Friday, April 25, 2014

Easter Bunny. Perfectly Normal.

RAH RAH RAH Easter!
With Easter coming to a close, I like to reflect on the sweet gullibility, er I mean innocence, of young children. Evidence: Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny. Elf on the Shelf. This year, we even had a leprechaun visit for St. Patrick’s Day. What with the Tooth Fairy visiting a couple of times a year, we seem to have mythological creatures in and out of the house all the time. But not monsters. Sure, there’s this Fairy out there who for some unknown reason wants to trade money for your teeth. She has free and easy access to your bedroom to come and go as she pleases. Perfectly normal. But Monsters? Monsters aren’t coming in your room. There’s no such thing as monsters - Go to bed!

Chiara, for her part, is too smart not to have figured out all this mythological baloney, I think. But, she plays along since there is money, chocolate and presents involved. If not, it’s reaching the point where I have to question her intelligence. Just look at some of these logical loopholes that should have raised a question or two:

Whenever Santa’s workshop is depicted in a movie or TV show, the elves are working away, merrily building by hand well crafted, wooden toys. In other words, the kind of toys no self-respecting child in 2014 would be caught dead near. What shows up on Christmas day are packaged, branded toys, most of which look like they came out the action end of an injection molding machine. So what gives? Does Santa own the injection molding machines and the packaging lines? Do the elves painstakingly re-create the toys and packaging that they could buy in the store? Why go to that kind of effort? I can just see Jingle the Elf hand-painting the Play-Doh logo on a box to mimic the one at Toys-R-Us. Or does Santa just go to the store? In that case, why are there so many elves building the wooden junk? Have they lost their jobs like so many American factory workers?

Whatever Santa’s illogicalities, it’s nothing compared to the Easter Bunny. Easter night, a bunny hides eggs and puts chocolates in a basket. Now that doesn’t make one darn bit of sense at all. Bunny. Eggs. See what I’m getting at here?

And at least when you see Santa at the mall, it’s a man. Or a Jolly Old Elf. But anyway something that looks reasonably like the thing he is pretending to be. A mall Easter Bunny is a 6-foot-tall college football mascot. He looks nothing like a real rabbit. No one is fooled. “It’s a man in a suit” says my daughter. So who comes Easter night? The mascot or a real-ish bunny?

Today’s Easter Bunny has to be technically savvy to boot. Some of these Leap Pad games don’t even come in cartridge form, so they have to be downloaded directly from the internet. So this rabbit has to sit up late at night making the crummy Leap Pad download application work. Then he has to put the child’s same old Leap Pad in the basket with a note explaining there is a new game on it. Do you know how hard all that is when all you have is paws, floppy ears and a wiggly nose to work with?

On a side note, the person who really raises my Easter ire is Curious George and his egg dyeing ways. Never have the wits of man conceived an activity so well suited to staining clothes than dyeing Easter eggs. A tiny wire dipper carefully lowers an Easter egg into a vat of dye. That’s the theory - a 4-year-old doing this more than once is just tempting fate. But Curious George was curious, so he dipped his eggs in two different colors to see what would happen – you know, yellow and blue make green. So now we have to dip our eggs in two colors, too. Darn you Curious George! Why do you have to be so gosh-darned curious? Can’t you just be curious what it’s like to dip one egg in one color? Can’t you just put a lid on your curiosity, George? Can’t you just get your act together, CURIOUS GEORGE!?!?!?

Friday, April 18, 2014

This Post is Making Me Crazy!


As you may know, we are in the process of selling our house. We knew it was time to sell because we had run out of renovation and redecoration projects. The house has now been redecorated into a state of absolute perfection… rats, time to sell.

Whenever Andrea has her interior decorator over, I know two things are going to happen: I’m going to put in a lot of effort on a project I don’t care about, and life is going to get a lot less convenient. The secret to interior decoration is to pretend no one lives in your house. Of course, four people live in our house, two of whom are small children, so it’s a serious inconvenience to pretend we don’t.

When the decorator re-did our kitchen, all of a sudden everything was off the counter – napkins are now stored in the knife drawer and must be replaced every third day or so. The kitchen table now sits on a textured rug with groves that are perfect for trapping mushed peas and dried Play-Doh. I have the handyman skills of a trained monkey, and break into cold sweats at the thought of hanging a towel bar, but somehow I inevitably end up assembling IKEA shelves with Swedish instructions and three key parts missing.

Andrea moves from room to room in a house and grumbles “we have to do something with this [name of room]. It’s making me crazy.” Andrea is made crazy quite often; in our existing house she worked her way through the kitchen, family room, dining room and basement.  So after months of Andrea saying “we have to do something with this mud room,” I knew I was in trouble.

For the uninitiated, the “mud room” is the small room where we enter the house from the garage. Andrea calls it the “mud room” without irony, which is odd since no mud would ever, ever be allowed in there. Perhaps “mud room” is short for “room for items which formerly had mud on them.” It’s where the washer and dryer sit, a utility sink, our coat closet, and a shoe cubby. There is a crummy white wire shelf above the washer dryer that holds all manner of junk – washing stuff, obviously, along with some tools and wrapping paper, for example.

Basically, the mud room ranks right above the utility room where we keep our old paint cans on my list of places I could give two flips about its appearance. But it’s made Andrea crazy so now it is time for renovation.

And so, despite my apathy about this room, and my aforementioned lack of handyman skills, I’m suddenly hanging pictures and assembling drawers for inside the closet. The wire shelves are still there but are decorated in a sea shell and sand motif. And from now on, to get a hammer, I have to use chopsticks to remove it from a 14th century Ming Vase.

With the mudroom complete the house is complete and it’s time to sell. The new home is theoretically perfect. But I know that soon enough, Andrea will be grumbling that “this [garage/pantry/walk-in closet] is making me crazy!”

Friday, April 4, 2014

Parenting Advice From KiddleAunt

KiddleAunt explains a few things to KiddleDad
This week's blog post is from KiddleDad's younger sister. She doesn't have kids, but she does have plenty of parenting advice to share:

It’s not uncommon that my older brother needs some guidance, and I thought after years and years of potentially ruining his children, it’s high time I step in to teach him how it’s done. Do I have children? No. Why would that matter? I have a dog, I have a younger sister that I have basically been telling what to do her entire life, and I have only been fired from a couple jobs. Clearly I’m responsible and could show KiddleDad a thing or two about how to raise his children properly.

 

Gastronomic Curiosity

1.       During my visit, the children have asked (and been given) snacks almost every day. Worse even, they weren’t shamed at all for requesting cookies, crackers, and yogurt drinks for these snacks. If you don’t make your children feel guilty about wanting to eat these things, how will they ever learn that they need to spend their later years obsessing over calories and the size of their waists? I am truly worried that my niece and nephew might grow up thinking something ridiculous like beauty comes from the inside.

2.       When it comes to mealtime, Cody’s palate is unrefined. It’s clearly a parent’s role to help his son understand the complexities of flavors, and as far as I can tell there has been no effort here. Chiara on the other hand favors foods like candy, chips, and the like. When we’ve talked about Brussels sprouts, sushi, and fois gras, she referred to them as “yucky,” and she has requested Chipotle for roughly 75% of our meals. There are many approaches to broadening children’s culinary horizons: a treat after each broccoli spear and rubbing their head while saying, “Who’s my good boy? Who’s my good boy?” have always worked well for me.

 

Culture and Worldly Interests

1.       My brother and my lovely sister-in-law are doing a decent job with keeping Chiara well-cultured since they have recently incorporated “Les Misérables” to her bedtime story repertoire. 6-year olds need to spend more time “Examining the nature of law and grace, the history of France, politics, moral philosophy, antimonarchism, justice, religion, and the types and nature of romantic and familial love.” However, I question their dedication. After two weeks, they’re 10 pages in, and my niece reports that “nothing has happened.” Sigh.

2.       Cody on the other hand has been fully neglected in this regard. Looking through his bookshelf you won’t find a single Dickens, Tolstoy, or Dostoyevsky. How they can sleep at night knowing Cody has been in the world for over four years without some proper literary exposure, I have no idea.

3.       Cody also lacks appropriate guidance in world-religions. When I mentioned Shintoism this morning, he looked at me blankly. Not once has any member of the family spent more than 10 minutes in meditation or quiet reflection. I’m considering calling Child Protective Services.

 

Personal Development and Self-Control

1.       During a fieldtrip with the Sweet Kiddles preschool, I was informed by several of the kids that no one was going to win at the bowling alley. This is incomprehensible! Chiara is now 6, and Cody either 4 or 5 depending on who you’re talking to (he says 5, his birth certificate and every other person on Earth says 4 – jury’s still out, I guess). The time has long past since they needed to learn that there are winners and losers in this world. Not everyone gets a blue ribbon, and the sooner we expose our children to that harsh reality, the better.

2.       Having raised a dog since it was a puppy, I think it goes without saying that I could have a child well-disciplined child unquestioningly following my every command within just a few short weeks. My brother and sister-in-law started off without this robust training skill-set when they had children, so I can hardly blame them for any short-comings here. They have gotten wise to the most important elements of behavior modification, but I have a couple recommendations that could help. First, set aside 3-4 hours each day to perfect a whistling routine with the each of the kids. Soon, Chiara will know that three short bursts means it’s time to sit down quietly and await food, Cody will know one long blast means it’s time to put on shoes, grab his backpack, and get in the car. It would be much easier than wrangling the kids every time you want to eat or leave the house. Second, it’s always handy to carry around a baggie of bacon or other treats is useful for when the kiddos get rowdy in public. You’ll have them sitting in the middle of the sidewalk, salivating in no time – eagerly anticipating their reward.

Poor KiddleDad and Andrea need a lot of help, but I think too much guidance at once could get overwhelming. Hopefully my visit will have shed a little light on how parenting should really be done, but I worry these two slackers have already done irreparable damage. If they don’t take action to right the ship soon, I’m afraid Chiara and Cody may be doomed to a life of guilt-free happiness and lack flawless self-control. I only want the best for the children, and it might be better for the kids to be raised by someone like me who is already an expert. Clearly I would know; I do have a dog.

You can follow KiddleAunt on Twitter at @Kalyn_Kimmel or visit her blog: debaclesindating.com

Friday, March 28, 2014

Buy High, Sell Low, Too


Today’s post is a quick follow-up to last week’s parental financial advice titled “Buy High, Sell Low.” In the closing of that post, I mentioned the upcoming resale event in Strongsville that weekend. Well, we attended said event and demonstrated almost immediately our Buy High, Sell Low mantra.

Andrea worked the event while I took the kids to ice skating. While there, she saw a real find: a Barbie Princess Castle. It was a little faded from age, but otherwise was in pristine condition. Retailing at well over $200, she bought it for $50.

After ice skating, I brought the kids to the event, mostly to avail ourselves of leftover bake sale goodies. Andrea showed Chiara her prize. Chiara demonstrated her excitement by almost immediately breaking off one of the clock hands off the tower clock.

Just so I don’t put too fine a point on it, let me re-emphasize. Somehow this other family, with children the same age as ours, had lovingly and carefully maintained this castle doll house in excellent condition for years and we, the Kimmels, couldn’t manage to leave the building without breaking it.

It gets better. We brought the castle home. As I was reassembling the staircase, I broke a piece of the wall off. I super-glued it back on, but it is visibly marred.

In one hour of ownership, we rendered an “excellent” condition toy worth $50 into a “good” condition toy worth $10. We bought the tech stock the day before the market crashed. It was classic Buy High, Sell Low strategy.

There’s an obvious profit opportunity here: short sell the toys that the Kimmel family will buy. Let’s say you know you’ll be in the market for a “good” condition Barbie Castle two years from now. You could buy the castle from the first family, immediately sell it to us for $50 and then buy it back in two years for $10. You’d have your castle (albeit with fewer clock hands and crack-free walls), and you’d have turned a nice $40 profit. 

Friday, March 21, 2014

Buy High, Sell Low

Our parenting financial plan:
Repeat until broke.
I’ve mentioned it in a prior post, but children are really destructive. Attention people without kids – do you like your stuff? Do you have really nice stuff that you are proud of, that’s rare, has sentimental value, or even real market value?

Think long and hard about how much you love your stuff. Kids don’t give a crap about sentimental or material value. They will play with an object just because it looks fun. They might even break it intentionally just to see what the experience is like.

They’re not careful. They’re still developing their motor skills so they can’t even be careful if they want to.  Cody, for example, can’t even be relied on to stand up straight in the same spot without leaning on something or enter a room without banging into a wall or door. And he has a ridiculous amount of kinetic energy. In the absence of toys or activities, Cody will literally jump up and down in place or run in circles, until he bangs into some foreign object.

Cody knocks large, heavy, securely mounted pieces of artwork off the wall which cause all manner of reciprocal damage. So how well do you think he handles a tiny, delicate, antique Japanese porcelain cup? You know exactly how he handles them – and we have now sent several tiny, delicate, antique shards of Japanese porcelain cup to the garbage dump.

Do you think Andrea and I learn from our mistakes? No, we do not. Having outgrown the train table in the playroom, we decided it was time for a craft table instead. So we went and found one – a beautiful one from Pottery Barn Kids, with four beautiful chairs. This whole setup was like $300 (I only put that number so you won’t think we are outrageous snobs; Dear God I hope the price was that low). We put it into the playroom and the kids went to work on that. I have no idea what it is they’ve done to it, but after six months of use its former gorgeous shiny mocha veneer now resembles your grandfather’s workbench.

When you’re a first-time parent, everything just has to be new. No item can have been soiled by the slightest touch of other children who don’t share your cleanliness fetish or moral upbringing. You pay premium prices for the best products. Months or even weeks later, you’ve outgrown the item physically or realized its impracticality. So you take it to the resale event.

There’s a resale event in Strongsville tomorrow, which will be your opportunity to buy formally pristine items at a fraction of the cost. The exchange rate is roughly $100 new equals $5-20 if lightly used. I know for certain that our $300 Pottery Barn would fetch around $50 and we would call it a win.

$300 out, $50 in. Buy high and sell low. That’s our motto.

Friday, March 7, 2014

The 2nd law of parenting

Sir Isaac Newton.
I cannot compete with this guy.
I guess I had some notion that the day-to-day stuff would get easier. We have routines, it’s the same thing every day. You wake up, you get dressed, you brush your teeth, you eat breakfast, you get coats and shoes on and you get in the car and go. That’s, what, maybe 30 minutes of total value-added activity? Perhaps 15 minutes if you are under the gun? If the kids aren’t up already, I wake them at 7:00, and they’re usually up well before that. So we should be out the door at 7:30, right? So why are we sometimes struggling to leave by 8:30?

I’ll tell you why. It’s because, the actual process is: wake the kids up – beg and scream and cajole – get dressed – beg and scream and cajole – eat breakfast – beg and scream and cajole, and so on. Basically, weekday parenting is herding cats. Two cats. But very independent minded and obstinate ones.

We’ve been doing this for over two years, so by my calculations that’s something like 500 attempts at getting out the door and into the car. After 500 goes at this, shouldn’t our reasonably intelligent children understand that, once the shoes and coats are on, the next step is to proceed directly to the car, get in, and get in the booster seat? And yet, opening that door to the garage is akin to unleashing juvenile German shepherds from their travel cage into the room – within seconds, toys and bikes are out, messes made, and coats and clothes are dirty. Do I really have to explain that, no, today is not the one exception day where we can play with sidewalk chalk before going to school?

I have a theory to explain this behavior. The children, it seems, are more bound by the laws of physics than by the more human motives of rationality and process. Newton’s second law of physics is centered on entropy – the general trend from order to chaos. The children, it seems, are contributors to entropy on a grand scale. Observe the process of putting on coats 500 times and you can easily see how my children are marching us ever closer to the heat death of the universe.

That door to the garage isn’t just a portal, it’s a vacuum. We all know that nature hates a vacuum, and as the door opens, you can almost hear the whoosh of young-child mass being sucked in. Getting into the car isn’t a controlled reaction, it’s an implosion, with all the destruction that entails.

Watch any Disney movie, and you’ll learn that love is the strongest force in the world. I can tell you that Andrea and I love our children with great strength indeed. But parenting is no match for Sir Isaac Newton- the universe itself conspires against our parental attempts at order and routine.

Friday, February 28, 2014

Sentimentality

Our box of our kids' keepsakes
When you have kids, it’s easy to be sentimental. Sometimes, sentimentality is all you’ve got- when you’re frazzled and stressed and tired, sometimes you need the shot of joy that for a few fleeting moments make it all seem worth it.

A good summary for “sentimentalist” might be “pack rat.” We have a box in our bureau containing various crafts and artwork, projects from school and other bric-a-brac. This box is now a teetering, overflowing morass, threatening to take over the contents of the rest of the bureau.

The challenge is the sheer volume of materials that two young children can produce on a daily basis. Each day, school sends them home with several items each. Each item needs a review, and the review committee needs to answer the eternal question: “Am I supposed to keep this?” A marked up Letter D writing worksheet with “coby” (“Cody” with a backwards lower-case “d”) ham-fistedly written on the top. Am I supposed to keep that?

I am the force behind the pack-rattedness. I am the sentimentalist. Not knowing what will make us gushy down the road, my bias is to hold on to it. Pretty soon every snotty Kleenex, so long as one of my children wrote “I love you Daddy” on the back, becomes a keepsake worth holding onto. We can always re-evaluate after three months of seasoning and discard in the periodic purge. The trouble is, the purge never comes.

Andrea’s feeling is more aligned with Joseph Stalin’s: “Sentimentality is a sickness of dogs.” (Side note: I seem to quote Stalin a lot more since becoming a parent. What gives?) Andrea takes one glance at the send-home papers and shoves them directly into the trash. More than once this has gotten her in real trouble.

“Where’s my butterfly picture?” asks Chiara.

“I don’t know, did you look in your room?” says Andrea as she furiously digs through the refuse.

“It’s not in here!” Chiara starts to whine.

“I found it!” Andrea exclaims.

“Why is it so wrinkly?”

The kids, of course, angle hard in my direction. Never ask your kids if you should keep something. The answer is obvious. I remember once in summer camp in elementary school we had a “swap meet” where you brought items and sold them to the other kids, then used your profits to buy from others. My sister, probably 5 at the time, spent her little bit of money to buy back the fish guide that we had brought to sell. It was an adult book that she had never spent more than 30 seconds looking at, and I doubt ever looked at it again, but that’s sentimental value for you.

I know, or at least I’m desperately hoping, that there will come a time years hence when I will look back on these times with romantic hindsight. In some sense, I’m planning for it. But I never know which letter D worksheets hindsight will show to be of great value, and which will just be snotty Kleenex.