home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- WELCOME TO EVEN MORE EXPERT ADVICE, GUIDANCE AND GENERAL BRILLIANCE FROM
- YOUR RESIDENT EXPERTS IN MOST SUBJECTS YOU CARE TO MENTION.
-
- TODAYS SUBJECT IS:
-
- PARENTHOOD
- ~~~~~~~~~~
-
- Non-parents, as a breed, are people who haven't got children, don't want
- children, and have absolutely wonderful child-free lives. They're the sort
- who just swan out to the shops on a Saturday morning without having to make
- plans equivalent to the movement of NATO troops around Europe. The ones who
- cheerfully wear white blouses and shirts, confident that no one's going to
- puke down them, and can say at the drop of a hat "lets go to the pictures
- tonight".
-
- Non-parents, regard nappies on a par with nuclear waste dumps .. something
- they know exists but have no wish to be within several miles of.
- Non-parents have pastel-pink carpets and cream coloured sofas, and do crazy
- things like keep booze and record collections in floor level cupboards,
- precious ornaments are kept at tempting just within reach positions.
- Non-parents just don't want to know about children and hands-on experience
- anyone under 12 years is more scary than Mike Tyson on a bad day. Faced
- with a gurgling bundle, they become stiff, scared and tongue-tied, as if
- the wee one needed intelligent conversation instead of simple clucking and
- gooing.
-
- Well that was us to a tee, especially when we were at a party, although it
- was only an informal one, we had just finished our "take-away meal" when our
- friend did something so terrible I hardly dare tell you what it was.
- ...OK...I will, if you insist... She changed her baby's nappy right there on
- the living room carpet. Anyway it was at that point that we stopped fancying
- vegetable biryani and became determined to stay non-parents. We didn't want
- kids, and weren't going to have any, and even if we did have one we'd never
- change it's nappy on the living room carpet.
-
- Then....you've guessed it....we had a baby. Of course we tried to keep the
- promise about carpets, but it wasn't easy. Sleep deprivation is a very
- effective form of torture practised by terrorists and new born babies.
- After a few weeks of it we would have quite happily changed a nappy in
- front of a capacity crowd at Wembley. When you've been feeding every 2 hours
- all night and changing about 10 nappies a day, the last thing you worry about
- is offending some confirmed non-parent, who's supposed to be a friend.
-
- It has to be said and there is no doubt about it. The arrival of a small
- baby on the scene can test the best of friendships. As you struggle through
- the day mopping up smelly messes, it becomes hard to remember the time when
- you, wore dry-clean-only clothes and thought that 5.30 am was a time for
- going to bed rather than getting up. You soon learn to take your pleasure
- as and when you can......
-
- That reminds me of the story of two women having a chat, while the child of
- one of them empties a kitchen cupboard and sits on the floor bashing two
- saucepan lids together. The childless friend, fed up with having to shout
- at the top of her voice to make herself heard above the din, eventually
- asks, "Should she be doing that?" The tired mother replies, "Not really,
- but at least it keeps her quiet".
-
- Then there is the time when you get invited to the Non-parent's house
- and the inevitable happens - blackcurrant juice on the cream-coloured sofa
- pulped smarties on the pastel-pink carpet, a tiny chip on a family heirloom..
- They mutter through clenched teeth that "it doesn't matter a bit", while
- wondering why you haven't been banned from adult society for the next 15
- years.
-
- Trying to get non-parents round to your way of thinking by inviting them
- around for a conversation about weaning, potty training, sensitive
- disciplining and tantrums can tempt a child-free friend into telling you
- their own, very blunt views on the subject.
-
- Sometimes, of course, you do find a wonderful non-parent, a real friend who
- doesn't hate kids, and who is quite prepared to roll around on the floor or
- rattle things until your grumpy tot turns into a little angel.
- Still with all our experience we have found the best way to deal with people
- that believe that children should be seen and not heard, or preferably
- brought up somewhere else, is to pick up your grubby, runny-nosed offspring,
- preferably after they have eaten a chocolate biscuit, and tell them to give
- auntie/uncle a great big goodbye kiss.
-
-
- BROUGHT TO YOU COURTESY OF JUSTIN EIDLEBURGER AND SPINEY,
- MIKE AND MIKE HUMOUR INDUSTRIES,
- ALIAS G1ERT AND G8AMG @ GB7AAA
- *** EOF
-