Hi! I'm Lindsay Ferrier. You might remember me from a blog called Suburban Turmoil. Well, a lot has changed since I started that blog in 2005. My kids grew up, I got a divorce, and I finally left the suburbs for the heart of Nashville, where I feel like I truly belong. I have no idea what the future will hold and you know what? I'm okay with that. Thrilled, actually. It was time for something totally different.
January 3, 2013
When my daughter was in kindergarten, I helped her teacher in the classroom two days a week. As a result, I learned a lot about her classmates– but I probably learned even more about some of their parents. Take, for instance, the time one of the boys stood before the class and described the photos on his “About Me” poster.
“Did your dad help you print this out?” the teacher asked, pointing at the boy’s neatly labeled name at the top of his poster board.
“No, those are just stickers,” the boy said. “My dad doesn’t really help me with anything. He just comes home from work and gets on the computer until he goes to bed.”
And just like that, the kid innocently managed to deliver a stinging public indictment against his dad. I never looked at that man the same way again.
But hearing those kinds of telling details from my children’s friends and classmates is commonplace. Far more epic was the time, years ago, when one of my stepdaughters attended a fifth grade sleepover. When the parents stepped out the next morning for breakfast donuts, the daughter led all the girls to her parents’ bedroom. She dared one of her friends to open the drawer of her mother’s nightstand and take out what was later described to me as “a long, pink rubber thing with a switch on it.” Giggling, the girls passed it around and discussed what they thought it could be. I heard about it afterward because they had no idea.
But I did.
And I never forgot about it, either, in part because that particular mom was one of the most enthusiastic members of my neighborhood’s unofficial We Hate Second Wives Club. Every time she graced me with her patented frosty glare after that, I would give her my most angelic grin in return, thinking of all the things I could say, if I were that kind of person, about that not-so-secret item in her nightstand.
Once you’re a parent, forget about keeping secrets. Whether you drink a little too much Chardonnay at night or regularly spar with your spouse, chances are your children’s friends, their teacher, and perhaps worst of all, their friends’ parents know all about it.
I’ve known this for a long time, and have grown fairly comfortable with it. I don’t like having secrets, anyway, to be honest, and I’ve always hated the unspoken rules in suburbia about presenting a perfect facade, even as everything’s falling apart behind the scenes.
But now that our second set of children is getting older, there’s a new rub– one I had never anticipated.
It became apparent that we had a problem a few weeks ago, when we were shopping for our Christmas tree at the neighborhood tree lot. There, we ran into the father of a girl that my husband had coached in soccer for several years, back when my stepdaughters were teenagers.
If you’ve been reading this blog for a while, you probably remember those heady days. Both my stepdaughters loved playing soccer, and while they were growing up, my husband coached their rec soccer teams, their indoor soccer teams, their 3 v. 3 soccer teams, and even, for a while, their high school soccer team. I spent a LOT of time traveling to and from various match-ups and practices when my children were very small, and many of my early blog posts and newspaper columns were inspired by what happened on and off the field.
When my youngest stepdaughter graduated, my husband retired as a coach. But when my daughter turned three, we couldn’t resist finding out if we had another future soccer star on our hands. Dennis pulled together a team of three-year-old girls and we were back on the field once again.
It quickly became obvious that soccer was not going to be Punky’s “thing.” She loved socializing with the other girls– but she was far more interested in collecting the bright fall leaves that littered the field and giggling with her teammates than she was in actually kicking the ball. During one memorable game, she even managed to convince a few girls from the other team to join her and her friends in the center of the field for a few rounds of Ring Around the Rosy. I still remember the thunderstruck look on my husband’s face when he stood up from herding a few girls from our team toward the goal and realized that more than half of the players on the field were busy dancing in a circle that was led by HIS OWN DAUGHTER.
At three, this kind of thing was adorable. At five, not so much. By the third season, the other girls on the team were starting to get a little more serious about the game– and so we made the decision to abandon soccer in favor of… something else. Punky was a little down about losing what she had always regarded as a playdate with uniforms, but I gently explained that since she didn’t enjoy the part that involved running on the field or kicking the ball (otherwise known as SOCCER), it really wasn’t fair to the other girls to remain on the team.
And that was that.
Until last month, at the tree lot.
“Are your little ones playing soccer now?” the father asked, after reminiscing for a few minutes about his own daughter’s high school team.
“No, not anymore,” my husband said.
“They both tried it,” I added, “but it really wasn’t their thing.”
“Yes it was,” my daughter piped up. I looked down at her in surprise.
“I liked soccer,” she continued. “But you said I had to quit because I was too slow.”
“I didn’t–” I began.
“Yes you did,” she said vehemently. “I wanted to keep playing, but you said I didn’t run fast enough. You made me quit. You said I was just too slow.”
“I never said that!” I said.
The father chuckled uncomfortably. “Kids,” he said. “They always tell the truth.”
Except when they don’t.
“I can’t believe she said that!” I whispered to my husband after I stuttered out a red-faced goodbye to the dad and we went on our way. “I can only guess what Steve thinks of me now. And it’s totally inaccurate!”
“That was awkward,” Dennis agreed.
“Punky, you know I never, ever cared how fast you ran,” I said, turning to her. “The problem was that you didn’t want to run at all. You didn’t want to play the game. And that wasn’t fair to the other girls.”
“I know what I heard,” she retorted, in her impossibly high-pitched voice. “I heard ‘You’re too slow.'”
“You didn’t.”
“I did!”
I sighed loudly and sat back in my seat, arms crossed. What other deeply suspect “memories,” I wondered, were lurking among the My Little Ponies and rescue puppies currently jockeying for position in my daughter’s brain? With whom would she choose to share them?
And why am I suddenly picturing a future bestseller, cleverly titled Mommieblogger Dearest?
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
A friend of mine was working as a kindergarten teacher. He told me that he knew ALL KINDS of things about the parents ~ including the mom who “got new boobs”!! Haha!! Kids…..
Love it!
That was so hilarious…except that it’s not! One of my freinds teaches at a private Christian school and her son, who also attends there (at age about 5 or 6) told his teacher that his mom and dad liked to drink and dance! (which they do neither)lol
I can only imagine what my son tells his kindergarten teacher- particularly since he comes home all the time telling me things she supposedly said that I KNOW she didn’t say!
Great sharing. BTW – Puncky’s pic above is so damn precious.
Yes, this is what she used to do mid-game when she got too tired to keep going. At one point, I had to cross the field, pick her up, and carry her off myself because her legs were “too tired to work anymore!”
Oh, I forgot. My honey has a daughter who is a now in college. When she was five, Bill asked her what she might like to get for her teacher for Christmas. She replied with the normal, “IDK.” He asked what she and her new husband liked to do, thinking that he could just invest in a gift card SOMEWHERE. She said, “Have sex,”. Trying very hard to keep a straight face, he asked what that meant. She told him that it was hugging and kissing. Apparently, she would see her teacher get dropped off by her husband in the mornings, and concluded that that is what sex was. He insists that SEX as a word would never have been mentioned at home, so it makes you wonder what WAS talked about at school.
Kids are a trip!
WOW!!
I think kid-truths are tricky. My son told people my husband was Jewish because he knew Jujitso. My husband does know Jujitso, but he’s not Jewish. My daughter said she wanted to be a writer when she grew up and when I said “I’m a writer” she said, “No, you’re a teacher of college and all you do is grade papers.” True, right? But also not true. I also think kids and sports are tricky. I coached my daughter in soccer for 2 seasons and she lolligagged. The third season I enrolled her with someone else as the coach and she did great. When I worry about kids and sports I comfort myself with Ayelet Waldman’s great response to Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, which I’m guessing you ran across back in the day: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703333504576080422577800488.html
YES. We’re actually in talks about whether she wants to return to soccer, but it doesn’t come up all that often, so I think it’s just the idea of playing she likes more than the actual thing. I don’t care what she does– I just want her to find her passion and I feel like it’s my job to help her try as many things as possible (within reason) until she figures out what she truly loves.
Guess I’m glad all the school parents read my blog! Gives me a chance to set the record straight. Snort.
Ha!
A teacher friend told me a story once about a child in her class whose parents came roaring in, upset about some things their child had told them, none of which were grounded in reality (the teacher said I was stupid, the teacher made me go outside without my coat, etc.)
After they had run out of steam, she asked them, “Do you have a pet pig?” Confused, they said, “No!” “Well,” she continued, “Your son swears that you do. Also, that you live in a houseboat and that his uncle used to perform in the circus.” The parents were aghast; none of that was true.”I’ll make you a deal,” she finally said. “I’ll believe only half of what he says about you if you’ll believe only half of what he says about me.”
Love it!
Oh boy. Thankfully Ellen doesn’t have the vocab the embarrass me quite yet, but this is a good thing to keep in mind!
Ah, the stories I could tell after working in the front office of a school for a year…those kids and their parents were their own special brand of crazy. Once I had a parent freaking out because their kid had said the cafeteria lady wouldn’t let them eat. Um, no, your kid was being a brat and didn’t want to eat what was being served so they just threw their lunch tray away. That’s why they come home hungry every day.
Someone needs to go undercover and record some of that kind of stuff and write a book. LOL
It could be a bestseller, like The Nanny Diaries!
[…] A Family Needs our Help…..Please Respond and Share.So How Are the KidsThe Mythmaker ‹ Suburban Turmoil […]
I’ve coached 4/5 year olds for three years.
Once a little boy ran up to me and said “My Mommy spit on me!!!” (a little spray came out when she was talking)
Not to be outdone, a little pig-tailed girl announced… “Well, my Daddy pooped in his own pants…”
I could see her poor father on the sidelines in his business suit, completely unaware of her embarrassing over share…
I have many many more treasured stories…
[…] that soccer really wasn’t her thing. She was done with the sport by the age of five. (We have a difference in opinion, apparently, as to how that happened!) Bruiser also started at three and clearly wasn’t ready […]