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Friday, November 10, 2006

Off My Game

By Sharie Derrickson

My husband and daughter have few things in common. This is for several reasons. My daughter is a teenage girl. That means she likes stuff like hair gel, the telephone, fashion accessories, and purses that match her socks. My husband has no interest in any of that, and has an intense dislike for hair gel, as I know when my daughter approaches him and says, “Dad, let me just put a little hair gel on you and update your look.”

“What do you mean, update my look? What’s wrong with how I look?”

“You’re kidding, right?”

“Kidding about what? I happen to like my hair the way that it is and I’m not wearing hair gel.”

“Moooommm,” my daughter yells. “Tell dad to let me try some hair gel on him.”

“Honey, let her put some hair gel on you.”

“Why?”

“Because it’s funny.”

My daughter runs into the bathroom and grabs the hair gel and her arsenal of styling tools with a look of glee in her eyes that I only see when the word “mall” is mentioned.

“All right, hold still,” she says as she rubs gel into her hands. “The key is to put it at the roots so that you get a little body and then you spike it up – like this.”

She and I stand back to look at her work. “Well?” he asks as I burst out in teary-eyed laughter.

“Why are you laughing? What did you do to me?” he says as he runs to the mirror.

“You look like a troll doll,” I said, continuing to laugh. It’s true. He did look like a troll doll, but a middle-aged troll doll with a receding hairline.

“Man, I never knew your forehead was that big,” my daughter said. “Have you considered renting it out as billboard space?”

“You’re funny,” he said, trying to fix his hair in the mirror. “Now get away from me with that hair gel – hair gel is for girls,” he snapped.

“And for people with hair,” my daughter said, laughing.

For some reason, by husband is very sensitive about his hair. Anyway . . .

No, my daughter is at that stage when she and I have more in common. We like some of the same things, like shirts that don’t have food stains on them, hats without earflaps, things that smell pretty, and hair gel.

When my daughter was younger, she and my husband used to do a lot of stuff together, but then, my daughter grew up and developed an aversion to things that made her dirty, and she feels unclean unless she changes her clothes no less than four times a day. She also isn’t too keen on anything that might mess up her nail polish. She had reached that stage in her life where she and her father had less in common than they used to, and soon, she will be at that stage where she will deny knowing him at any public event. We are not quite at that stage yet. She still lets him go with her to ball games and such, but she insists that he not say anything.

“Okay dad. Don’t do anything to embarrass me.”

“Like what?”

“What do you mean, like what? Like don’t pretend to be all cool around my friends.”

“How do I pretend to be cool?”

“Well, that’s what mom does and it drives me crazy.”

“What does she do?”

“She started break dancing when she was chaperoning at activity night at school. I was mortified.”

Okay, so I like to dance. I don’t see why she gets all bent out of shape about it.

So my daughter and my husband are struggling – her for independence, and him to be a part of her life. I explain to him that it’s a normal part of adolescent behavior, but I can tell that it bothers him. So, he was very happy this past weekend when he and she found a common bond – something that they both can do together. It’s a computer game called, “Age of Empires.”

I have no desire to do video games, so I think they were both happy that it was something that didn’t involve me. No, instead, the two of them stayed holed up in my husband’s office, coming downstairs long enough to grab survival gear like food and water, and to occasionally come into the living room to talk about the computer game.

“Dad has the two computers hooked into the network, and I went into Britain and formed an army to fight the Saxons.”

For a minute, I was happy that she was learning something, like who the Saxons were, so I began to try to have a conversation with her about it.

“Oh, the Saxons. How interesting. Did you know that the Saxons were made up from people from three parts of Germany?”

“Yeah. Sure. Whatever. Do we have any Crunch and Munch?”

I felt left out and tried to stimulate some thread of connection. “Did you know the Saxons invented Crunch and Munch?”

“Really. Cool.” She then ran out of the room. “Hey Dad, did you know that the Saxons invented Crunch and Munch?”

“Did your mother tell you that?”

“Yes.”

“She’s lying.”

I was then shut out of any conversation that involved their newfound passion. For two days, my husband and daughter plundered each other’s villages, invaded each other’s territories, and engaged in fierce battles over strategic tracts of land as I watched the History Channel to find out that even though the Saxons didn’t invent Crunch and Munch, they did invent the self-winding wristwatch and published the first daily newspaper in 1650, but my husband and daughter could have cared less. They were too busy pillaging.

I felt left out and sat in the living room seething each time I heard the trumpet sound of an invading army. I had to resort to desperate measures. Think, Sharie. Think. A stroke of genius came to me – go to things that are tried, true, and tested.

I went up stairs into the bathroom and began my ruse. “Heeeelllllp.”

“What’s wrong?” my husband yelled.

“I can’t figure out this hair gel. My hair looks awful and I can’t fix it.”

I heard my daughter grumble. “Hold on mom – I’ll be right there – I just have to fend off this Celtic attack.”

I smiled, knowing my trick worked.

“Did you know that the Celts invented hair gel?”

“Really?” my daughter asked as she styled my hair.

“Really. It was first used in 1202 as a cooking oil, but the Celts began to market it as a hair gel after an explosion at a diner, and it got in some Celt’s hair. It became a common traded commodity between them and the Saxons, as a matter of fact. I think Vidal Sassoon was the first Saxon to label it as such and sell it internationally.”

Okay, I lied, but I was back in the game. When all else fails, resort to weapons you know will work – and in this case, it was hair gel. And for just a little bit of time, she and I were our old selves – doing hair together and poking fun at her father. Precious moments. Time well spent.

“There. You look great,” she said.

“Thanks honey.”

“No problem,” giving me a hug and turning to go back into the office.

“I love you.”

“I love you too, mom.”

And then, she was gone, but for a brief moment, we connected by doing something meaningful and my heart was full.

“Hey dad,” I heard her say laughing, “I just did mom’s hair, and guess who now looks like a troll doll.”

“You’re heartless,” he said.

“Yeah, I know.”

I hate that game.

© 2006 Sharie Derrickson. Previously printed in the Thousand Islands Sun.

Friday, October 06, 2006

The Kitchen Campaign: An All-Clear and Present Danger

By Sharie Derrickson

Both my husband and daughter have begun their latest campaign, which is to remodel our kitchen. They have made up cute little campaign buttons that say, “Vote Yes to Remodeling,” and they march around my kitchen wearing giant sandwich boards covered in kitchen remodeling propaganda, and scream, “WHAT DO WE WANT? A NEW KITCHEN! WHEN DO WE WANT IT? WE WANT IT NOW!” into one of those bullhorns.

Apparently, the thing that has come out of their latest strategy session is to take me shopping, and somehow, make it so we end up in the appliance department, and then, they begin working on me with their talking points.

“Mom, you would look great standing next to this large capacity stainless steel refrigerator. Come over here so we can get a look,” my daughter says. “Oh, wait, I brought my camera – let’s get a photo of you with it.”

And for a minute, I am almost suckered. “You really think I would look good next to it?” I say, as I put on fresh lipstick.

“Sure you would,” my husband says. “Stainless steel is your color.”

“Well, okay then. But just one quick photo, and don’t take it so my butt looks too big.”

“Oh, I won’t,” my daughter says as she moves me next to the behemoth of a fridge. “You will look tiny next to this fridge.”

I then stand still, place my hand on the side of the fridge, and give my best smile. Then, reality sets in and I think to myself, “Why am I getting my picture taken next to a refrigerator? It’s a little weird – even for me.”

“Can I ask why I am getting my photo taken with an appliance?” I ask them.

“It’s a surprise,” they tell me.

“Oh, okay,” I say, not wanting to spoil whatever surprise they have for me that might include a picture of me standing next to a refrigerator.

It is all part of their systematic indoctrination plan. It is how they operate. They did it to me when they wanted a dog. They did it to me when they wanted new towels. They did it to me when they wanted a Christmas tree. They devise this elaborate plan to somehow draw me in, confuse me – then they bombard me with subliminal messages that I actually need new towels, a Christmas tree, a dog, or a fridge. They are very tricky, these two.

Unfortunately, I usually realize that I have been duped when it’s too late – we now have a dog, new towels, and I already have the tree picked out. Now, they want a new kitchen because, apparently, the kitchen we have is not “kitcheny” enough, and according to my daughter, it’s dangerous.

For me, it has all I need – a fridge, a microwave, and a can opener. I am a minimalist. I can walk to my fridge and pull out chicken tenders from the freezer, pop them in the microwave, and while the main entree is heating up, I can open a can of corn. Once the chicken is adequately nuked, I can zap the corn, and bingo, dinner is served.

But, both my husband and daughter actually like to cook. My husband likes to pound cutlets with this little hammer and roll stuff up. He likes to mince, julienne, garnish, and sauté. I don’t even know what that stuff is. He has tried explaining it to me, but just like when he talks about his work, my eyes glaze over and then, I’m lost. Apparently, my husband works with computers, which requires enough equipment in his office to power NASA. I’m not sure, but I think he might be a secret agent or something like that. Oooops. Not really, Mr. Fitzgerald. I was only joking. He’s just a computer nerd that likes to cook. Honest. He doesn’t even own a pair of dark sunglasses. Anyway . . .

My daughter, the true baker of the family, says that our kitchen is not conducive to culinary science. Okay, I want to know who taught her that – culinary science indeed. It’s called cooking. That’s it. Just cooking. There is nothing scientific about popping nuggets in the microwave – oh, wait, that is pretty scientific if you think about it. I am not sure how a microwave works and it seems weird to me that when you open a microwave, it isn’t hot, but somehow, your food is. Some army widget-guy tried to explain it to me once when we were using a giant microwave satellite dish to transmit images from Africa, but all I got out of the conversation is that I shouldn’t stand in front of it or I will cook my reproductive organs. That is why I never stay in my kitchen when I am using the microwave, and that is why I always forget I have stuff in the microwave and only remember it a week later when my kitchen starts to smell, and OSHA has to be brought in.

Back to my story. So, my daughter has a drawn a flowchart of perfect kitchen and then has written an essay on why our kitchen is an accident waiting to happen since it is an ergonomic nightmare and a lay-in-wait hazard of major proportions. I mean really, where does she get this stuff? It’s like we are storing nuclear waste or something.

Apparently, according to Kitchen Ergonomic Experts, the oven is supposed to be near the center of the kitchen. Ours is not. It is mounted on the wall on the far end of the room, just opposite the bathroom, so it you have to take something out of the oven, you can’t do it if someone is in the bathroom because they might walk out of the bathroom, knock you down, and sent your scalding pie all over the place. So, at my house, if someone is in the bathroom, you have to say loudly, “Don’t come out of the bathroom until the all clear is given,” and then the person in the bathroom is totally embarrassed that someone is talking to them while they are in the bathroom, and is very confused on what “the all clear” means.

Also, both my husband and daughter say that a dishwasher should work, and should not be there just for show. Our dishwasher broke about two years ago and we have yet to replace it.

They have picked out a new fancy-smancy one that is supposed to make pre-washing of dishes before they go into the dishwasher a thing of the past. I dislike new-fangled stuff, even if it can clean the bowls I left in the microwave.

Now, they both say that the refrigerator is too small, which is why I am getting my picture taken with white ones, black ones, stainless steel ones, ones that have doors on top, ones that have double doors, and ones with ice cube dispensers outside the door. I like the one with the ice cube dispenser because then, I don’t have to ever open the fridge to see how dirty it is inside.

I am not sure how I will vote on election day regarding the remodel of the kitchen. There are just too many factors to consider – cost, need, color, size, ergonomic-ness. Should we bite the bullet and do a complete remodel, upgrade what’s in there now, or just replace things as they come up? I do agree about moving the stove, though, and I am sure my guests will concur.

And I do like the stainless steel fridge – it makes me look skinny – and that’s what really counts.


© 2006 Sharie Derrickson. Previously printed in the Thousand Islands Sun.