically I still drive fast, but now I have an audience.

Which is awesome.