Showing posts with label my parents. Show all posts
Showing posts with label my parents. Show all posts

Monday, March 17, 2014

I Know the Number

CHIP OF WISDOM:

Proverbs 22, Verse 15

"A youngster's heart is filled with rebellion,
but punishment will drive it out of him."

---

CHIPPED WISDOM:

I have to imagine that, just considering probability and my smart mouth, I was at least occasionally punished as a child.  If I was, though, I don't remember it, and it's not because I was concussed by my father's closed fist.  No, that never happened in our house.  There was awful blue carpeting on the stairs and the word "fuck" was said with greater frequency than the word "salt" or "and", but there was never any hitting.

At least, not of me.

He gave my sister a few good smacks, though, though he claims, conveniently, to not remember.  We tell these stories, laughing, in the living room.  He laughs too, which, (I guess?) is good.  There was the time where we were all placing our ice cream orders and he asked her what she wanted and she answered, "Vanilla".  He said, "What?"  And she made the mistake of uttering, "I said 'vanilla', what are you, deaf?"  That earned her a thick Israeli palm straight across her face.  Another time, he threw a full cup of water ice in her face, though I don't know what crass remark of hers prompted that frozen projectile.  Maybe I would have gotten smacked around if I had been more into cold desserts.

There was a decent amount of verbal "abuse", if you want to call it that.  Of course, I'm sure any child born to an Israeli father could claim at least the same, if not far worse.  He screamed at us as if we were privates in his regiment.  Eating our Cinnamon Toast Crunch too loudly the breakfast table on Sunday received an emphatic, "JEEE-SUS CHRIST!  ENOUGH WITH DA FACKING CRUNCHING, ALREADY!"  I never fully considered the irony until this moment of a man whose native tongue is Hebrew using "Jesus Christ" as an exclamation.  Classic.  Breaking something on the kitchen floor-- a plate or what have you-- resulted in him asking, rhetorically, I learned, "WHAT ARE YOU, FACKING KEE-DEEING ME?"  Making fun of him and his accent, we quickly learned, was enough to make the man almost completely implode.  One day he took us on an ill-fated trip to visit the Pepperidge Farm factory.  He got hopelessly lost.  He stopped by the side of the road at some movie set-looking old gas station where the pumps still said "Esso" and asked some toothless hump in a pair of overalls, "Excuse me-- how do I get to, uh-- Pappen-dridge Farm?"  The farmer cocked his head and stared at him.  My sister and I almost passed out in the back seat of the Buick from holding in our piss as we exploded in a torrent of laughter.  He turned to us with a virulence I had never seen before and screamed, "SHAT DEE FUCK UP, YOU TWO ASSHOLES!  I AM TRYING TO DO SOMETHING FACKIN' NICE FOR YOU FUCKS!"

This, of course, made us laugh harder until my neck almost burst.  He drove us home in silence and said nothing to either of us for two days.    

In spite of all this, and more, I don't ever recall being sent to my room-- I always ended up running there myself before anyone could send me there.  He yelled and screamed at me, but I don't ever remember an explicit "punishment" per say.  Once he poked me in the stomach with his index finger, I don't remember what the hell that was about.  And I remember crying and, you know, running to my room.  Fortunately, I liked my room.  I think I even liked crying in it.  I am relieved, of course, that it was just yelling.  His father used to chase him around the house and, once he caught him, he'd beat the shit out of my father with his shoe.  And you know how they made shoes back then.

My mother, of course, was a different story.  Once I did something bad-- who the hell knows what it was now-- and she told me she was disappointed in me, and I considered wearing black for a year.  Maybe it was the time that I took an axe to the basement wall-- that one's still kind of hard to explain, even now, with almost four years' experience in psych.  I told my parents, when they asked why I'd done it, that I was bored.  They came down a lot harder on my sister, who was supposed to be babysitting me but who was watching "The Hard Way" (James Woods, Michael J. Fox-- great flick) in the basement at full volume and I could have been building an atomic bomb on the sofa next to her and she'd never have known.  I don't know what her punishment was, if anything, but at least she didn't get a frozen custard or something slammed into her face.  Was I punished?  No.  Would a normal parent have taken money out of my allowance until I was 27 to pay for the damage I did to the wall?  Yes.  I guess they're not normal.

Remember how I told you earlier that I liked my room?  Well, once I called my mother a "witch" and she chased me around the house, which was quite an athletic feat for a woman like her.  I was stunned that she was up to it, and that scared me.  She almost got ahold of my arm but I broke free and I was terrified about what she was capable of doing to me if she'd caught me-- I'd never seen her like that.  I ran into my room and I slammed the door shut, and shoved my bureau up against it.

"DON'T TOUCH ME!" I screamed, "I KNOW THE NUMBER!!!!"

There was silence on the other side of the door.

"What number?" she asked breathlessly from the hallway.

"THE CHILD ABUSE HOTLINE!  I KNOW THE NUMBER!"

Truthfully, I didn't know the number.  I did, however, know the slogan "In case of child abuse: know the number" courtesy of the commercials that played endlessly during episodes of "Rescue: 911" that any child psychologist worth his salt would have known I shouldn't have been watching.  I also, not that it mattered, didn't have a phone in my bedroom.

I don't know if I'm going to punish my children.  I didn't really know what grounding was, other than ordering an airplane to land, until I was in high school, though I'd heard it said enough on "Diff'rent Strokes".  I don't know that not getting punished spoiled me, I think it just made me weird and fucked up, and I suppose that's punishment enough.  Still, all things being equal, I'm learning to be okay with it.        

Monday, September 2, 2013

To Mock a Killingbird

CHIP OF WISDOM:

Proverbs 1, Verse 26

"Some day you'll be in trouble, and I'll laugh!  Mock me, will you?  I'll mock you!"

---

CHIPPED WISDOM:

Terry Gross did a "Late Night Week" thing on her show all of last week.  She interviewed Letterman and whathisname with the chin already-- Conan and Jimmy Fallon, too.  It started on Monday when she played an older recording of an interview she did with Fred de Cordova, the Executive Producer of "The Tonight Show" with Johnny Carson.  This guy, as far as I can tell, was a legend, from a time where legends knew how to tie a Windsor knot and they all smoked and somehow lived to be 90, their skin was tanned and leathery as a handbag and they could get away with white socks and dress pants.  

de Cordova lorded over "The Tonight Show" and the legend of whether a comic made it or not being determined by receiving a wink from Johnny turns out to be not so much-- it was really getting "the wave over" from de Cordova, as Jay Leno himself spoke of when he got the wave over in 1977, while wearing a suit that looked like it was made from a skinned lizard.  That's how you knew your act killed and it was time to take a seat next to Johnny Carson.  Kings were made, empires fell, who knows how many useless schmucks killed themselves after not getting that de Cordova wave over, but that's show business.

There was a lot of introspective navel-gazing (the technical term for this is: "omphaloskepsis", in case you were wondering-- and, hey-- save some dirty lint for me, okay?  Bloggers gotta eat too, you know.) during these interviews about comedy-- what is it and how do you find it?  Is it under a rock or inside your navel or does it grow in Brooklyn?  

Jimmy Fallon was talking about how most of his humor is "nice", that he's "not too mean".  

I like that.  I respect that.  But I don't particularly understand it.  I don't know, I don't think, how to be funny without being mean.  Dirty.  Cruel.  Harsh.  

My meanness was honed at our family's dining room table.  They say good things happen when families eat dinner together, and maybe that's so, but, when my family ate together, it was show time.  There was no need for a tv or a radio, I was Johnny and the guests all rolled into one.  Impressions, sarcasm, voices, songs, faces-- it was all there.  Passover was the high point of the year for me, because it meant that

a.) I got a MUCH bigger house and,

b.) I got to dress up (Windsor knot and everything) and,

c.) My lines were already WRITTEN DOWN!

(You know, in the haggadah.)

In our house, the 4 Questions were done in Indian, Chinese, English, Scottish, and Irish accents, depending on the year and what films I had seen recently.  Sometimes, they were done in the voice and manner of people our family knew-- friends, and doctors, mostly.  Sometimes, I improvised a little.  Sometimes, I got in trouble a little.  But, for me, it was like being on tv, and I loved it.  

But being funny at the dinner table as I got older got a little bit harder.  It's easy to be precocious and get a laugh or two when you're impersonating your rheumatologist (yes, unfortunately, I had one of those, and he was Indian, and he was hiLARious) as a younger kid, and it's another to still be funny when you're a smarmy little fifteen-year-old that nobody likes, not even you.  But I found that something usually worked, and that was meanness.  

Being offensive, which I was sometimes inadvertently as a younger child and which was severely frowned upon (especially at Seder), was somehow not only okay when I was a burgeoning teenager, but something that was rewarded with a prize all boys, no matter how old, endlessly seek: their mothers' smile.  Whether it was a cutting remark about someone we all knew, or some outrageous comment about something going on in the news or the family, the darker and more sinister it was, the louder the maternal laugh.  And I didn't think too terribly much about trends I might be setting for myself or the family, I just knew what was working and, like any comic with half a brain, I kept at it.  

Look, at dinner, I killed.  Who could ask for anything more?

Of course, I sometimes wonder what I would have been like had I been encouraged to "be nice", or at least "nice-er".  What would my personality have been like?  Who might I have attracted, or turned away?  What would my omphaloskepsis on comedy yield?  I'll never know, and I suspect, unfortunately or not, that the kind of children I am going to rear are going to realize that what gets daddy going, what will win them the wave over, is raucous and unrefined, imitations of an unflattering nature and a heavy dose of envelope-pushing.  

And I guess they'll roll with what works.  And maybe, hopefully, they won't get quite as addicted to the results as I did.