Tuesday, February 19, 2013

359 DAYS – WHY WE DO THE THINGS WE DO



"You know, Mrs. Buckman, you need a license to buy a dog, to drive a car - hell, you even need a license to catch a fish. But they'll let any butt-reaming asshole be a father."
~ Keanu Reeves as Tod Higgins in Parenthood (1989)

and…

“Ecclesiastes assures us... that there is a time for every purpose under heaven. A time to laugh... and a time to weep. A time to mourn... and there is a time to dance.”

-       Ren (Kevin Bacon) in Footloose (1984)


A two quote blog… must be a thoughtful one…


 As a parent, there are many sacrifices you make for your children.

As a parent, you know that your children probably will never realize just how much of a sacrifice you made until they have kids of their own.

I know that’s certainly the case with me. I was oblivious to the things my parents did for me – and not just until I had children, but well into my thirties.

As a matter of fact, Here I am, six days into the final stanza of my thirty-something decade, and they are still sacrificing to help me.

I could never repay them for all they have done. Ever. Sure, I complain about them, but they always have their hearts in the right place, so my aggravation with them must always remain short-term and never bring an impossible divide between us.

And while I can easily argue that they let me out into the wilds of this world quite naïve in some very important areas, one thing I definitely gleaned from them was the unconditional love and never-ending support and sacrifice you have to make for your children.

I always tell people just how involved in my kids’ lives I am, but I don’t think I ever realized just how deeply until this past Saturday.

First of all, I skipped a trip to Montreal – one of my favorite cities to visit as part of my job – to attend a regional tap dancing championship.

The reason? My 12-year-old daughter and 11-year-old-son are both tap dancers (among other dance disciplines) and for the second straight year were invited along with their competitive tap class to take part in this competition.

The first year was a blast – and it was nerve-wracking. We didn’t understand how it worked. There was disappointment when we didn’t win a group trophy but then went absolutely bonkers and took over the ballroom when we were awarded with the highest score in the entire competition as they definitely wowed the crowd with their rendition of the Brian Setzer Orchestra’s version of “In the Mood,” the Glen Miller Orchestra classic.



This year was different though.

It was rooted in frustration, from the minute we left our house for the event, to the pre-event nerves, to the awards presentations afterward, to the late-night visit to the diner afterward.

And yet, between my heavy sighs and my sunken eyes and extra pale complexion that would suggest I was truly fed up, there were the big, brown eyes of my youngest children, looking into my soul, telling me unconsciously that they were so happy to be where they were – and it was all thanks to me.

But before we get into the details of that night, I should provide some background.

Their mother, MOMC (read my previouspost), abhors the fact that they dance. She never appreciated the arts. She never wanted to go to plays or concerts. She was even lukewarm about the movies.

She gritted her teeth when I signed up Amelia for dance. But she lost her shit when I signed up Andrew as well.

Because, in her cold, sheltered, WASPY New England upbringing, boys did not dance.  They were teased. They were called “girls” at 10. “fruits” at 12 and “fags” at 14.

Such a shame.

She couldn’t keep that narrow-minded mindset out of the conversation with the kids either.

She constantly made fun of dancing school. She tstill ells my son that she has to take him to “tippy-tap.” When it was disclosed that for him to compete on a regional level that he would have to begin taking ballet classes to work on his core strength, she tried to say no – because it was on her custodial night, and she wasn’t taking him to ballet class because “no son of mine will embarrass me and be in a ballet class.”

I threatened to take her to court. I’ve done that several times since the divorce. I’ve even gone far enough to do so on certain issues and won. I’m not afraid to fight for my kids, no matter the cost. Even if I can’t afford the fight, I’ll find a way. After all, they’re my children. I can’t let them down.

I have had some people try to tell me that kids need to learn disappointment (foreshadowing for tomorrow’s blog) and I agree that they do. But the disappointment shouldn’t be rooted in the disinterest and flawed bias of their parent.

I’m sorry driving them 20 minutes each way to dance class may be deemed inconvenient to MOMC. Suck it up. Be a nurturing mother for God’s sake.

But, anything she says or does these days doesn’t surprise me. For someone who was so hell-bent on being a mother four times in her life, she has very few discernible maternal instincts.

Which has forced me to be both mom and dad.

When my 17-year-old needed a ride home from work, she refused to pick him up because he had decided to crash at my house the night before and didn’t check in with her all day.

“There’s a bus that runs near his work, he can figure out how to get home on his own,” she said.

I wasn’t close to home, so my dad went and got him. He was rightly pissed off.

But, that’s a parent sacrificing for his child AND his grandchild. It wasn’t the first time, and it won’t be the last.

When I was going through my custody battles with MOMC, she went out of her way to try to take the kids from me. She made up a story and filed a phony police report that my mother tried to run over my daughter with her car.

That was quickly dismissed.

She tried to have my oldest pulled out of the public school he was going to because she insisted he wasn’t a resident of the town.

Yep, I had to eradicate that one too.

She tried to fight my work schedule, saying it wasn’t conducive to raising children.

So I changed it.

She even went so far as to insist I was having an extramarital affair.

You guessed it, the judge found that to be a frivolous charge as well.

Nevertheless, with Pennsylvania having some of the most arcane custody rules in the United States, it took five years for our custody battle to end.

Well… I guess it never really ends until they are all 18… but it took that long to finally simmer down.

I feel I did very well for myself in court. I have a brilliant lawyer. I saw her today briefly as a matter of fact to catch up with her. My relentless desire to be with my children coupled with her masterful lawyering came up with an end result that was pretty darn good.

It cost me my entire savings and put me into further debt than I was already in, but it was so worth it.

And now, I do everything, and pay for everything. MOMC pays for nothing.

I’m not kidding.

Something as simple as a $12 fee for a class field trip was presented to her by my youngest and she told him, “make your father pay for it.”

So, $5,000 a year for dance classes. About $1,000 more for my oldest to play high school baseball. Field trips, health insurance, iTunes accounts, Xbox accounts, dinner with friends at the local pizza joint, ice skating, sports equipment you name it, I pay for it.

And what does she pay?

Nothing.

As a matter of fact, she refuses to give my oldest $5 for lunch at school on the mornings he’s at her house.

So, he has to starve, and raid my fridge when he gets home afterward.

There’s so much more, but I don’t want to lose focus on the point of this post here.

See, my situation left me in a tough spot. I needed a place to bunker down to right my ship.

So, I turned to Mom and Dad.

They took me and my kids in, for what was supposed to be a temporary situation.

It lasted seven years.

Oh there were plenty of battles. A lot of getting in each others way. And a ton of concessions made by them in what should have been relaxing years for them.

But, they gave that up for me… and my kids.

And although they’ve been wont to tell me many, many times that I don’t appreciate what they’ve done, I couldn’t disagree more.

Because who knows where we’d be right now without them. Certainly not in the position we are in, that’s for sure.

So, back to Saturday. Here’s how it went:

-       Kids slept at mom’s Friday night because I was out of town for work.
-       I picked up my youngest son at 10 am to take him to a dance class. My daughter stayed there.
-       After dance we went back to my parents’ to pick up my daughter.
-       From there we went home. They both needed to shower and get ready for the competition which started at 6, but we needed to be there by 5.
-       Not my strongest suit, my daughter needed her hair curled and makeup done. So we went back to my mom’s at 4 so my mom could help.
-       Mom blew a fuse in the bathroom, slowing the process. We couldn’t leave until 4:45. The competition was a 30 minute drive.
-       My daughter alerts me as we are leaving that she forgot her head band (all the girls have matching head bands for the costume) and we had to go back to my house to find it.
-       I text the dance instructor to alert her that we are running a few minutes late.
-       My daughter runs into the house to get the head band while my youngest and I sit in the car.
-       Five minutes later she emerges. Tears streaming down her face. Her makeup ruined. She can’t find the headband.
-       I go into the house, tear apart her closet in search of this thin piece of gold material that frankly is immaterial as far as I’m concerned, but I don’t want to get a tongue lashing from the instructor.
-       We never find the head band.
-       Now 5:15, we finally leave my house. I phone the dance instructor to break the head band news. As a gesture to save my eardrums from being screamed into, I offer to run to the mall across the street from the hotel where the competition is being held to buy nine matching gold head bands. I’m told not to worry about it.
-       On the way there, I’m so caught up with trying to calm my daughter down that I drive past the exit off the highway.
-       I go to the next exit, wait in ungodly traffic, make an illegal U-turn, curse out every poor driver in my way, and head back to the hotel.
-       My kids walk in at 6 p.m.
-       Luckily, our group doesn’t go on for another hour, but that’s the extent of the good fortune.
-       While my daughter gets her make-up fixed, the instructr hands me a new pair of pants for my son – she didn’t like the originals.
-       We get him dressed… however the pants are too long and the belt is for a kid who has my waistline.
-       So the instructor starts hemming the pants, occasionally staring daggers at me. I try to look away, only to notice that all the girls now have shiny, matching silver barrettes in their hair. When I ask one of the moms (I am the only dad in the dressing area – the others are all swilling beers at the hotel bar) where they came from, she told me someone ran over to the mall and bought them after I called. Guess I wasn’t capable.
-       We then try to jerry-rig the oversized belt to my son’s waist. We use both double-sided theatre tape as well as packing tape. It looks ridiculous on my opinion, but hey, I’m in enough trouble. I keep my mouth shut.
-       I check the massive crowd and see MOMC with her husband and youngest son (not mine). They look thrilled, as always, to be there.
-       The kids dance. They are awesome. Everyone is happy. I need a beer after my day. I down four.
-       We go back for the Awards ceremony. I noticed they were doing things differently this year. First of all, they were awarding everyone. Seriously? (tomorrow’s blog Anthony, focus on today).
-       Secondly, they decided to compare different disciplines and age groups when handing out the big awards. Also uncool and not fair.
-       Thirdly, where the hell was MOMC? She left? My daughter said she saw her in her seats before they performed, but that she didn’t even come over to congratulate them. Really? You can’t even fake it? To be honest, it definitely tarnished things a little bit for the kids.
-       We won our group. It allows us to go to Nationals, if we want. We weren’t nearly as excited as last year. It just kind of was a deflated balloon. Then we find out bonus points are awarded to entries from schools who send multiple entries. Why? So they’ll come back and the organizers can make more money? Lame. Lame. Lame.
-       My kids knew right away that something was rotten in the state of Denmark. They cried foul to their classmates. My youngest was belittled by some boys in the crazy dance troupe that brought 12,000 kids to compete. (Not relly that many, but waaaaaaaaaay more than any other school – big surprise that they won so much eh? And this isn’t sour grapes, but they really weren’t that good. That’s not a knock on the kids – because they were trying their hearts out – but the teachers who exploited the rules to their advantage, regardless of talent.
-       I had to calm down my emotional daughter – who puts her heart and soul into the rehearsal for these events. She practices at home daily. She gets on her brother’s case to be better. She is determined. So, she was crushed, because it was so blatantly obvious what was going on.
-       We all went to a diner to celebrate our Pyrrhic victory. My son was cranky and tired and didn’t eat. I was tired myself, it was a hell of a day. Nevertheless, I was the last one to leave.
-       We got home at midnight. At 8 a.m. we were back on the road, back to the same hotel for workshops for the kids.
-       I had breakfast with the moms. They want to know all the dirt about MOMC. I tell stories with a smile on my face. But, it’s the umpteenth time I’ve told them.
-       Then, as if the moms haven’t had enough time to chit chat, we all go to lunch after the workshops.
-       We head home. I pack for Long Island. I spend a day in Uniondale, N.Y. watching hockey, driving both ways. (Worst trip in sports).
-       Today, I run a couple of morning errands, then fly to Pittsburgh by route of China (it felt like it) with delays on planes out the wazoo. My tail bone is sore.

But that schedule was gerrymandered for one reason and one reason only - I will do anything – anything – for my kids.

And I’m not afraid to say, I learned it from my mom and dad.

Until tomorrow...






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