Yesterday morning began, like most mornings, with me laying in bed, hearing Regina scream "ELIJAH? WHAT ARE YOU DOING????" from the other room. This phrase gets uttered so often in our house that I rolled over and went back to sleep, but I was still surprised when, half an hour later, I discovered what Elijah had actually done.
1. Begged Regina to make him spaghetti for breakfast.
2. Refused to eat the spaghetti at the table.
3. Dumped the bowl all over a new throw blanket on the couch.
4. When put in his room for punishment, peed on the floor of his closet.
And thus the never-ending hell spiral of banality that passes for my life continued. School's out for summer, and all the cliches apply. Our sanity hangs in the balance.
We've enrolled Elijah, for the week, in an educational camp at the L.A. County Natural History Museum. This week's theme is "Into The Forest." I chose this theme for him because he likes forests, and also because it was the only class that had an opening all summer. All preschoolers must be accompanied by a parent, so I guess I'm also learning about forests this week.
The initial half-hour went well. I quickly determined that I was the only adult male in the group. We met his teacher, a nice young woman with a degree in cultural anthropology. She took us to our large, well-appointed classroom. The kids introduced themselves and said their favorite color. Elijah gave a normal answer. I'm glad he wasn't the kid who said his favorite color is "yellow Flash and red Flash. The yellow Flash is evil and the red Flash is good," to which the teacher said, "oooooo-kaaaaaaay....What about you? What's your favorite color?"
Then she read the kids a story about a deer, and told them that today, they'd be studying temperate forests.
"But first," she said. "You're going to do a craft. Parents, this is the toughest craft you'll do all week. So you don't have to worry."
Existential despair, never far from my surface to begin with, bubbled up in a spasm of fear. At that moment, I knew for certain that life is ruled by cruel and angry gods. In those tender, disco-fueled days when I was a schoolboy, my craft projects, if I even finished them, usually looked like something crapped out by a dying animal. My skills haven't improved any.
The craft turned out to be a backpack, made of paper bags, that Elijah would then use all week as his class went on "expeditions" into the museum. I got the materials, and saw that the teacher had drawn dotted lines into the bags to show us where to cut and fold. She might as well have asked me to translate the plays of Vaclav Havel from the original Czech into Farsi. Elijah was going to have one fucked-up backpack.





