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Authors: Jim Gaffigan

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BOOK: Dad Is Fat
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“What’s going on here?”

The other kid always looks at me like, “Oh, he’s one of the crazy adults.”

Once my then three-year-old son, Jack, approached some seven-year-olds playing cards at the park and just watched them. One of the boys looked at my son and said, “Go away. You’re gross!” The other kids laughed.

I chimed in immediately. “No,
you’re
gross! You are the grossest gross grosser in the world!” The bully ran with tears in his eyes to his caregiver, who glared at me. I just smiled in victory. I realize I won’t always be there to defend my children, but if I can trim some of the jerky behavior out of their life, maybe they won’t do it to other kids. Of course, I am also getting revenge for my own victimization as a child. I was always hoping some pale giant would appear and rescue me from the bullies. Now I am that pale giant. You shall call me Thor.

God help you if one of your kids has to use the bathroom. Remember, they didn’t have to go at home, but (five minutes later) now they do. I’ve had some really difficult moments in my life, and using a New York City park bathroom with a three-year-old is up there. New York City park bathrooms feel like a crime scene. You are always expecting to see yellow police tape and a chalk-outlined body.

There’s usually water running and a homeless man giving himself a sponge bath. He always looks at you like you broke into his house. The only thing about the New York City park bathroom that is unlike a crime scene is that crime scenes will eventually be cleaned up. You may ask me why—if it is so scary and disgusting and I am not a serial killer—would I ever use a New York City park bathroom? Why not go home, or to a nearby restaurant, or just buy my kid a new outfit? Anything but use a New York City park bathroom? I use it because when a three-year-old tells you they have to use the bathroom, she does not mean in a couple of minutes. She means at that moment. Actually, before that moment. They always tell you at the last possible moment.

    
THREE-YEAR-OLD
: I need to use the bathroom.

    
ADULT:
Now?

    
THREE-YEAR-OLD
: Almost done.

Wet pants, a bad fall, and a temper tantrum are all signals that it is now time to leave the park. If you thought leaving your house with little kids was impossible, now there is the other crisis of returning home that must be dealt with. You could spend ten hours at the park, and your announcement
that it’s time to leave will always be greeted with whines of “Aw, man!” or “Five more minutes!” Of course, little kids never want to leave anywhere. They never say, “You know, I’m tired … let’s head home.” The more tired they get, the less they want to leave, and the more necessary it becomes for you to leave before the meltdowns start. To other people you are never leaving at the correct time with your children. You’re either looked at strangely for leaving early—“You’re going already?”—or you’re the irresponsible parent—“Your baby seems really tired. Like he needs to go to bed.” It’s amazing that people with kids ever go anywhere.

Suddenly, the only thing harder than leaving your house is returning to your house. Even though it’s an hour before dinner, you are forced to coax them out with the promise of ice cream, the methadone of leaving the park. It works. Now to clean them up and convince them to not tell Jeannie I got them ice-cream cones. They always promise to not say a word, but as we walk into the apartment, one will gleefully announce, “We had ice-cream cones!”

“Oh, really? Did Daddy have one, too?”

“Of course I didn’t.”

“No! Daddy had a hot fudge sundae.”

“What? I’m still going to eat dinner.”

Is It Too Soon to Start Dating Again?

I often view other parents the way I view other comedians. I have great respect for them, but I always assume they are crazy. I’m usually right. My other assumption about parents who have children who are of a similar age to mine is that we will have something in common. I’m usually wrong.

“How old is your kid?” is the “How about this weather?” of parental playground talk. I am at the park to spend time with my kid, not to chat with some stranger, but the casual chat becomes inevitable. Talking to a parent I don’t know at a playground can be an obstacle course. I try not to be too forward or too aloof. If the stranger parent is of the opposite sex, I don’t want the banter to be considered flirtatious or otherwise creepy. If the conversation gets too serious and we start talking about an election, religion, or soy milk, it can get really weird. Therefore it always goes back to the safe option: asking the age
of the stranger’s child. Warning: Avoid guessing at a stranger parent’s child’s gender. You don’t want to be wrong.

    
ME:
How old is he?

    
STRANGER MOM:
She’s twenty-three years old!

    
ME:
Wow, lots of hair.

If this awkward chat goes on too long, and your kids like each other, you may get sucked into phase two of the interaction with the stranger parent: the awkward playdate. Given that I have enough kids for a basketball team, I rarely seek out playdates. I understand that other parents want to arrange playdates, and of course my kids love them. Playdates are great for kids and most often incredibly uncomfortable for me, given my general dislike of human beings.

Many times, playdates with parents I don’t know feel like I am on a double date with my kid. My kid really likes his playdate friend and needs me as his wingman. He has set me up with someone I have no interest in hanging out with, but I’m doing him a solid. Suddenly I’ve traveled back in time to when I was single and trapped in that awful double-date scenario. I could always tell what my friends thought of me by the people they set me up with.

“What did you think of Lisa?”

“I’m not that desperate!”

For me, blind dates and first dates were nothing but awkwardness and discomfort. Playdates with a stranger parent are just déjà vu. “Oh, you guys don’t eat meat or food?” “Yeah, I guess the park is dirty.” “Tell me more about your job at the
water filtration plant.” I am forced to engage in endless empty parent talk while my kids live it up. To be fair, it’s usually a great opportunity to discover that the only thing that I have in common with that parent is that we have a kid the same age.

Like a serial dater, I am spending time with strangers who I am not even on a first-name basis with. My phone is filled with numbers of people that I will probably never see again, and if I did, I would never know their real name: Milo’s dad, Luca’s mom, Silas’s dad, Oliver’s mom, that kid from Chelsea Piers’ gay dad.

Rarely do I meet a parent at a park or on a playdate that I develop a lifelong friendship with. Someone should really start an online service for playdate matchups. Parents could take a personality test to see if they are compatible with other kids’ parents before letting their kids become friends with kids with boring parents. It would narrow down the list of potential playdate partners’ parents and help you avoid the inevitable walk of shame home from a horrible playdate. I would totally sign up for that service. I’ve got an idea. Why don’t you start that business? You could call it “Playdates.com” or “ePlaydates.com.” You could make a killing! You’re welcome. Again. Don’t tell me you don’t have time. You’re just sitting around reading this brilliant book. Me? No, thanks. I have five kids. Plus I don’t like to work. Send me an e-mail when you have figured out your business plan. You can pay me then. I’ll take 80 percent. All right, all right, 79 percent. Hey! It was my idea! Fine. I’ll see you in court.

I’ll Be Your Tour Guide

When you have five kids, or even more than one kid, it can be difficult to give everyone the appropriate amount of attention. Therefore I strive to get some quality one-on-one time with each of them. I’ll proudly announce to Jeannie, “Michael [the one-year-old] and I are going to have some ‘dad and son’ time together this afternoon.” Unfortunately, Jeannie will often say, “Fine, just don’t take him somewhere to eat.” I always think, “Then what are we supposed to do?” I mean, we could play catch, but he’s not that great at catching, so it feels more like playing throw. I’ll try to convince Jeannie that taking Michael to Katz’s Deli could be a memory that he cherishes. I imagine adult Michael saying, “I remember when I was little, my dad would take me to Katz’s for a pastrami sandwich. Occasionally, my dad would even let me have a bite. What a great dad I had.” Yet Jeannie always insists on no food. She has this weird thing about eating large meals between meals. I know, she’s a
total weirdo, right? She also has this cockamamie notion that cured meat is not only bad for babies but bad for everyone! I call that “neglect.”

Eating healthy at Katz’s Deli. A tradition
.

When you only have one of your children with you, you have many more options of places to go in New York City besides parks or playgrounds (the only logical places you can safely bring the whole group). Here are my assessments of these nonfood places that are good for one-on-one bonding with a kid.

Children’s Museums

I’m not really sure what makes a children’s museum a museum. I guess just the word
museum
. Children’s museums seem more like gathering places for toddlers to do fun activities while at the same time contracting a cold. I guess the idea is “Why have my kid ruin my house when he or she can go ruin this play area someone has named a museum?”

Regular Museums

NYC has some amazing regular museums that kids seem to enjoy. There’s the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Natural History, and a bunch of other ones I keep planning to take my children to. I know kids love these museums because whenever I take my kids to a NYC museum, they are way too crowded with other kids. Don’t ever go to a museum on a rainy Saturday. It’s like when the Walking Dead took over Atlanta. All right, I love
The Walking Dead
. Get used to me using it as a reference. Museums are a great cultural experience, and by that I mean a great opportunity for you to repeatedly tell your children not to touch things. I find museums incredibly exhausting, and by that I mean acting like you’re interested in some of those exhibits. “So this is a painting by
another
European painter of another unattractive European from the 1700s? Fascinating.” It seems like they were only painting the sad, ugly people back then. “Hey, you’re hard on the eyes,
why don’t I paint your portrait?” To make matters worse, it’s hard to leave a museum, mostly because you can never find the exit. I’ve been in casinos that are easier to navigate.

My head looks pretty big in this picture, right?

The Zoo

Kids love the zoo. I’ve been lucky enough to take my kids to many zoos across the United States. What I’ve learned is that when children see animals in captivity, it makes them want ice cream.

    
ME:
Hey, there’s a monkey!

    
KID:
Can we get ice cream?

    
ME:
Let’s see the polar bear.

    
KID:
After that can we get ice cream?

    
ME:
Are you enjoying the animals?

    
KID:
Do they have animal-shaped ice cream?

BOOK: Dad Is Fat
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ads

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