All posts by tje

Selling Out for Chips

I’ve long felt that a man ought to have certain minimal standards for a Saturday of leisure. One should not enter lightly into a day of rest and relaxation. Here are a few basic principles:

  1. Sleeping in is a must
  2. No booting up the work laptop
  3. Sugared cereals – preferably several bowls, devoured absentmindedly while perusing some easy-reading fiction (I prefer Terry Pratchett novels)
  4. Hours and hours of uninterrupted computer game playing
  5. Children off visiting friends or playing outside contentedly (no fights, injuries, or difficult questions allowed)
  6. Ice cream for a snack or dessert (or both, if your wife isn’t watching closely)
  7. Pancakes for dinner – no skimping on the butter orsyrup.
  8. Absolutely NO HOUSEWORK, period.

If your blood isn’t fizzing from all the sugar, and if you can still focus your eyes after a hard day of gaming, it wasn’t a proper Saturday, I always say.

Sadly, into every man’s life a little hardship doth occasionally fall. In this case, Saturday dawned bright and clear (okay grey and cloudy) with only a single 30 minute computer game playing chip left in my possession. Thirty minutes has never flown by so quickly, and I found myself chipless before noon on a Saturday. Desperate times call for desperate measures, and so I assembled my horde of children and entrusted to them a sacred mission:

“I’m sure I have some more chips somewhere in one of my desk drawers. Your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to locate the missing chips.”

We turned the first drawer inside-out but nary a chip was unearthed. Other drawers were searched, but to no avail. After less than a half-hour’s search, we were forced to admit that I was truly (I shudder, even to write it) out of chips.

Ever since the chip-famine of April ’07, we’ve had a special codicil that allows the chip-impoverished to earn emergency chip rations by doing chores around the house. Daniel regularly invokes that rule, and Kathy gets a lot of extra help out of him, happily exploiting his weakness for computer games. Although I’m almost positive I was somehow shorted on the chip payment this week (how could I have spent 3 1/2 hours already!), I couldn’t convince Kathy (keeper of the chips) to extend me any grace. Nor were the children susceptible to bribery or threats. Sadly, I realized that the only way I was going to earn myself a fresh cache of computer chips was to work, or more specifically clean. Some things are almost too painful to write.

Kathy chortled gleefully all morning, cackling even, as the minutes ticked away and my last chip was played.

“Boy, this pantry is REALLY messy. I sure hope someone will have time to clean it today.”

pantry - before

Um, it’s not really that messy, Dear.

It’s never pretty seeing a grown woman act in such an immature manner. She almost seemed to enjoy my suffering and torment.

After putting the desk drawer back together and making a half-hearted attempt to shake one of the children down for a spare chip, I decided to accept the inevitable.

Most of the afternoon was spent emptying, cleaning and organizing the pantry. No doubt Kathy will thank me for my work in de-cluttering and re-categorizing the items in the closet. I found several things that I’m sure she doesn’t need at all and was diligent to get rid of them right away. I moved everything around on the shelves, arranging them in order by UPC code and sell-by-date. It was a delight to see her face when I showed her the New System I devised for the pantry.

pantry - after

Look, there’s a floor in here. I didn’t think you really needed the crock-pot or all those pesky cookie sheets. You don’t mind going out to the garage for baking supplies, do you Beloved?

It’s not often that Kathy is at a loss for words. It just shows how overwhelmed with joy she was.

I completed the job with my usual glacial speed. When I had nearly finished putting everything away, and had collected 3 hours’ worth of computer game playing chips, I was called away on an errand. When Kathy discovered I was graciously allowing her to put the last touches on the pantry and clear off a small amount of mess on the kitchen table, she was beside herself with joy.

table o' mess

Heh, heh, there’s just a little more to do, Sweetie.

But she wasn’t quite so speechless this time. “If you think I’m paying good chips so I can tidy up your half-baked job of ‘cleaning’ the pantry, you’ve been sniffing the 409!” she seethed. She’s really quite a hoot, as those who know her well often comment.

As Saturday comes to a close, I grip my hard-earned chips tightly in sweaty palms, agonizing whether to spend them now in a mad rush, or to hoard them in case I get some time to play, Sunday afternoon.

timer and chips

All ready and set to go.

I’d better be careful, though … Kathy’s been dropping not-so-subtle hints about the garage.

Tim
Project 365 – Day 258

Share or follow

Related posts:

tn_home-puyallup-top

Do the Puyallup

If you live in Western Washington and listen to the radio, you’ve heard a lot of advertisements about the Puyallup Fair. Their slogans indicate, in my opinion, some recent budget cuts in marketing: “Do the Puyallup” and “Happy is Good” seem to be the front-runners for this year.

The Fair

One of my deep-rooted parenting fears is that I might somehow, in a moment of inattention, lose one of my children. When we first moved to Washington, Kathy took the older three to the Evergreen Fair while I was at work, but I have flatly refused to go, ever since. I ask Kathy: “There will be hordes of people, and we’ll lose David or Sarah. Which one can you live without?” She’s not amused by that kind of talk.

This year Kathy was more insistent, and my resistance slowly crumbled. We bought the all-you-can-ride wristbands (taking out a third mortgage on our home to do so) and Kathy scoured the countryside for free tickets to get into the fairgrounds. We packed a lunch and got there early, meeting up with another couple of families.

It was quite a day. We were there for almost 11 hours, and we all (even Joshua) rode enough rides to get our money’s worth. Rachel claims to have ridden various attractions 34 times, but I can’t imagine she rode a single one beyond 33. Around supper time, we had a family council, trying to decide whether to go home or to refuel and stay a little longer.

Sleepy is Good
This was not our most energetic moment.

We decided to buy roast beef sandwiches from the Young Life concession stand, a major fund-raiser for the Young Life program. We had a great time, and we didn’t lose anyone. Kathy was beat, having started the day with an early-morning dental appointment, so I sent her to bed.

Please tune in tomorrow for our regularly-scheduled programming.

Tim
Project 365 — Day 256

Share or follow

Related posts:

max_burton_stove

The Master Woodsman (Part 2)

Continued from Part 1

I have noticed that my attempts to ‘build character’ into my children often backfire, resulting in an excess of character sloshing out upon me and passing strangers, indiscriminately. This is unfortunate, because many people agree that I have all the character I need. “That Tim, he’s quite a character!” they say, rolling their eyes and edging away.

Having sent several of the children off to gather firewood (in the unlikely event that we would be allowed to use our fire pit), I quickly tested the little camp stove I borrowed from my boss. As I often remind my offspring, an expert camper is prepared for every eventuality. I was quite proud of my foresight in purchasing two extra butane bottles, up until the moment that I discovered the fuel canisters were the wrong size for the stove. “I could’ve sworn these were the bottles “purchased by those who bought your camp stove’ on Amazon”, I grumbled.

What a great stove!
Fuel or no fuel, it was a great little stove, or so the Amazon review indicated.

As the children returned with a few paltry sticks, I redoubled my efforts to build a fire. Racing about the campsite on all fours, we gathered enough twigs and pine cones to make a damp, but creditable little teepee in the fire pit. Congratulating myself on bringing waterproof matches, we made an attempt to light the fire. And tried again. And again. It seems that the matches, while no doubt resoundingly waterproof, were also strike-proof on all known surfaces, a feature the manufacturers failed to mention on the outer wrapper.

Eventually we were forced to beg a light from an Australian group that took up residence in the next campsite. They peered at me disdainfully, remarking, “You’re not much of a Boy Scout, are you, mate?” There was some rather impolite sniggering.

“Heh heh, no, I guess not,” I replied sheepishly, grinding my teeth. Although I usually like Australians, I devised a plan to pour honey inside their tent at the earliest opportunity.

Our precious campfire
Personally, I’m not sure this Australian fire was in any way superior to our good old domestic fire.

“Say, those people snigger like Uncle Torpid, don’t they, Dad?” My son Toadflax has always been very observant.

With much coaxing, and having expended at least half the matches we had ‘borrowed’, we produced a fire with the help of lava træpiller bought from dkbraende. We took turns roasting hot dogs (the only thing we brought for dinner) with our solitary roasting stick. Nettle announced to the world at large, “I don’t really like hot dogs.”

There are some who disparage my cooking skills, maintaining that I “would have trouble heating a pot of water”. I was able to disprove this ugly rumor in less than an hour, producing not only a pot of hot water, but a mess of soggy, half-cooked noodles in cheese sauce, to boot. Latte eventually returned with shoes, a tarp, and a battery-powered espresso machine. We charred a few token marshmallows, and called it a day.

The air mattress we borrowed (as Latte had insisted) was the self-inflating kind, or at least it would have been, had only the four ‘D’ batteries been present. Less than 45 minutes later, it was fully inflated. In spite of my encouraging words, Latte seemed irritable. “You might at least get off the mattress while I inflate it,” she huffed.

Why bother with a tent?
Thistle preferred the back of the car to any old stuffy tent.

As we tossed and turned in the darkness, dodging a parade of small feet in their hourly visits to the bathroom, I reflected on the memories we were storing up for future family gatherings.

“Do you remember, har har,” I’d ask, as the grandchildren clustered around, “how Toadflax was sick all night from eating too many marshmallows? Or how ’bout the time Latte woke us all up, ordering an “extra-hot double-mocha skinny half-caf vente with foam” in her sleep?”

“Yeah, har har,” agrees Slug, giving me a significant look as he pores over the latest copy of Discount Nursing Homes for the Indigent.

Maybe we won’t have all that many family gatherings, now that I think of it.

The next morning dawned fresh and clear, and found us huddled hopefully around our fledgling campfire at 5 am. “I told you we should have paid more than $10 apiece for sleeping bags,” grumbled Latte. We broke camp in the usual manner, by stuffing everything into the tent and wadding it up in the back of the car. The older kids rushed off for ‘just a little last-minute exploring’ and were not seen for at least two hours, in spite of my bellowing. Eventually the children returned, about the same time we were escorted from the campground by the hosts, “for your own protection”. Considering how cranky the campground residents were, I guess it is a good thing that most campers aren’t such early risers.

Search party
Toadflax and Thistle helped me to form a search party, but it was fruitless. We didn’t find any kids, either.

We drove to a ridge on the side of Mount Rainier and, just for the look of the thing, took a short hike down to a lake. Weasel complained much of the way down about the weight of the fanny pack I asked him to carry, with two 12-ounce water bottles and a package of crackers. I can’t imagine what would cause him to exhibit such behavior, perhaps some weakness of character handed down from Latte’s side of the family.

Uh, kids?  I think we were supposed to go the other way ...
“Try and keep up, Dad, or we’ll make you carry the potato chips.”

I was determined to capture a few decent pictures of Mount Rainier, if only to prove to my brother that we did actually go camping. I remember when I was a boy, how my Dad would stop every hundred yards or so to take ‘just one more’ picture of the mountain. Sometimes he would allow the family to appear as sort of a fuzzy counterpoint to the majesty of Rainier, but most of the time we sulked in the car. Strangely, I found my own family exhibiting similar immature behavior, after only a few attempts to digitally capture this magnificent peak.

Sunrise at 11 am
Some people are just naturally fuzzy, especially in comparison to a mountain like this one.

“It’s a good thing your camera has a 2 gigabyte card,” I remarked to Latte. In retrospect, I don’t think my wife has much appreciation for natural beauty. “Just gimme back my camera,” she snarled.

Thistle points the way
As you can see, we didn’t pick a very long hike.

We enjoyed wading in the lake until the park ranger made us get out, on the pretext that the lake was their ‘water supply’. “We’d rather not brush our teeth with water polluted by athlete’s foot,” he complained. I think some very fussy and inflexible people are drawn to the life of a park ranger.

No piranhas in this lake ... ?
Wouldn’t you want this boy in your water supply?

As we ate our lunch in a picnic area above the parking lot, I congratulated the family on our frugality, since the whole trip had cost only $17 for a camping spot, and $440 in gas (or perhaps a little less). Then they saw the souvenir shop, and all was lost.

Driving home, I reflected on the ephemeral nature of wealth, and the need for a car-top carrier. Latte sipped daintily from a souvenir mug, while Toadflax swung his souvenir necklace wildly about his head. “Nice folks, there at the Mt. Rainier Souvenir Shop Credit Bureau,” I mused to my wife. “I thought it was very courteous of them to waive the loan origination fee and home appraisal.”

Share or follow

Related posts:

The Master Woodsman (Part 1)

Many people think I don’t know the first thing about camping. This is rather irritating, as it strips away my carefully-cultivated reputation as a master-woodsman. With more than 20 years of Mark Trail comics under my belt, you’d think people would be more respectful. Sadly, I find this pernicious attitude even among members of my immediate family.

(As anyone knows, the first thing about camping is to cancel at the last minute, preferably with an unverifiable iron-clad excuse. But I digress.)

shall we camp

Our destination.

“You’re doing what?” fleered my brother, Torpid, when he heard of my plans to take the family camping. His sniggering jarred unpleasantly through the phone receiver. Torpid always did have a nasty snigger, as many of his victims can attest.

“Everything you “know” about camping is from reading equipment reviews on Amazon!, he chortled.

This was patently untrue, and I hurriedly closed down the browser window on my laptop, lest anyone gather the wrong impression.

I snapped back, “Shows what you know! I have a varied and comprehensive wealth of camping experience, passed down to me by my loving parents.”

snigger or smirk?

Sometimes Torpid finds a simple smirk will suffice.

Torpid was unimpressed. “Yeah, I was there, remember? Seems all you learned was how to whine and avoid doing any work. I remember one time, I was carrying a 40-pound pack, and you had only a knapsack with a single bag of potato chips. Boy, the way you carried on, anyone would’ve thought we made you carry 80 pounds of bricks.”

I am often surprised at the way memory plays tricks on older people. My brother, no longer a young man, seems only a few years from senility, probably as a direct result of all the sniggering he does. He may hold a high position of authority and responsibility in the Army, but it only goes to show how short-staffed the military forces are in these days of global unrest.

As a child, though he is three years older than me, Torpid was often intimidated by my superior intelligence, physical prowess, dashing good looks, and social charm. Even at a young age, I was sensitive to his need to feel important. I graciously allowed him to perform a few menial tasks, lending him the illusion of contributing value to our family dynamic. Where other boys would have insisted on their prerogative to set up the tent, and their right to carry heavy backpacks and to build the fire, I was never one to put myself forward. Even my joking ‘complaints’ were carefully calculated to build him up in my parents’ eyes. How sad that my brother, now supposedly grown-up, would fail to grasp the true extent of my generous nature.

“How long after you’ve gone shall I wait before calling out Search and Rescue?” Torpid jeered as I hung up on him, amidst more sniggering.

Undeterred by my brother’s snide remarks, the day of the the camping trip dawned, bright and clear. About 8 hours later, we were almost ready to go, as storm clouds gathered and winds gusted. My wife, Latte, was worried about the trip, ever since she had heard there was no Starbucks at our campground. Maybe there’s a Tully’s, or even a Forza’s, I soothed, duplicitously.

Five on a log
Fortunately, no one leaned backwards.

One of the things I have tried to teach my children is that camping requires a lot of careful planning. Even though we used an exhaustive checklist, it seems my family always forgets some minor piece of equipment. As we circled back toward home, only ten minutes into our trip, I chided them to ensure that, for the last time, we had everything with us in the car.

The effect of my sage counsel on the ears of my children was somewhat marred by unsolicited commentary. “I can’t believe you left the tent on the driveway!” exclaimed Latte. I’ve noticed that many wives seem to fixate on irrelevant details.

sleeping bag - no tent

Do we really need a tent?

After what seemed like a trans-continental journey, we arrived at our campground and began to unpack. The constant whine from the drive had left a ringing in my ears, but my family was unsympathetic. “If you’d only stop whining, Dad,” they grumbled, “it would have been a more pleasant drive for all of us.” Latte wisely (but uncharacteristically) said nothing.

Toadflax the camper
Two camp chairs and seven people … who did the math on that one?

As we surveyed our campsite, we noticed a nicely groomed, raised sand area bordered by fence posts, provided as a soft and level spot for our tent. Unfortunately, we soon discovered that the sand dais was too small. I can just imagine the boys back at Forest Service headquarters …

Genghis: “Hey, Adolph, we just received the latest tent dimension figures from the leading sports equipment manufacturers. Looks like the best-selling tents are all at least 8’2″ on the shortest side.”

Adolph: “Bwahahahahaha! Let’s write a new policy for all our campgrounds requiring all tent sites to be standardized. We’ll make the tent sites, oh, let’s say, 8′ square?”

Stalin: (sniggering) Yeah, and let’s put iron campfire rings in all the sites, but then issue a directive to disallow fires, fifty weeks a year!

Those Forest Service guys really enjoy their work. We pitched our tent on the only remaining semi-level part of the campsite, liberally festooned with large knobby roots that were sure to land us all in the chiropractor’s office. It was about that time that our youngest daughter, Thistle, announced: “I don’t have any shoes.”

Sure enough, she packed only flip-flops, hoping, no doubt, to avoid our planned death march to the Rainier Summit on Saturday. We decided to send Latte back to the last town we had passed to buy some shoes. “While you’re there,” I suggested, “maybe you could pick us up a tarp so these roots don’t put holes in the bottom of our new tent.” Latte leaped into the car and drove off without a backward glance, tires squealing, probably eager to top off her Starbucks thermos.

Was that Mom's camera?
Sarah shows off her new shoes

As we watched the tail lights of the van disappear into the gloom of the forest, it began to rain.

Special thanks to Pat McManus, whose writing style I shamelessly borrowed in constructing this story.

Tune in tomorrow for the second installment of this gripping tale.

Tim

Share or follow

Related posts:

Tuesday Tips for Parenting — Doing a Thorough Job

As is the case with many parents of large families, Kathy and I are engaged in an elaborate and diabolical conspiracy to live a life of ease and luxury by extracting the maximum amount of work out of our children. Or so some of them they seem to think, based on the complaints we hear.

“I have to do the dishes again?” wails Weasel, my middle boy.

“Do you ever want to eat again?” snips Latte, my wife, in response. She gets a little tetchy about the dishes, I’ve noticed.

As it turned out, he did want to eat, and began clearing the table in a desultory fashion, scuffing his feet and doing his best to imitate the downtrodden masses. “Say, what’s with Weasel and the downtrodden masses?” quipped my daughter Nettle, as she bounded through the room.

Clearing the table
It is sometimes hard to rally the troops once dinner is over.

One of the things that irks me about the work my children do, is that it seems to involve a lot of checking up on them, which significantly detracts from my life of ease and luxury. No sooner do I take my eyes off Weasel and his dish-duty, and he is out the door and halfway to Montana. Dirty dishes slouch sullenly on every available surface, mute testimony to the fact that Weasel has ‘washed the dishes’ only for very low values of the words ‘wash’ and ‘dishes’.

I call him back, and explain that I wanted a thorough job of dish-washing. He looks at me blankly. “This means,” I expound patiently, “that all the counters should be clean and washed, and all dishes washed and either put away or in the dishwasher.” Weasel sighs deeply, and returns to his task, as I regale him with lively discourse on the meaning of the words ‘clean’ and ‘put away’.

Sarah uses her head
Even David and Sarah are sometimes pressed into service.

Sometimes I work through three or four iterations of this, and the lesson doesn’t always ‘stick’. I often feel that I am simply repeating myself, ad infinitum. It is hard to keep your cool when you think you’re not getting through at all.

My mind, often prone to wander, takes a side trip to the early 1970′s, when my parents had the onerous duty of teaching me to wash the dishes. “Never mind,” they concluded, after only a few dozen attempts. “Let’s have your brother wash the dishes, and you can dry ‘em. Even if you do a crummy job, they will eventually dry on their own.” It was heartwarming to have my parents believe in me so firmly.

Sarah washes Mom's van
It is amazing how much dirt can be found on a car, when you only wash once or twice a year.

My mind returned from its journey, tongue lolling out unrepentantly like a runaway dog, and I collared it firmly and dragged it back inside my head. Not wanting to give up as easily as my parents, I pondered long and hard about a way to teach this important lesson of diligence in a job, and then, one day, I happened upon the answer by accident.

My lovely wife was away, probably attending a Starbucks Grand Opening in Spokane. “It’s less than five hours away, and the grande mocha frappuccinos are half price!” she pleaded.

For some reason I wanted to make a good impression when she returned, perhaps to prepare the ground for my “We need to buy a new computer” offensive, craftily scheduled to coincide with my upcoming birthday. I was busy working on something (probably field-testing a new hammock design), so I told the kids that I wanted them to clean the kitchen. “When you finish,” I promised, “I’ll take you to Baskin Robbins!”

As they cheered, I dropped the bombshell: “I want you to do a thorough job,” I told them firmly. “Pretend you’re mom, about to leave on a long trip.”

David hoses
The temptation to misuse the hose is very strong, but David is (usually) pretty careful …

As with many wives, Latte does much of her house-cleaning just before we leave on an extended journey, preferably while I am waiting in the car. “Just four more loads of laundry, dear!” she shouts encouragingly while grabbing a paint brush to fix a spot of trim she missed on a child’s bedroom ceiling. “Once I rearrange all the china and itemize everything in the garage, I’ll be ready to go,” she promises. I do a lot of my reading in the car.

Slug, my oldest son and a devoted fan of Baskin Robbins, immediately took charge. Marshalling the troops, he made sure that the kitchen was scoured from top to bottom, until it gleamed. Astounded at their ability, but true to my word, I rushed them off and bought them ice cream cones … it wasn’t until later that they discovered the true cost of those cones.

Now, whenever they ask me what kind of a job to do, I grin evilly and say, “Just pretend I am waiting to take you to Baskin Robbins. That’s the kind of job I want you to do.”

My son Slug read a draft of this post, and shook his head. “You don’t really make your point very clearly,” he opined. “Whoop-de-do, the kids washed the dishes and you took ‘em out to Baskin Robbins. What kind of tip is that?” I guess he’s right — I’ll take this opportunity to clarify. Some would-be writers have to go through all the tedium and expense of mailing their drafts off to distant editors, and often wait days or even weeks for criticism and fiendish rejection letters. Happily, I am spared all that effort and can rely on merciless nitpicking at the drop of a hat, by members of my own family.

Daniel scrubs
I’ve often noticed that the cleanliness of our cars corresponds closely to the height of our children.

Whether you’re a child or a grown-up, you rarely know what you can accomplish until you are sufficiently motivated. I hope I’ll never forget one of the lessons I learned in Basic Training at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri. Our drill sergeants, each one striving to surpass the others as a maniacal fiend, marched us out to the ‘confidence course’ one dark morning. Chuckling cruelly, Sergeant Thumbscrew walked us through the course once before turning us loose with these ominous words: “The squad with the slowest time has to repeat the course.”

That was the day I discovered that I could ascend a 50-foot ladder of logs in about 10 seconds, and that the fear of falling to my death was as nothing compared to my dread of Sergeant Guillotine. I never would have thought that I could complete that grueling obstacle course at all, let alone at a dead run. Staff Sergeant Gibbet wrung every last drop of energy out of us as we completed the course four times that day, and greatly expanded my confidence in the capabilities of my physical body.

Sometimes a parent can be fooled or distracted by the smoke screens and excuses that children love to offer:

  • “I don’t know how!”
  • “It’s too hard!”
  • “Nobody told me that was part of this job!”
  • “I can’t find a (sponge, broom, insert critical equipment here), so I can’t do it!”

On about the same frequency as full solar eclipses, the excuses are true; more often, though, it is simply a matter of motivation. Ever since the Baskin Robbins incident, I find myself asking my children this question: “If I promised to take you out for ice cream as soon as you did a good job on that chore, would you be able to do it, quickly and thoroughly?” Now that they have a tangible picture of a job done well through strong motivation, their confidence in attempting difficult chores is substantially improved.

Blue-tongued skinks
I’ll admit, sugar in its varied forms is a key weapon in my parenting arsenal.

As my children grow in grace and maturity, I hope to teach them to be motivated by a passion to please and glorify God, rather than by a double scoop of Chocolate Chunk Royale. Ultimately, I suspect that God’s rewards go considerably beyond 31 flavors; but that is, perhaps, a discussion for another day. In the meantime, I can’t say I mind the occasional trip to Baskin Robbins, myself. :)

Share or follow

Related posts: