I asked my son Alex what he was doing on the playground with his friends, and he told me -- without any shame-- that they were playing a game they invented called "Dalek tag," which had a number of rules, all revolving around references to Dr. Who . . . my boys love the new version of the show and so do a few of their friends, but the rest of the kids had never seen it, yet they were still willing to join in . . . this is a big change from when I was a kid-- back then, if you made up a game based on campy sci-fi television, then you didn't advertise this to the entire playground (unless you wanted a serious beat-down).
EXTERMINATE - that's Madeline's predictions of what's being yelled during the game.
ReplyDeletethat was one of the rules! tell her she's very smart and also very nerdy.
ReplyDeleteGrowing up on the mean streets of North Brunswick, New Jersey made Dave a hard man. He bore the scars of serious playground beat-downs when he went bummed a ride in an IROC-Z and rode south to liberal arts college. He stood out a bit down there for his love of The Cult, Judas Priest, and the Eagles. He hated the very mention of mayonnaise on an Italian sub, and the southern genteel boys knew never to bring it up. Otherwise, Dave might lose it on them by drinking a bunch of Milwaukee's Best, turning red, and sleeping on the cold, cold porcelain of the third floor men's room commode. The cold reminded him of the cold world in New Jersey he'd left far behind for the greener pastures of Virginia, a pastoral new setting where he could invent a dweeby game called The Disc Game where participants guessed which song among six compact discs on the hi-fi would come up next, and correct guesses got your name proudly and dorkily displayed in permanent marker on the dorm room wall, a stark contrast to the years of hiding his geekiness on the rough hopscotch asphalt of Jersey. Similarly, there were streaking episodes in college -- and not just for the well hung members of the glorified Physics Club Dave ran with in Williamsburg; rather, he and his cohorts appeared to be a parade of Irish late bloomers in very cold weather 30 seconds after intercourse in a pool who'd just been presented with a photo of gay porn and gore. It was liberating, and Dave tasted sweet, sweet freedom. It tasted like Nino's Pizza, but without the serious beat-downs if you ordered veggies on it. Dave spent four years frolicking among the meadows of nerdy Colonial Virginia, slowly letting the memories of his closeted dorky childhood fade, biding his time until he could return to the Garden State a full-fledged adult no longer vulnerable to playground beat-downs, if only because he rarely frequented playgrounds (after the citation). Later, however, after kids, he began making his way back to some of those same old childhood haunts, those same mean streets jungle gyms where the beat-downs had occurred, and as he watched his own son display the same penchant for nerdiness that he'd experienced -- but be able to shout it from the swingset-tops without fear of serious beat-down, Dave was happy. The world was indeed a better place, as Jackie DeShannon predicted in Top 40 song so long ago. But deep down, Dave also felt a twinge of bitterness. Why should his progeny escape the beat-downs he lived in fear of, and would it make them weaker adults? Like Asia sang, only time will tell.
ReplyDeletecomment of the year
ReplyDeletealso calling out the humblebrag that your kids watch love BBC programming BUT you refer to them as "nerds"
ReplyDeletePunks jump up to get beat down, as Brand Nubian put it.
ReplyDeleteAnd just because your kids aren't being beaten doesn't mean they won't wind up 40-year-old virgins sharing a bunk bed in Greasetruck Studios.
my biography in a comment. how apropos . . . except for the periods.
ReplyDeleteand maybe it's a good thing we didn't have the internet in college. we were nerdy enough without it.
i would also like to humblebrag that they really enjoyed hiyao miyazaki's "spirited away."
ReplyDelete