Fun With Play-Dough

The E.T. Factor

May 14, 2008 · 1 Comment

Every once in a while we make parenting decisions that are, let’s say, not brilliant. I recently noticed the TV Guide’s announcement of E.T, and, remembering it fondly from my own childhood, called my daughter. “E.T. is on television,” I enthusiastically told her, “You should watch this with us. It’s fun.”

Unfortunately, I forgot that I was twelve when I first saw it, and my daughter Isabella is not. She didn’t make it past the first ten minutes; seeing Elliot sneak around in the dark, hearing funny noises, she quickly hid underneath a pillow, all the while begging us to shut it off. It was too scary.

“But there will be Reese’s Pieces!” My husband tried, as if that would make a difference.

Now, in spite of the fact that Isa never even saw E.T.’s face, she comes out of her room every other night to announce that ‘she can’t sleep; she’s scared of E.T., the monster’.

“He’s not a monster,” I tell her, “He’s just an alien. And besides, he’s not real. It’s a puppet. Why would you be afraid of a puppet?”

She looks at me as if I’m the biggest idiot that’s ever walked this planet, and maybe a few other planets in the process. Have I forgotten what it’s like to be six? The concept of what is real is stretchy, fluid; whether something is real is up to her to decide, not me. How dare I suggest that E.T. is not a monster, what do I know?

We bring out the monster spray, which is a nasty old bottle of Fahrenheit, saved by my husband for occasions like this. After all, when little brown Hollywood puppets are around, the power of suggestion is at its strongest. It helps, her room smells up to high heaven and she goes to sleep; how she’s able to breathe with those fumes hanging around, I’ll never know.

To put things in perspective, this is a girl who loves Corpse Bride, who’s seen Modigliani take his last breath many times, and who reenacts whole CSI episodes on the playground, body count included. I admit; we don’t censure her television habits much, except maybe for the Disney channel- I can’t stand Mickey Mouse’s Club House. So why E.T.?

Why does she know most Tim Burton movies by heart, yet seems unable to shake the idea of an alien, ugly, faux Muppet, who she’s never even seen?

But there’s the problem, isn’t it? Not knowing is much worse than knowing; every horror flick is at its scariest when the blonde bombshell goes up the stairs and you don’t know what is coming. So maybe this particular blonde just needs to sit down and watch a few minutes, somewhere in the middle, when E.T. is happy and cute, to get over this unreasonable fear. Perhaps we’ll try tomorrow; I think Starz is showing it again. As long as she doesn’t develop a fresh fear of flying bicycles, I think she’ll be okay. 

Categories: Fun with Parenting
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Finally, a Real Beauty Pageant

May 14, 2008 · 1 Comment

Miss Mount Carmel, Verna Burks (of course I was going to win this. What; like it’s hard?), left, and runner up Miss Rosie (I’ll smile for the camera, but I’ll yank that crown off while she’s sleeping), on the right.

 

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Fun with Politics (135)

May 14, 2008 · 1 Comment

What’s worse then having a cheating husband? Having a famous cheating husband. And if that famous cheating husband is a politician, you have to stand next to him while he apologizes, and watch while everything you’ve vicariously lived for crumbles. Then, when the dust settles (and boy, does that take a long time) you try to get a divorce, and you still can’t do it without making headlines. Poor Dina McGreevey; she thought she had it all.  I guess Governor’s mansions aren’t as comfy as they used to be.

Brian Crowder deserves to have ‘dumbass of the week’ branded on his hideously large forehead. Why doesn’t he take a blowtorch to that awful hairdo, if he likes fires all that much? When police chased him, he got out of his car and ran. All police had to do was trace the owner of the car (surprise, they can do that!) and go to Crowder’s house. When he tried to run again, a police dog caught him, and he had to be transported to the hospital for minor injuries. I hope the dog bit him somewhere south of his navel. Honestly, setting fires? While sporting a mullet?

A family of four adults and one child, flying from Vancouver to Winnipeg, “lost” their four-year-old son, because all adults thought he was “with someone else”. They actually made it all the way onto the plane and into the air before finding out he wasn’t with them, and even then they only realized it because they were told…

What?!

Categories: Fun with Politics
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