The Dad I Had: Nightmare Edition

Total angst.
Total angst.

I want you to know, first of all, that I hate dreams. In fiction, they’re too often used to convey psychological depth. And in reality, we stupidly rely on them to explain subconscious desires. But this one has stuck with me so long, and speaks to so many conscious issues I have, that I have to share it:

I have traveled back in time to the mid-1970s, a year or so after my own birth. It is Western Massachusetts, and I am on a dark street cut through by railroad tracks. There is a car parked on the tracks, and in the car is my father.

As I approach him, I can see there is a look of terror in his eyes. When I question him, he explains to me that he can’t handle his life—the book he’s writing, The Minutemen and Their World, isn’t coming together, he probably isn’t getting the job he applied for at Amherst College, and he has no idea how to take care of his young son (i.e., me). Emerging from the car and gripping me by the shoulders, he stares into my eyes, then turns and flees into the night.

At this point, I know what I have to do. I’m about his age. I know how to write. I know, in a general way, how to handle my mother. And so—because we look, and especially sound, enough alike—I get in his car, drive home and take over my father’s life. I finish his book and accept the job at Amherst, knowing full well that I couldn’t have done so without the upbringing he provided me. But if it was me, not him, all along…?

That’s when I wake up, with a weird feeling that’s equal parts ickiness and inevitability. Because, well, it’s all true—metaphorically. Although I never set out to follow in my dad’s footsteps, we apparently wear the same size shoes. We do essentially the same job—narrative writing—but from slightly different angles and in somewhat different environments. We enjoy domestic life. We are patient—until we aren’t. Outwardly, we’re calm and cheerful, but it’s really just an expression of inward angst. Oh, and we jog.

So why does this bother me so much that I not only have eerie dreams about it but am compelled to read meaning into them? Apart from the obvious Oedipal interpretation, it’s probably environmental, the difference between growing up in the postwar prosperity of the 1950s and enduring the dystopic 1980s. Dad entered adulthood believing that making it was not only doable but desirable, whereas I’ve always been deeply skeptical of the whole endeavor. Not that I was some crazy punk, but when your cultural touchstones are Black Flag, Pee-Wee Herman and the Jerky Boys, middle-class stability is hardly what you strive for.

And yet, I like to imagine that the dad of my dream bears some relation to my dad in reality, and that there’s some part of him that’s deeply freaked out by the choices he’s made. Which makes me wonder: Who is this man who’s seemed to me to be a pillar of calm my whole life but may actually be as troubled by the prospect of adulthood—and fatherhood—as I am?

Now that’s a dad I don’t mind emulating.

‘The Favorite Model of Your Child’

No children were hurt by this catapult...I think
No children were hurt by this catapult... I think.

Let’s not get into how I found myself searching the Internet for the phrase “child catapult.” I was. Deal with it. It yielded some rather interesting stuff:

Freeplanstobuildacatapult.net. Interesting site. Links to how one might build paintball guns, bazookas, and land mines. Nothing on catapults.

The Assembly Required Blog offers a link to a “free plan” that is worth quoting at length:

“it is very popular because this is the only website which…you can satisfy your child by using these plans and build the favorite model of your child. You can also find other details regarding catapults in this website and the free plans will help you build a functional catapult which will shoot the target from any distance. Learn to build this medieval weapon and make your children happy and of course save your money with the free plans from this website.”

No word on what the “target” referenced here is, or how building medieval weapons will please your child (that’s too obvious?), or what they mean by making a “model of your child.” (Is the child the catapult? Do they mean “example of your child,” as in you’re going to punish your child by catapulting him or her? Hmm.)

The Catapult Project is an example of Internet bait and switch. In this case, catapult stands for Computational Thinking and Programming Languages. It’s a computer educational program in Wisconsin. No weaponry involved. No eyes put out. No injuries whatsoever.

Holy shit: October was fucking catapult month in Corona Park, Queens. “Build and test your own catapult” in a public park.

Why am I not kept abreast of these very important events?

Tears of Death

Came across this horrific story at (the normally silly and unreadable) Babble today about a 2-year-old girl who goes into potentially lethal seizures every time she cries.

The girl has something called Reflex Anoxic Seizure, a syndrome that impacts about 8 children out of every 1,000, according to an extraordinarily unreliable Web search I just did.

How exactly do you keep a 2-year-old from crying? It’s impossible. Terrible stuff. I’m going to step away from my computer now.

Fingertip Amputation & Other Parenting Hazards

The first rule of hipsterdom is this: Thou shalt ridicule other hipsters for doing that which you yourself do. But does this apply to hipster parents?

As best I can tell, yes. At least, this explains my reaction to the news that Maclaren is recalling 1 million strollers because their opening mechanism could, if sprung incorrectly, cut off a child’s fingertip. Ha! I cackled with Gawkerian snark. Serves those disgusting yuppie parents right!

Of course, I myself own a Maclaren (the cheapest, most lightweight one, but still), a hardy stroller that I’m not going to return. Sasha might grow up fingerless, and retarded from watching too much Baby Einstein, but I’m certainly not going to act like I care. To do so would be most unhipsterlike.