Sydney's first chocolate chip cookie. She has developed her father's messiness. Imagine when the cake comes!
Brooke and I have come to our first major disagreement when
it comes to raising our child.
The birthday party.
If you have been reading this blog for any period of time,
you know how our disagreements end. So, I will skip the suspense and tell you
that Brooke wins. We are going to have a “big” party for our 1-year-old
daughter. But I am participating under protest.
I expected to have disagreements with my wife on how to
raise our child. We are human. We disagree on a lot of things. For example, she
watches every reality television show ever invented, from “So You Think You Can
Dance” to “How to Cheat on Your Husband and Not Get Caught.” (Hmm.) I can’t
stand reality TV. She loves her new Ford Explorer. I think it lacks pickup and
prefer my Honda Pilot. She likes to share our food when we go out to dinner. I
stand ready with a knife to stab her hand as it reaches for my plate.
But raising a kid is serious business, so I hoped for as few
disagreements as possible. This may be wishful thinking. I have seen how she
raised her dog, after all. Murphy was allowed to sleep in her bed with her. Eat
from her plate. Bark at anything that walked by. Sit on the couch (to the point
where actual humans sit on the floor so as not to disturb him).
I, of course, raised my Vegas the opposite way. He was never
allowed on the bed unless I invited him. He never, ever got on the couch. He
hardly ever barks and when he does, it is usually for a good reason. And, when
I was eating, he was taught to keep an appropriate distance.
Once Murphy moved in, all that great training went out the
door. His bad habits have migrated to my dog. And Brooke has facilitated this.
She is the only woman I know who feeds the dogs from her plate and then angrily
wonders why they are either under her feet or in her face every time she tries
to eat lunch or dinner. Hmm. Could there be a correlation?
Anyway, we have had very little disagreement when it comes
to Sydney. But the Aug. 30 birthday is a big one. I am not one for big birthday
parties. The thought of a dozen kids rolling around in the Hepatitis C-ball pit
at Chuck E. Cheese makes me shudder.
I don’t ever remember having a big birthday party when I was
a kid. My mom says I did when I was a toddler, but I can tell you that from
what I can remember – maybe 5? – I do not remember having more than one friend
over on a birthday. Most of my birthdays were just with my family.
As I got older –10, 11? – it meant going out to eat. There
was a little Italian restaurant on the other side of town mom would take the
family to for a celebration. If we had the money. Remember, we were so poor we
went to Tiny Tim’s family for a handout at Christmas.
There was no freaking Chuck E. Cheese when I was a kid. We
couldn’t afford a skating party. If someone showed up in our neighborhood with
one of those gigantic inflatable jumping playgrounds, I can guarantee someone
would stick a pin in it and ride off on the party pony while it deflated.
I don’t know what Brooke’s childhood was like, but given
that she grew up in suburbia with $400,000 houses, I take it huge birthday
parties were as common as BMWs in the driveway. To say we grew up in different
worlds is to say Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes have a lot of secrets. You haven’t even scratched the surface.
I know this for sure: Brooke has bought into the present
propaganda concerning birthday parties. Most people would. For parents,
birthday parties are all about keeping up with the Joneses.
I know someone whose child turned 1 last year and they
catered a party. Yes, catered. About 50 adults attended, drinking wine and
beer. In reality, it was a party for mom and dad, not for the kid.
The propaganda is never more prevalent than on the Sprout
network for kids. They sing happy birthday to kids on a daily basis, running
their names across the bottom of the screen. Sydney is being indoctrinated with
the philosophy that birthdays are huge events that require tons of screaming
kids, an inflatable castle, a pony and a dad walking around with a dazed look
of confusion.
And that’s where I come from on the subject of birthday
parties. I don’t need a party for my sake. And Sydney doesn’t even know what a
birthday is, let alone what day hers falls on. She’d have as much fun playing
with a box as she would with any new toy she receives. She won’t remember it
one hour after it ends, let alone for the rest of her life.
Maybe I am just trying to avoid the inevitable Sweet 16
Party with a Mercedes SLK in the driveway. I’ve caught a few episodes of those
reality TV shows in passing while Brooke’s been watching. I’m never going to be
able to afford that kind of outrageous birthday bash, so I might as well start
crushing her dreams at an early age so she has low expectations as she gets
older.
Am I a party pooper? Probably. That’s the great thing about
being married to the uber-positive, raised-in-the-suburbs, Pollyannaish,
life-is-a-bouquet-of-roses, let’s-give-our-kid-the-Beaver-Cleaver-life Brooke.
She balances me out. Sydney gets the best of both worlds. My glass is half
empty. Brooke’s is half full. Sydney’s is overflowing.
Maybe Sydney will be like me. I’ve always preferred to
ignore my birthday, not celebrate it. I don’t like all the attention it brings.
My wife likes to take me out to dinner. That is fine with me; I don’t want or
need anything more. One birthday I spent walking the 5-mile loop at Lunken
Airport. How is that for celebrating?
I kind of hope my daughter adopts my attitude. How about a
nice dinner out at Red Lobster with mom and dad, or a trip to the Reds game
with your parents and maybe one friend?
But, until she can make those decisions herself, her mom and
dad will make them. Which, if you have been reading this blog for any period of
time, means her mom will make them.
The invitations are being printed. The cake will soon be
made. The relatives have been invited. And yes, the alcohol will be purchased.
Daddy will need it.
This is a birthday she may not remember, but a couple of years from now it will be a really big deal to her. She'll enjoy looking back at pictures of her first birthday one day. Just because you hate birthdays doesn't mean Sydney has to :).
ReplyDeleteJust sit back and enjoy it BG. Indulge your wife and your daughter. Sydney only turns one once in lifetime. She won't remember this party but when she's old enough you can show her all the pictures we know you are going to take and tell her about how special the day was to all of you!
ReplyDeleteSbeila Mac
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ReplyDeleteI'm with you, BG. Why the big fuss for someone who won't remember it? (Although, since I'm not the one paying for this big fuss in particular, and I'm assuming I'll be invited which means I get to eat the food and drink the beer, I'll make an exception and join Team Brooke for this decision.)
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