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  • Now Look What You Made Me Do…

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    Sarcasm It is a moral imperative that parents warp their children. Now, don’t get the wrong idea here… By warp I mean teach them the basics of sarcasm, satire, and acerbic humor.

    That kind of warp…

    Granted, we don’t want our kids being bitterly sarcastic with us. That only serves to make the old Mark Twain bromide about putting them in a barrel and corking the hole in the side when they hit sixteen sound like a truly excellent idea. But, by the same token, if you have a kid who is packing around an IQ that has the local chapter of MENSA handing them pencils and brightly colored bookmarks as incentives to join up, then you had best seize the moment and teach them about sardonic humor, otherwise they’ll just end up being boring people with big IQ’s. Trust me, I’ve met a few, and I prefer hanging out with the warped people with big IQ’s. They aren’t as… Well… Boring.

    And so, this is why I warp my kid’s sense of humor at every opportunity. I want her to not be boring because the operative not portion of that trait will serve her well later in life.

    Of course, you have to keep a close watch on this process and take note of when your child is properly warped; otherwise you end up with a smartass. I’ve met a few of those too. The general rule is that once you’ve put a sufficient bow in the lumber of the mind it will break free of the jig and smack you right between the eyes. This is the point when you can be truly proud of a job well done, and as of the other day, let me tell you,  I was beaming.

    corn5
    It was a Saturday as I recall, because E  Kay was home and it was the middle of the day. We were sitting at the table having some lunch before heading out to take care of grocery shopping and all that other jazz. As sometimes happens when the O-spring becomes a bit animated during a meal, some “foodgitives” escaped her plate. In this case, a few kernels of corn went over the wall and were trying to make their way across the tablecloth. At a point such as this it is the job of one of the parents to gently remind the kid that the food should go from plate to fork to mouth without any furniture or lap detours along the way. This is especially important if she ever wants to be invited out to a nice restaurant on a date (which is something we will allow her to start doing approximately 20 years after I die). This also goes along with the not chewing with your mouth open, not blowing bubbles in your milk, and not building scale replicas of Devil’s Tower out of your mashed potatoes.

    Anywho, since I was sitting next to her, with E K on the other side of the table, it was my duty to point this out. Which I did… Of course, I then promptly slopped corn off my own plate to join hers in a bid for culinary escape.

    Now I had a critical situation. I had just done exactly what I had just finished telling the child she should be careful not to do. Since I had yet to receive a sign as to the present “warpedness level” of the O-spring’s mind, I decided to punt.

    Pointing at the freshly emancipated corn kernels I said, “Look what you made me do.”

    Without missing a beat the child looked across the table and said, “Yeah Mommy, look what you made Daddy do.”

    E Kay’s brow furrowed with understandable confusion. She shook her head and replied, “I’m way over here. How did I make Daddy do anything?”

    hypnoredhead

    It was at this very moment I knew the O-spring’s brain was ready to take on the world, because once again without a single pause she answered, “That’s simple. You used your evil powers.”

    Even the Evil Redhead did a spit-take on that one.

    Yeah… My work here is done. 😛

    More to come…

    Murv

    • I used to build butter volcanoes with my mashed potatoes … actually, I still do, and I’m 30. It’s fun to play with your food.

    • you know, I don’t think I ever tried that. Now I have something else to annoy my family with at holiday gatherings.

    • Who hasn’t made the Devil’s Tower out of their mashed potatoes? After Close Encounters, it was a phenomenon.

      • I actually emulated Roy Neary in a sense, but skipped the mashed potatoes and went straight for the larger model. I didn’t shovel dirt into the window of the dining room and such, however one winter I did build a Snow Devil’s Tower that stood around 8 feet tall, had the box canyon on the back side, and all of the details I could glean from a couple of pictures I found.

        I didn’t eat it, but it did end up melting because my mother wouldn’t let me put it in the freezer.

    • I STILL make the Devil’s Tower out of mashed potatoes. I’m willing to bet this doesn’t surprise anyone.

    • What I REALLY find interesting is the fact that out of that whole blog the thing that seems to be getting the most commentary is the mushed tater “build a mountain in your living room” reference…

      If I was “Roy Dreary” from Closet Encounters of the Nerd Kind, I’d be running around yelling, “This means something!”

    • Possibly. On another note, I was given, on the occasion of my twentieth Father’s Day, a stuffed monkey dressed in a Spiderman costume. Accompanying the monkey was a small bear with a recorded message from Sam thanking me for making her the “cool, geeky amazing person she is.” This includes a warped sense of humor. So what comes around goes around, my friend.

    • Funny, I was going to tell you one of the first things I ever asked Doug on our first date. His middle initials are S and C (yes, his parents went a little over the top with two middle names for him and his brother), and I asked him, “When your middle initials aren’t busy standing for ‘sarcastic’ and ‘cynical,’ what do they stand for?” He promptly cracked up!
      But I guess that makes me a little odd (okay, perhaps more than a little) for wanting to relay that story instead of a comment about Devil’s Tower. Hmm.

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