Striking the Balance
My son’s favorite toys are as follows:
1. An empty coffee can with some dry rice in it
2. Any pot, pan or random kitchen
implement he can lay his hands on
3. Tools, forks, high voltage
electrical outlets and/or wires, containers of hot or stain causing or
poisonous liquid, the stove, or anything else he has been expressly told not to
touch.
4. That Fisher Price thing that has a clear dome containing what appear to be delicious gumballs. They’ve been making them forever. You know, it has a long handle and two wheels and when you push it the balls bounce around and it makes a super loud popping noise? It's apparently like catnip to a child but makes a parent want to smash the thing like Pete Townsend with a Stratocaster after about ten seconds. Even when I was a kid everyone had one of those things, but I’ve never seen a new one. They were always a hand me down from some older cousin and now I know why. I would snatch that thing right out of Goat Junior’s hands if I ever got a chance to hand it down to some other little tyke and their unsuspecting parents, but I’ve gotten off on a tangent here.
This list has taught me two
things. One is that we’ve wasted a lot of money at Toys ‘r Us. The other is
that Goat Junior doesn’t watch enough TV yet to realize that it’s impossible to
have fun if you haven’t collected all 136 of whatever dumb fad you’re into. He
foolishly thinks it’s super fun to play in a fort made from an empty BBQ box or
run around chasing pigeons.
I grew up on a farm as an only
child in what could be described as fairly modest economic circumstances. We
were poor. Yet I still managed to have
lot of fun with only a dog, my imagination and the outside world. Eventually I
got my hands on a pellet gun and an ancient mini bike and man, the world was my
oyster!
Now, I realize that for a lot of
parents today at least half the things on that list are the stuff of
nightmares. Dangerous, perhaps even politically incorrect? At the very least I
was savagely gender identified! But somehow I and most of the other kids I knew
survived and grew up to be reasonably well adjusted adults, at least by
Haliburton County standards.
When I think of the best times
from my childhood they involve messing around outside with friends, not some
amazing toy I thought I needed. Except for the GI Joe aircraft carrier that
Corby Kent had. It was awesome. I really did need that.
Compared to today’s world of
vehicle mounted DVD players, smart phones issued at birth, 24/7 internet access,
the cartoon network on demand and video game systems that would have literally
made me pass out from sheer excitement, those times seem so far removed I might
as well have been floating down the Mississippi with Huckleberry Finn. And I’m
still in my thirties!
Technology is a wonderful thing,
I’m just struggling with how to help Goat Junior take advantage of the wealth
of information and learning opportunities all these innovations provide (not to
mention tantrum free car rides) while still fostering in him a love of
physical, outdoor activities and imagination based fun.
One time my buddy Phil and I were
goofing around in the front field. We thought it would be fun to
start a little grass fire because when you’re ten burning stuff is awesome.
Just like when you’re a drunk adult. Everything was going great when a little
breeze wafted across the field, a zephyr if you will, and our harmless little
slow burning fire instantly became a raging, hay fueled inferno. It was the
kind of fire I imagine mighty bands of Sioux warriors kindled on the great
plains in order to drive massive herds of bison over cliffs to their deaths! The smoke
rose hundreds of feet into the air and was visible for miles! At least that’s
how it seemed to a frightened 10 year old who’s dad might look out the window
at any second.
Phil’s momma didn’t raise no
fools so he decided his best option was to distance himself from the situation
and skinned out, running like hell towards the barn. I’m not sure my dad would
have believed that I was torching a field while Phil pitched in and mucked out
a few stalls, but I reckon he thought it was worth a shot.
I knew I had about 10 seconds to do something before things got completely out of control so I did the only thing a kid with an aversion to corporal punishment could do. With a savage battle cry that to the untrained ear might have sounded a lot like hysterical weeping I leaped into the conflagration and started stomping on it like a meth fueled clog dancer. In a few moments the fire was out and I stood soot covered and breathless in the middle of a patch of burned grass that could have been seen from space or at least from the top of the Dorset fire tower. I wasn’t sure about my dad’s views on aliens causing crop circles but I sure hoped he was a believer.
I knew I had about 10 seconds to do something before things got completely out of control so I did the only thing a kid with an aversion to corporal punishment could do. With a savage battle cry that to the untrained ear might have sounded a lot like hysterical weeping I leaped into the conflagration and started stomping on it like a meth fueled clog dancer. In a few moments the fire was out and I stood soot covered and breathless in the middle of a patch of burned grass that could have been seen from space or at least from the top of the Dorset fire tower. I wasn’t sure about my dad’s views on aliens causing crop circles but I sure hoped he was a believer.
To make matters worse this was
only a couple of weeks after we had gone back to school shopping and I knew as
I looked down at the smoking husks of my brand new shoes that we couldn’t
afford new ones. I threw them in the bush and wore my old ones for six
uncomfortable months until I could claim I’d grown enough to need another pair.
My parents never mentioned the
fire or the shoes and I was sure we’d gotten away with the crime of the
century, but looking back they must have noticed. They probably thought having my feet bound like a geisha was punishment enough.
Another time Phil and I were
playing Robin Hood or Lord of the Rings or something. I had a child’s miniature
compound bow and an arrow with the tip broken off so it was just a blunt stick with
fletches on it. Phil was armed with an aluminum ski pole, the point of which we
had stuck into a piece of rigid Styrofoam insulation so he could hit me with it
without causing injury. It seemed like a fool proof plan but as the imaginary
and painfully nerdish battle was joined the downward force of Sir Phillip the Fleet‘s mighty blow whipped the improvised padding off the end of the metal ski
pole and I took the full force of his attack on the top of my unprotected head. It actually
bent around my skull. I dropped like I’d been tasered and emitted a howl of
pain and rage that sounded like Sebastian Bach slamming his testicles in a car
door.
Once again Phil weighed his
options and settled on heading for de hills. Sadly for him, lonely hicknerds (my
own term) living in the middle of nowhere have a lot of time to practice their
archery skills. I rolled into a crouch and hit him right in the kidneys at a
full gallop, a shot I’m unapologetically proud of to this day. He went down in
a writhing, squealing heap and I resumed my high pitched wailing.
Seconds later my father burst from the house, certain we were being set upon by a band of ravenous wolverines or possibly caught our hair in a drill press. Instead he found two idiots who had turned on each other due to a combination of poorly engineered fake weaponry and severe anger control issues. A proud moment to be sure.
Seconds later my father burst from the house, certain we were being set upon by a band of ravenous wolverines or possibly caught our hair in a drill press. Instead he found two idiots who had turned on each other due to a combination of poorly engineered fake weaponry and severe anger control issues. A proud moment to be sure.
I told you these stories because
they are two great examples of the type of wholesome outdoor fun we used to
have. Think of the character building and the life lessons. The grass fire
taught me that sometimes in life, as in arson, you make mistakes. When that
happens you have to be ready to jump right in and make things right…and
then hide the evidence.
The nerd skirmish taught me that
when life bashes in your skull with a metal shaft you have to get back up and
fight. Even if that means shooting your friend in the back as he runs away
begging for mercy. A harsh lesson but life’s rough. Phil
learned that you never run away from a psycho with a projectile weapon in a
straight line. You gotta zig. You can’t learn this stuff from video games or TV
When my dad wasn’t watching one
of his hay fields burn down or treating arrow wounds he and I were always
outside fixing something or doing chores. He loved to take me on long walks
through our property and teach me about nature and the history of the land. At
the time, especially as I got older, I often wanted to be somewhere else.
In hindsight however those were the best times of all. I would give anything if
my son and I could go for one walk in the woods with his Grandpa.
We can’t, but we can go together
and I can try to pass on some of the practical skills, stories and love of
nature that he taught me.
Were he here however, my dad
might also tell you that some things you just can’t teach. For instance, how to
hold a flashlight for someone fixing the carburetor on a ’74 Dodge pick-up. I
would usually get distracted by a squirrel or something and end up shining the
light into the wheel well as dad blindly scraped all the skin off his knuckles. This is actually how I learned about zigging when fleeing from an enraged lunatic so luckily it still turned out
to be a teaching opportunity.
I bought that ancient mini-bike I
mentioned earlier with money I earned trapping minnows in the creeks and beaver
ponds on our property to sell to the local bait shops. It involved miles of
walking to empty the traps and my dad walked every foot of it with me, often
after work and chores. We spent countless hours together in the woods and
fields collecting those minnows and now as an adult (kind of) with a son of my
own I realize that those times together were a much bigger reward than even a
sweet ass 50cc Honda Z and those memories are something I will always cherish.
At least I know I had a great
role model as I try to find a way to strike a balance for my son between
today’s technology driven activities and the robust, knuckle headed outdoor fun
of my youth.
Now, if you’ll excuse me, Goat Junior
just finished watching a show which taught him how to solve problems using
reading and words. He is now chasing a cat around the deck with a tower he
built using Mega blocks . Looks like maybe he’ll just strike his own balance.