Sunday, October 10, 2010

Patrick Sure Is a Wise-A**, for a 2-year-old

Turns out, I spent part of my overnighter with the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse with my eyes wide shut, but at least I didn’t let ’em pull the wool over my eyes all of the time. In one instance, I found that a 2-year-old can be brutally honest. And in another, I discovered that, the more things change, the more they stay the same.
Some people have expressed wonderment that I’d tackle an overnighter with the Gang of Four, ranging in age from 2 to 9. I pooh-pooh such incredulosity. Pooh-POOH, I say. So THERE, the four poohs in those two sentences match the number of poopy diapers I changed for Patrick in a 24-hour period.
All a guy has to do to survive such an adventure, from noon on a Saturday to noon the following day, is stay one step ahead of the lads (and allow TV and Wii to help with the sitting chores).
First step out was a trip to the Halloween store. DAMN, how times have changed since granddad was a lad. Back then, we either made our own costumes or chose from a few options in a tiny Halloween section of an aisle at Ben Franklin (the STORE, folks; I don’t date all the way back to the father of the “penny-saved-is-a-penny-earned“ slogan).
This was a whole dadgum store with aisle after aisle after aisle of costumes and masks and scary paraphernalia. Ghosts and ghouls and goblins, oh MY. The life-sized, automated, machete-wielding Jason Voorhees scared Jack a bit, although he refused to admit it.
If he wasn’t scared, I asked, why did he make a huge detour around the manikin in motion, all the while trying to figure out whether it was real, as the ch-ch-ch-ch-ch emanated from a speaker. His lips said he wasn’t skeert; his eyes told a different story. (Can't say as I blame him; Jason used to scare the bejabbers out of my kids, and they were older than Jack when Jason started slicing the air with the oversized knife, not to mention throats, and heads, and sundry body parts.)



Anyhow, we burned about 45 minutes at the store, and could have spent more because there were about a bazillion scary and/or fun things. But we had to head to the big-box drugstore where we stop to load up on movie candy and reasonable prices instead of being held up at the theater.
Actually, having Patrick along helped my stealth maneuver of sneaking the candy past the gendarmes and the sign that proclaims, “NO food or drink from outside.” All I had to do was stuff part of the loot in the bottom of the diaper bag, and the rest in my cargo shorts. Sorry, theater folks, I don’t like your 70 percent markup. Bad example for the boys? Well, at the prices for 3-D movies these days, nobody should begrudge my saving a few bucks.

We saw the owls movie, which I thought had some of the best 3-D I’ve seen so far, although I didn’t give a hoot about the length. It was just too dadburned long. (Time was, I thought the longer, the better, to get my money’s worth, but this challenged sitting times for Patrick and 4-year-old Luke, who kept asking when it was going to be over.)



However, just to help other grandparents, I’ll disclose my secret to taking the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse to the flick and surviving: You’ve gotta get the kids organized before the lights dim. That means making sure each has the candy he picked out at the drugstore, as well as dividing the two supersized icies I’d bought, at the theater’s exorbitant prices, into the four cups I’d brought, as well as divvying up the huge bag of popcorn I’d bought a the theater’s highway-robbery prices, and making sure Luke is propped in front of the diaper bag so the seat doesn’t swallow him, which is his one fear of theaters.

Of course, it helped that Patrick, who was a little whiny at first, was that way because he was tired, and he soon nodded off to sleep. In my lap, which meant I had to be careful when I reached for the HUGE drink I’d gotten for myself, albeit supposedly cut-rate from the theater thievery, because it was in the trifecta of the popcorn and a supposedly “free” candy.

After the flick, I considered a stop at the ice-cream store, but they all seemed sugared up enough, so we headed home for their various choices of dinners: Vincent and Jack opted for cereal, I forget what Luke ate, and Patrick ate a couple of fistfuls of miniature corn dogs.

The evening was fairly uneventful, breaking up a few scuffles, watching a kids movie and playing Wii.

Here’s a HUGE secret, or so I thot: I let ’em stay up late so they’d sleep late, and so could I. After all, it worked onetime at our house, when Vincent stayed up til midnight and slept like a teenager the next day.

Despite my loose bedtime rules, Jack tried to trick me. As I nestled in to sleep twixt Patrick, who had gone to sleep at 9, and Luke, Jack came in and said: “Papa Mike, what channel was that Nickelodeon we were watching — for no particular reason?”

For no particular reason? Does the lad think I was born yesterday? He serves up an alibi with the premeditated crime? Well, I didn't just fall off the turnip truck, son. Just so happens I used to sneak behind my step-grandfather’s back when I was a lad, too. I figured he was asleep when I got back up and turned the TV back on to watch “Gunsmoke.” Next day, he said, “How’d you like ‘Gunsmoke?’”

That legendary series started out simple enough, in black and white (after all, those were the simple days, when everything was black and white):




Of course, eventually, it came out in color:



I saw most of the series’ 635 episodes (BTW, that‘s the record for the longest-running, prime-time drama leaving even the more recent “Law and Order“ in its smoke, but I might have missed this one, if it really WAS missing and that isn’t just a myth:



My suspicions were confirmed a bit later when I checked on him and found him sprawled across his bed, dead asleep, with Nickelodeon on the TV.

I should mention that Patrick foiled my bedtime secret: I guess he wasn’t very tired, between the nap at the movie and having gone to sleep at 9. The little pants loader was up bright and early: at 7 a.m., and I was dead tired.

To make matters worse, he bruised my ego a bit as he watched me change out of my SpongeBob SquarePants jammies Sunday morning.

He looked at me reflectively and said, “PaMike, you’ve got a big bewwy.”
Well, I NEVER. Here, just a few months ago, I wondered what it would be like when he started talking. Now I know: He’s a little wise-a**. Oh, wait, that’s a bit harsh to say about a grandson. Perhaps I should say only that he's a wiseacre.

Then I looked in the mirror and realized why he said that. I mean, it’s not big as in HUGE, but it’s bigger than when I was a senior in high school and drank a malt a day trying to gain weight. He could have thought I had a fat bewwy without SAYING it. After all, I've been on South Beach for two months! And I mean the diet, not the beach.

Maybe he IS a wise-a**. Time will tell, I suppose.

All in all, though, a great, and memorable, 24 hours. Chances are, someday, Jack will have a grandson who tries to foil him into letting him watch TV all hours of the night. Or whatever they’ll be watching then.

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