Nobody ever said
parenthood would be a cakewalk, or even much fun. My son, who just turned 17,
is finally beginning to walk, talk, and act like a human being. My 12-year-old
daughter, on the other hand, has overnight turned into a she-devil. One moment
she’s calling me “Daddy” in her sweet little girl voice, and the next she’s
screaming, “you’re a sonofabitch” and trying to kick me in the groin.
Before slamming the door
to her room, my daughter has this to say: “All you and mom care about is my
education!” Guilty as charged, kid, guilty as charged. The child is upset
because her math teacher recommended her for an after school math class.
Instead of taking this recommendation as an offer of help, my daughter takes it
as a form of punishment, like being drawn and quartered or tied to the back of
a mule and dragged through a field of cactus. “Don’t you want to get better at
math?” my wife and I ask. “I don’t give a crap about math!” shouts our
daughter.
Behind the locked door of
her room my daughter wails. To escape the noise I go outside to the deck, but I
can still hear the kid; I’m sure everyone in our neighborhood can hear the kid,
and half of them are probably dialing 911 to report a homicide in progress. By
agreeing, happily and with gratitude, to place her in the after school math
program, we have sentenced her to an extra hour of school, every day for two excruciating weeks.
Why can’t we understand
what this means?
We are tyrannical parents,
unfeeling brutes, though I’m pretty sure the kid will thank us later. Our son
is finally coming around, proving that there is hope. For several months I
feared the boy was lost to us, as if aliens had swiped his soul and replaced it
with their evil spawn. I swear he was barely recognizable. Every time I saw him
I wanted to ask, “Who are you and what are you doing in my kitchen?”
If our experience with our
son is any guide, we have approximately four years of hell ahead of us. We can
expect to be second-guessed, insulted, slighted, ignored and blamed for everything
wrong under the moon. When our daughter forgets to pull her overripe gym
clothes from her backpack until Monday morning, three minutes before she must
leave for school, the fault will lie with us for not reminding her.
This isn’t the saccharine stuff
of Hallmark cards. Some nights I look back with nostalgia to the days when it
was my wife, our Jack Russell terrier, and me. The dog ate a couple of pairs of
shoes, devoured one fine fountain pen, and shredded his share of carpet, but at
least he never called me a sonofabitch.
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