"Oh, God," I groaned to one of the other parents at my youngest's baseball game.
"What's wrong?" she asked.
"My whole family's here." Ignoring the Lovely Bride's glare, I gestured at the concession stand, where my oldest was working. My middle son had just arrived at the park and was trying, without success, to bum a soda from his brother.
Unfortunately, the middle kid saw the gesture and thought I was waving to him. He trotted over.
"Hooray," I muttered. "Life gets better."
"Hi daddy," he said, giving me a hug. "I love you." Several of the other parents looked a little puzzled by a high school boy hugging his father in public.
"He's at that age where kids start experimenting with drugs," I explained, earning another glare from the Lovely Bride. I ignored her and hugged him back. "I love you too, buddy. What do you want?"
"Nothing," he said, drifting away.
I checked to make sure I still had my wallet. "Okay," I called after him. "Hugs not drugs."
"Hope not dope," he called back.
Yet again, a glare from the Lovely Bride. I returned to the first order of business, heckling my youngest.
"They're letting him pitch?" I asked one of the other dads. My boy normally catches or plays shortstop and I felt a bit queasy watching him walk to the mound.
"Better you than me," he said. "My kid was awful in the last game."
"Did you make him sleep outside again?" I asked.
"It was raining pretty hard," he replied. "I let him share the kennel with the dog."
We cackled. His wife turned around and glared at us. Same story, different woman.
Distracted, I hadn't noticed the return of my middle son. He hugged me again.
"What's the matter?" I asked. "Can't you find your meth dealer?"
"He was sold out," he said. "Can I have money for food?"
I handed him some cash. "Get something I can eat," I said.
The Lovely Bride had been watching us suspiciously and heard my request. "Didn't you already have dinner?" she asked.
"I don't know," I said.
"Well, I do," she said. "Our oldest said he sold you a bratwurst."
"It was a low-sodium, diet brat," I said.
"Either way, it's the only one you get this week," she needlessly reminded me.
"You're mean as a snake," I told her.
"It's not my rule, it's your cardiologist's," she said.
"He's not a real doctor," I told her. "I'm pretty sure he's creating a human centipede in his spare time. I hope I can be the head, at least."
The middle boy returned with a bag of popcorn, interrupting our conversation. A good thing for me even if it was a disappointment for the rest of the parents, who were enjoying the latest episode of The Snags Go Out In Public.
I grabbed a handful of popcorn.
"Why are you taking my popcorn?" the middle kid demanded.
"It would be your popcorn if you'd bought it," I said. "That would require you to have money, which in turn would require you to have a job. You have neither. Therefore, because I paid for it, it's my popcorn and I am simply sharing it with you."
"I'm not old enough to get a job," he said.
"Of course you are," I told him. "You had a job last year. You were a soccer ref. It paid good money, too."
"I didn't like that job," he said.
"How is that relevant?" I asked.
"Why would I work at a job I don't like?"
"Because they pay you?" I suggested. Jesus, now my heart was starting to hurt.
"You like your job," he said.
"My job's fine," I said. "I went to school for twenty years and worked at a bunch of jobs I didn't like before I got this one."
"I don't want to do that," he said. "I just want a job I like."
"He is on drugs, isn't he?" said one of the other dads.
"So it would appear," I said.
Friday, June 24, 2011
Disorderly Eating
Posted by Snag at 12:42 PM
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6 comments:
"He's not a real doctor," I told her. "I'm pretty sure he's creating a human centipede in his spare time. I hope I can be the head, at least."
I live for these posts.
~
"Why would I work at a job I don't like?"
jeez, slap him once for me.
I'm pretty sure he's creating a human centipede in his spare time.
This is exactly the kind of cocktail chatter that ensures that snag gets an invite to all my important functions.
I wish I lived near Snag for real time snark.
now see if my mom had over heard that conversation and repeated it to me randomly, things would be a lot better.
"I just want a job I like."
He should continue with the drugs then. Flexible hours!
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