Outdoors
Sponsored by

Playgrounds and Parenting Fails - Hope It's Good for a Laugh

2,318 Views | 11 Replies | Last: 4 days ago by TheAggiesAreWe03
MasonB
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
The last essay I shared was bittersweet. Hopefully this one from several years back is just funny.

--------------

I share parenting wins, but we all know the crowd favorites are the parenting missteps. If that's you, you are in for a treat. Today's missteps snowballed on me.

I like to knock out Alex's computer assignments before we go on any adventures and this morning started off pretty well. He only protested a little and we knocked out one lesson. We took a break and when the next lesson started, things went downhill.

Sometimes these balks last 5 minutes. Sometimes it lasts an hour. The record is 15 hours but that included 10 hours of sleep in the middle.

Somewhere around the 45-minute mark this morning, Alex told me "You aren't my dad anymore."

He loves to start a distracting argument to get me talking about something else, so I just replied, "Ok, but you still have to do the lesson."

A few minutes later, he did his lesson pausing between questions to remind me I wasn't his dad. To which I said, "You can pretend I am not your dad all day if you do your lesson."

With the lesson done, it felt like a win. But just put that little story in your pocket for a bit. You will want to refer to it later.

So our adventure today was pretty simple. Go to the park and play. Of course our dog, Murphy, came along, too.

When we got to the park, I noticed it was fairly busy. The parking lot was full. It looked like a moms group had a meet up and there were lots of kids playing in the sunshine. What there was absolutely zero of was other adult males. I cringed a little.

Now I have nothing against mom groups. In fact, I believe them to be quite wonderful in almost all aspects. The exception is when you are the only dad around, you feel like a creeper of some sort.
You may think that is just in my head. I used to try to think that, too. But having been turned down for group outings because they were "moms only" means there must be some validity to it. Still, I mostly try to ignore signs of that and go about my business. And I should quickly add here, I have met many friendly playground moms, too…so I definitely don't want to paint everyone with the same brush.

Anyway, back to the parenting fail…

I park the truck down a ways from the playground, but I can see the walk all the up to the entrance. Murphy needed some water before we left the truck and Alex was anxious to get to playing. I made what at the time felt like a wise parenting move that allowed Alex some independence and showed him I trusted him. I told him he can go on to the playground and we would be up there in a few minutes. It turned out to be misstep #2.

Murphy was thirstier than I expected. It took a few minutes for him to drink up. Alex was already mixed in to a crowd of kids, when Murphy and I come walking up the hill and sit on a bench away from everyone at the far edge of the playground. So far so good.

But then kids start noticing Murphy. One comes over and asks to pet him and I say okay. The kid sits down on the bench right next to me to pet the dog. This is when I realize there is a mom about to freak out.

In that moment, I am literally the guy they warn kids about when they talk about stranger danger. Beware the guy with no kids with a puppy.

This was definitely a misstep, but I tried not to overreact.

The kid asks me, "What's his name?"

"Murphy" I answer looking all around me trying to assess the situation and in doing so probably making myself look even more suspicious.

"That's our dog's name!" the kid beams. The kid holler to a sibling, "his dog is named Murphy, too". Which, if you think about it, is exactly what the stranger danger guy would say, too.

I realize no one there knows I am with Alex and I catch him looking my way and try to wave to him. He is only thinking "playground" and blows me off. Meanwhile, I'm catching the eye of other kids and they see Murphy and soon we have several kids surrounding us at the park bench at the far edge of the playground. Which, if you think about it, is the bench the stranger danger guy would have picked, too.

At this point, moms are starting to take notice. How could they not? I would have been on alert, too. Many are staring straight at me. A couple moms are moving toward their kids on the playground and one brave mom starts walking across the playground my way.

Now I really needed Alex to come over. He was standing between me and the mom marching my way. I was waving at him and hollered at him. He was ignoring me.

The mom reached him, pointed at me and asked, "Is that your dad?"

To which Alex responded by looking my way, looking back up at her and saying, "nope".

And if you have ever wondered why I am awkward at the playground, now you know.
Dirty-8-thirty Ag
How long do you want to ignore this user?
DoitBest
How long do you want to ignore this user?
S
"nope".....

Thank you..
Deats99
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Effing priceless. Carrying our two and three year olds through customs off of a Mexico flight 17 years ago and my precious daughter answers on queue to the U.S. citizen question in perfect Baja accent "Hola!, me llamo Hannah!"
A good plan violently executed now is better than a perfect plan executed next week.
-George S Patton
Gunny456
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Man o man. I just spilled coffee on the floor laughing. Wait till I read this to my bride.
ShouldastayedataTm
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Saw it coming a million miles away and still choked on my coffee and had it come out my nose. Which burns because I like coffee hot. I was a consultant and traveled weekly through my daughters' formative years. Sure we had weekends and with both playing travel softball got to spend time with them, but not like a parent should. Thank you for these stories I have read them all as you post and they all have an effect. This one though given the world we live in has been favorite. Watching y'alls videos and seeing the interaction between you and your son, and reading the stories, it is obvious you are far from the creeper, but dang if you did not get setup this time. LOL
Ogre09
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Great! How did it resolve? I'm assuming you're posting from county lock up.
MasonB
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Funnily enough, the dog helped bail me out.

As she headed my way, Alex saw the commotion and followed her. He saw all the attention Murphy was getting from the kids and announced "That's my dog, Murphy!"

The lady was confused enough it gave me an opening to explain. She remained skeptical, but didn't call the police.

Thanks for all the kind support. I'm trying to muster the courage to pull these various stories into a collection and make a book out of them. If nothing else, maybe my grandkids will like reading stories about their parents.
aggiez03
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
My kid used to tell whale tales to the pediatrician when he was about 3, stuff that never came close to happening.
He was very verbal and a good story teller. He used to tell us stories that he would make up all the time.

One he told the pediatrician, was about how he wandered off, when we weren't watching him, and he ended up going into our neighbor's backyard, there was no fence around it, and he fell in their pool, he was there alone. Both neighbors had fences around their pools and none of it ever happened.


We wondered if she would call CPS.

He is a Jr at A&M now, so needless to say, they grow out of it...

At least I think they do. I don't go to the dr with him anymore...
Duckhook
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
That's a good story. Reminds me of something that happened at A&M.

We had a deaf guy in our dorm. He could read lips well and we really didn't have a problem communicating with him. We went across the street to Loupot's to get jerseys for our intramural football team. The girl working the counter was asking us for the names on the back, and she asked him when he wasn't looking at her. We told her he was deaf and if she got his attention he could answer her. She looks at us funny and asks him "are you really deaf?". To which he of course replied "no". We died laughing.

A lot of people in the dorm had nicknames. Creatively our nickname for him was DG (deaf guy).
AtlAg05
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
With ATL being a hot-spot for trafficking, when my kids were younger I would dread going through TSA. They are shy to begin with and having an unfriendly stranger staring at them asking their name and if we were their parents, very nerve wracking!
TheAggiesAreWe03
How long do you want to ignore this user?
AG
Deats99 said:

Effing priceless. Carrying our two and three year olds through customs off of a Mexico flight 17 years ago and my precious daughter answers on queue to the U.S. citizen question in perfect Baja accent "Hola!, me llamo Hannah!"


This reminds me of a story one of my childhood friend's dad (Geoff) used to tell. Took place in the early/mid 60s. Geoff and his family were taking a road trip from the Valley to somewhere up north. Geoff and his brother had been in the back of the station wagon fighting, as brothers do, and his brother had really pissed him off. Well, they pull up to a Border Patrol checkpoint; his father rolls the driver window down. BP officer asks dad, "is everyone a US citizen?" Just as dad is about to say yes, Geoff, from the backseat yells, "yeah, except for this wet back back here!" (referring to his brother) BP officer asks them to pull to the side of the road. Several officers come over and they strip EVERYTHING out of the interior of the car. Mind you, they are on a long road trip. I think his dad almost went to jail that day.
Refresh
Page 1 of 1
 
×
subscribe Verify your student status
See Subscription Benefits
Trial only available to users who have never subscribed or participated in a previous trial.