Tag Archives: Whiteboard Wednesday

How To Drive Your Parents To Drink

When I tweeted this, I likely should’ve shut my computer.

To be fair, the ball wasn’t exactly a volleyball. It was a globe. An inflatable one.

Vivian and William were using the sofa that divides the kitchen from the living room as a net. And they were spiking.

Meanwhile, I was drinking club soda from a stemmed glass, trying to convince myself that my drink had the alcohol content of Everclear. Or at least Bud Light.

The serves and spikes continued, with the globe ricocheting around our house like a pinball trying to flee a 1980s arcade game.

After one of William’s wild serves, the ball skidded across our kitchen island, taking 1990s relics – CDs and newspapers – with it.

“Enough!” I said.

My discipline was greeted by giggles, contagious ones.

I grabbed the ball, zinged it down the stairwell into the basement, and slammed the door.

More giggles. William tried to wedge me away from the basement door.

Vivian’s eyes grew bigger as did her smile. “Come here, Will,” she said. “I have a plan.”

William went to her, and she whispered things in his ear.

And that was how I came to find myself staking out my basement door while a Mini-Pops version of the CIA met in my kitchen.

With a grin on his face, William swaggered back to me, leaned against the wall, and waited.

I heard the fridge door open.

“Mom…” Vivian said with a singsong lilt. “I’m eating the rest of the cheese sticks.”

I eyed the cluster of processed plastic in her hand and said:

“Dinner’s in ten minutes.” I added, before wedging my hip further into the basement door.

“I’m going to eat them all, Mom,” she said, “unless you come get me.”

Vivian held all five cheese sticks up and pranced a bit. Then she peeled the plastic skin off one and bit into it.

Okay, I thought, I’ll play.

“Give those to me!” I lunged at her, grabbed four cheese sticks, and heard William stomp down the basement door to retrieve the inflatable ball.

What ensued was an impromptu game, a cross between Chase Me and Keep Away. From afar, it may have resembled a rugby match in a small space with breakable items, like stemware and the bones of a 40-year-old woman.

Finally, the oven buzzer rang.

“Game over!” I yelled. “Out of the kitchen. Please.”

Vivian and William knew the final whistle when they heard it. They shuffled to the living room.

I sipped my soda water and rescued the animal-formerly-known-as chicken from the oven.

That’s when I heard William say this: “Viv? Can you help me find something I can slingshot?”

Send a six pack, please.

*

What has nearly driven you to drink recently?

Beware of Playing Tag with Weapons

When Vivian and William were little, I was anti-gun and anti-fun, but I soon realized that there are plenty of legitimate ways for them to kill themselves that don’t require a locked up cabinet.

Take yesterday. I was in a splendid mood. I had yet to embed a Lego figurine into the sole of my foot. I had gotten through four things on my to-do-list, but while I bought myself a congratulatory chai, I remembered six more urgent items, resulting in this tweet:

But I digress.

So I’m waiting for my husband to barbecue eggplant (a vegetable that is Mediterranean yumminess) and cook prepackaged fish (a cardboard imposter he found in the organic section of the supermarket).

Vivian and William are also waiting, but they’re hovering over the table, two vultures ready to pick through the carcass that is dinner.

Around the time my husband carries in the eggplant, the vultures become bored and start circling the table. Before you can say roadkill, they’re racing around the table.

I say this:

And it doesn’t.

The organic fish sucked.

**

It’s Whiteboard Wednesday, the day I share something crazy I’ve said.
So now it’s your turn:
What bizarre things have you heard, said, or done recently?

Daughters, Bad Breath, and Losing It

Mr. Serious...

I’m pleased to bring you my first ever Whiteboard Wednesday Guest Post.

Chad Jones is a hilarious dad of two who I suspect sticks his foot in his mouth nearly as often as I do. He blogs about the bizarre (and slightly-less-bizarre) aspects of faith as well as being both a dad and husband. The guy can pen a sentence, so you should check out his blog, Randomly Chad.

But before you go gallivanting to read my Arizona pal’s blog, read his post below.

*

I’m a dad. Have been for a little over thirteen years now. Indeed, I
was in my twenties when my parenting odyssey began, and it wasn’t
until I was thirty seven that God decided to throw my wife and I a
curveball. Or drop a surprise bomb (in the form of a little girl) in
our laps.

Whatever.

I mean, up until then–when my daughter arrived–and it was just me,
my wife, and our son–in large degree, I still had “it.”

It being my “mind.”

Somewhere in the five intervening years, I seem to have lost it.

What I mean is that in my mind, I have these perfectly formulated bon
mots of parental wisdom, of instruction and guidance, that somehow
become garbled as they travel the neural pathways of my speech center
(maybe an extra loop-de-loop in Broca’s area?), and make their exit
via my vocal cords and pallet.

To wit, the other evening–as is my practice–I cleaned up after
dinner, and was preparing to get my daughter ready for bed (which, of
course, includes showering and the brushing of teeth). In so doing,
she said “Up.” Meaning that she wanted me to pick her up.

Fine and dandy. I intend to enjoy picking her up and holding her until
she’s too old to want to be thus carried. Maybe when I’m old, gray,
and feeble she’ll return the favor. ;-)

What wasn’t “fine and dandy:” her breath. It was rank. Ranker than
rank. It smelled like three-day-old Kung Pao cat turds left to ripen
in the summer sun had crawled in her mouth, and made their home there.
Yes, it was that bad.

What I intended to say (what I thought I was saying): “Sweetie, your
breath is really bad. Dragon-bad. We need to brush your teeth.” (She
laughed, and exhaled right in my schnoz. Whew!).

What actually emanated from my mouth:

*

Now it’s Whiteboard Wednesday, so I ask:

What bizarre things have you said or heard recently?