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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

HIP HOP IS RUINING OUR KIDS


     I have heard a lot of talk lately that Hip Hop will lead to the ruin of our kids.  Wait a minute.  Before Hip Hop started driving this generation to ruin, Grunge was driving the generation before this one to ruin.  Before that, it was that 80’s music that had no name, aim, purpose or use whatsoever.  Then it was Punk Rock and New Wave music.  Before that, Disco was thought to be the ultimate evil of a generation.  And before that was what many believe to be the beginning of the ruination of a generation, Rock and Roll.  It goes back even further than that, though.  
 
     Have you ever seen those old clips of Frank Sinatra singing or Bing Crosby crooning and teenage girls screaming and falling down like dominoes?   I am sure that the parents of that generation would have shipped those girls off to a convent in no time had they seen the effect that Frank and Bing had on their daughters.  Recently I realized the truth.  Sometimes the truth stings a little.  Sometimes the truth leaves a mark.

     Music is not ruining my kids.  I am ruining my kids all by myself.  I didn’t ruin my kids on purpose, though.  I meant well enough.  My parents were very evil you see.  I had it very tough when I was growing up.  When I was growing up I had to do chores.  I hated chores and I told my parents that, but they made me do them anyway.  I would have much rather been vandalizing the neighborhood with all of the other kids.  But no, I had to do chores before I could get involved in any good wholesome vandalizing.  When I was a kid I had to eat whatever my evil mother cooked.  And get this, I had to eat it all, whether I liked it or not.  If I refused to eat it all, I had to go to my room, the one I shared with a little brother and without a TV or a phone or surround sound stereo.  And when I was older I had to help make the food!  Are you kidding me?  These tyrannical parents of mine even made me take out the trash after dinner.  I will never forgive them for making me feed the dog every day.  I begged them relentlessly for that dog and only got it because I promised and swore I would feed it every day.  The nerve they had for actually making me do what I had said I would do.  They did not confront my teachers when I brought home bad grades; they confronted me.  Since I seemed to bring home mostly bad grades, there were a lot of confrontations and they never let me win one.  Not a single one.  I could only stay home when I was really sick.  I had to resort to creating fake vomit with milk and pretzels (I should have applied for a patent for that formula - pure genius) to get a day off of school.  My parents were brutal.  I did not see my friends’ parents treating them like my parents treated me.  When I had self-esteem issues because I was fat, they did not even consider sending me to therapy.  They told me to stop eating so much and get off of my ass and do something. 

     Discipline was not dealt out with ten minutes in Time Out.  It was dealt out with ten seconds of Mixed Martial Arts. When I was old enough to drive, I was forced to drive the old family station wagon.  They got the new car.  I have no idea who my parents thought they were.  They told me that going to college was a privilege, not a right, and that I would have to find a way to pay for that myself.  I was raised in a dictatorship; somehow I survived it all, though.  I swore that I would never subject my own kids to such child abuse and I never have, until recently, when I saw the damage that I had inflicted on my poor helpless children.

     I asked my oldest daughter to vacuum the living room.  “Sissy, vacuum the living room, please,” I said.

     She refused, so I went old school and put on a ten second display of old school Mixed Martial Arts.  I even showed her a few of the moves from the olden days on the old vacuum cleaner.

     “Stop it!  One of my friends might see you doing that.” she said, “I’ll do it!”

     I set the vacuum in the middle of the floor and said, “You will need this.”

     “That is a vacuum right?” she said.

     “Yes it is.  You are off to a great start.  Now turn it on.”  I watched in awe as she inspected the strange machine looking for a button to push.

     “How do you turn it on?”

     “You press that button right there with your foot,” I said. 

     Sissy pressed the button and nothing happened. 

     “It won’t turn on,” she said.

     “Why do you think it won’t turn on?” I asked.

     “Do I have to plug it in to the wall?

     “Yes you do.”

     She was beaming with pride when she plugged it in and it turned on.  She ran over to grab it as if it would fly away or something.  

     “Now what?” she said.

     “Now you move it around the floor and it sucks up all of the food that you and your sister have dropped all over the place.”

     “This is cool!  How long do I have to do this for?”

     “Until you have done the whole floor.”

     I turned around to walk out of the room and the vacuum stopped.
     “What’s the matter?” I asked.

     “I’m done.”

     “You’re done?”

     “Yep.”

     “Did you do under the furniture?”

     She started laughing and said, “You are so silly! The vacuum won’t fit under the furniture.”
Sissy stopped laughing when I said, “Well then, it looks like you will have to move it.”

     “Is this one of your tricks? There can’t be any food under the furniture. How would it get there?”

     “You will be amazed,” I said as I flipped the ottoman on its side.  She started making sounds like one of the cats throwing up a hairball.  Doritos, cat hair, Lucky Charms, a barrette, two non-matching socks, lip gloss, a chewed piece of gum, something I could not recognize, an empty toilet paper roll, another thing I could not recognize, a quarter, and, ironically enough, a petrified hairball.
“Have at it Sissy.” I said and walked into the bedroom.  

     My wife was in the bedroom and she said to me, “What is that noise?”
“That is Sissy vacuuming the living room,” I said.  My wife started to cry. 

      I asked her, “What’s wrong?” 

     “She is growing up so fast!”  Sissy was seventeen at the time.

     At some point I started treating my children as if we were friends.  Looking back, what I am guilty of was child abuse.  Not my parents.  Me.   My kids have friends.  They have a lot of them.  They change friends a lot too.  They change them more often then I change my underwear. I tried to become one of those friends.  Then I realized that by being their friend I left them without a parent.  When I realized that, I stopped being their friend.  And you know what?  They never noticed.  It seems while I was being their friend they did not see it that way.  They still saw me as their Dad, no matter how hard I tried to be their friend.  I thought that by being their friend it would make it simpler for me to be a Dad.  The truth is it made parenting much more difficult.  I spent all of my time trying to make them happy, trying to give them everything that they wanted, and trying to keep up with all of the other Dads that were blindly doing the same thing.  

     I am no longer their friend.  I am a Dad and while I have found that it is very simple to be a Dad, there is nothing easy about it.  I don’t try to make them happy; they are never happy anyway.  My job is to give them what they need, not what they want.  My job is to make sure that they have food to eat, whether they like it or not.  My job is to tell them when they are wrong and to tell them when they are right.  I do not build their self-esteem; they build their self-esteem.  That is why it is called self-esteem and not Dad esteem.  My job is not to live with them in peace and harmony.  My job is to teach them how to live in peace and harmony, period.  My job is to be a Dad.  If I am their friend then I am not their Dad.  They only have one Dad.  If you were to ask my kids, they would tell you that one Dad is all they need.  I had no idea how to be a Dad until my kids pointed me in the right direction.  For that I am eternally grateful.  

     That is all.


 After Word-

     Sissy did very well after she learned how to vacuum that day.  She went on to get her Master’s Degree in Social Work.  Sissy left our house one morning at 10 am sharp, bound to start her new career in Miami, 1,113 miles away from our living room.  She did not take the vacuum with her.  I prayed with all my heart that morning that I was able to give her what she will need.  Because I know that prayer works.  I also know, with all my heart, that she will indeed have what she needs.  I am ridiculously proud of what she has been able to do with her life so far, despite my many shortcomings as a Dad.  Dads don’t cry.  Their eyes leak though.  But only when no one can see. 

     And no one can see me now.

3 comments:


  1. My daughters listened to everything from Eminem to lil wayne to Foxy Brown and all four of us had a moment of singing "get low" -til the sweat run down my balls till all these bytches crawl" - in our party in the car days. Today my girls are more responsible than I am... so anytime I even see a title that blames an entity outside of self - I immediately get turned off . BS I say, But because my friend Michael asked me to read it, I'll read it.

    Back: Wonderful post!

    I'm a woman so for me it is not either, or but AND... I was my daughters' friend because without me being a friend they would find a "confidant" in the street. I chose to be their first source confide in...but I was also their guide - as in ancient african/asian tradition I taught my daughters "cause and effect" this way they could become great decision makers - Today they do just fine... but we all have to find our path -- parenting does not come with a handbook.

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  2. You were meant to write this stuff - another great piece!

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