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Friday On My Mind

On blog advertising...

Yawn!

Not sure how the previous throwaway post morphed into me being against people having ads on their own blogs.  As befitting my long-standing philosophy of "live and let live," I really couldn't give a shit what other people do with their own sites. Want to have the Golden Arches pop up while "This is Our Country" blares in the background? Go for it. Far be it from me to snatch food out of a baby's mouth. All I was saying was that it's not for me.  Capiche, kids?  Let's move on.

On swearing...

Occasionally I have heard mention of my site as being inappropriate due to my casual use of profanity. Several readers have even e-mailed me and accused me of contributing to the coarsening of the English language.  To those critics, I would respond that my discourse merely exemplifies the vaunted precedent of valorizing the oral vernacular. I would further add that language is a living tissue, which must occasionally suffer the rupture of subversion in order to convalesce with more structural stability. So to those prurient guardians of the linguistic gates who are offended by my occasional use of the F-bomb?  Well, you know what you can do with yourselves. 

On extreme sports...

I just got invited out to Colorado for a work-related event that would essentially involve hanging out with a bunch of professional extreme athletes for a weekend.  These are guys who make their living flipping backside 540s at the X-Games so naturally I'm a little reluctant to hang out with them.  Extreme sports are fascinating to a man like me, who screams like Fran Drescher in labor whenever I drive over a pothole with an open coffee container between my legs. In my defense, I may not be as adventurous as I used to be, but given the right set of circumstances, I am as hard-core as they fucking come. Like the other day, I'm cooking up a pot of my famous paella when I run out of saffron.  So what do I do?  Just for the sheer adrenaline rush, I decide to double up on the fucking parsley!  Hell yeah!  Balls to the wall, dude!

On flight attendants...

My mom was a stewardess when she graduated college.  It was the perfect job for her.  She spoke 4 languages and wanted to see the world.  She was happy to have the job.  However, these days, something has clearly gone amiss in the world of air travel.  I just got back from a business trip and I couldn't believe how cranky and rude all the flight attendants were.  Look, ladies, I get it. When you were 18-years-old, you made a horrible vocational choice. You sacrificed your entire future for some cheap airfare to Ixtapa. You haven't met Mr. Right.  And right now, you're basically a waitress in a crappy restaurant at 30,000 feet in the air.  But for fuck's sake, please pop some Thorazine and stop taking out your aggressions on young kids and toddlers, ok? 

On the dearth of quality songwriting...

At some godforsaken hour this morning, the Peanut crawled into bed with me and the BossLady.  After forcing me to read several books to her, she climbed on top of the BossLady and said, "Good morning, mommy. I just made a song for you. Want to hear it?"  Curious (but still sleeping,) the BossLady replied in the affirmative. I'm just going from memory here but if I remember correctly, these were the lyrics:

"mommy! mommy! mommy!mommy! mommy! mommy!mommy! mommy! mommy!mommy! mommy! mommy!mommy! mommy! mommy!mommy! mommy! mommy!mommy! mommy! mommy!mommy! mommy! mommy!mommy! mommy! mommy!mommy! mommy! mommy!mommy! mommy! mommy!mommy! mommy! mommy!"

Hopefully, emo really is the music of the future!

On summer blogging...

My buddy Laid-Off Dad always kids me about the sheer number of blogs that I read. I always reply that I'm a speed-reading insomniac whose idea of a fun Friday night is sitting on the couch with an 8-ball of cocaine, an RSS reader, and  bloglines.

Anyway, as I mentioned recently, the blogging world seems to be humming with the ennui of long lazy days unfettered by anything substantive.  Is it me or are things just boring out there?  Maybe we're just all in a collective slump.  Like Ben Affleck, Johnny Damon, and Moby.  Whatever it is, I think I need some new blogs to read.  This is where all of you come in.

Any of you discover a cool new blog lately?  Start a new blog recently?  Find a post somewhere that you thought was amazing?  Go ahead and pimp it out in the comments. Doesn't have to be related to anything. I just need some some new reads.  Pimp away!

Advertising on Personal Blogs

I've had numerous conversations and e-mail exchanges with bloggers asking me why I don't put ads on my site. 

It's not that I couldn't use the extra money. After all, cashmere boxers, gold-laced shower curtains, and beluga mayonnaise don't grow on trees, right?  And am I the only one who cares that the price of domestic help is starting to reach stratospheric levels?  Just this past week, my personal foodtaster Toto asked for more dough because his maid needed to get the tires on her BMW rotated.  So yeah, who couldn't use a little extra green in their pockets? 

All kidding aside, I generally find the idea of advertising on personal blogs to be the complete antithesis of what blogging should be about and that's generally why I've shunned them on this site. 

However, I've never really been able to fully articulate my feelings on exactly why I dislike the idea of ads on personal blogs.  Thankfully, I have Mimi Smartypants.  As she writes in a recent post:

I got into a minor debate recently about ads on blogs, because I was naively shocked to see one of my favorites with a big old honking McDonald's ad in the sidebar. I am sure when you sign up with Federated Media or any of the other blog-ad conglomerates, you don't get much of a say in what ads show up. Which is precisely the point.

When you attach your personal output (your song, your blog, your likeness) to a corporation, you align yourself with everything that corporation has ever done. In a small way, to be sure: no one is going to hold the aforementioned blog writer directly responsible for junk-food marketing to children or the destruction of the rainforests. But the fact remains that when you get advertising money from McDonald's, you become part of their business. If that is cool with you, then fine---it would be a cold day in hell, personally, but whatever.

It is not really my intent to pick on McDonald's, as my insides are not entirely Filet O' Fish free. My point is more that, through my lame, idealistic, aging-punk, Diaryland-colored glasses, I have a hard time seeing personal web pages as a business. There is something so cool about getting to read the thoughts of people I have never met, and then over there in the sidebar is this big honking ad for a multi-billion-dollar corporation, and that punctures the pleasure balloon somewhat.

Ads are fucking everywhere. It would be nice to see just a sliver of handcrafted, non-commercial, free-to-all, personal-expression space in the world, even if just on the internet.

I couldn't agree more, Mimi. 

Now I might not be most objective guy to lecture anyone on the dangers of advertising and pervasive consumerism, given the fact that my apartment is overfilled with a random array of useless shit and makes Charles Foster Kane's basement look like an empty breadbox.

But you know the omnipresence of advertising in our daily lives is getting out of hand when parents start auctioning off naming rights for their unborn babies and college girls start tattooing corporate logos on their breasts. 

As usual, I'm not passing judgment on any personal bloggers who feel the need to post ads on their site.  Advertising is a biological impulse found throughout the natural world. Peacocks attract the attention of a mate through a multicolored feather display. Baboons signal their sexual readiness with a pair of red, swollen buttocks. And shit, my wife and I just got a great deal on some attractively priced insurance from a fucking gecko!

So yeah, you probably won't be seeing any ads on this site anytime soon (of course, should the good people over at Aston Martin feel like sponsoring the site and donating the use of one of their fine automobiles, I'll be the first in line to tattoo their logo on my ass and name my second child DB9.)

But just out of curiosity, how do you feel when you see ads on personal blogs?  Do they turn you off?  Do you even care?  If you have ads on your blog, do you feel they're worth it?  Have you ever considered removing them?  In all honesty, I've stopped reading more than a few blogs because I couldn't deal with the advertising.  Have you ever done the same? 

An inquiring mind wants to know...

On Marriage

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As I've said on this blog before, a great marriage is like a duck.  Everything may look smooth on the surface but underneath, you've got to paddle like hell. 

If any of you ever speak to people around the world and ask them the secrets to their long-lasting and happy marriages, they will all smile knowingly and tell you that marriage takes a lot of work.  And I believe them.  As I look at current divorce statistics, it's scary to see how fragile modern marriages can be.  Especially in a city like New York, where you can actually get a marriage license printed on an Etch-A-Sketch.

However, make no mistake about it, my friends.  Marriage is the single greatest institution in the history of civilization---if you meet the right person. 

For me, the lovely, beautiful, sexy, intelligent and funny BossLady is that right person. 

This past Saturday, we celebrated our 6th wedding anniversary.  And after six years of marriage, I'm sure of two things---first, never go shoe shopping together, and second, nothing says "I love you" like a new handbag.  The rest is a mystery, but a mystery I love to be involved in. 

Being that I'm generally a hopeless romantic, I usually like to celebrate our anniversaries with a giant flourish and a whirlwind of activity: extravagant dinners, intimate evenings in a fancy hotel suite, giant bouquets of callas lilies, jewelry, Swiss chocolates---all in the name of love (and a semi-annual blow job!)

This year, we decided to celebrate our anniversary in a more low-key manner.  Since none of our regular babysitters were available, we skipped all the normal celebratory rituals and spent a lovely day together just with our daughter.  After a day at the playground, the three of us ordered in a bunch of lobsters, sat on the floor of our apartment with our little bibs and had a family dinner together.  Afterwards, we curled up on the couch together and watched "Finding Nemo" for the 800th time until we all dozed off into a deep slumber. 

And as I think about this past Saturday, I realize that may have been the perfect way to celebrate our anniversary and our six wonderful years of marriage together.  These days, celebrating our anniversary together is no longer just about the BossLady and me.  It's more of a celebration of our entire life together and who we are as a family.  And after six years together, I can't wait to see what the next six bring.  Or the six after that.

Because if there's one thing that a good marriage will teach you, it's that the exciting part of it isn't the destination.  It's the journey. 

And if relationships are the journey, then I couldn't be luckier to have the beautiful BossLady as my co-pilot.  With her by my side, I know I'll never lose myself nor the sight of what's truly important in life.   

Happy Anniversary, BossLady!   

As those cheese-eating surrender monkeys across the Atlantic like to say, "Je t'aime plus chaque jour, aujourd'hui plus qu'hier, moins que demain." 

I love you more each day, more than yesterday, less than tomorrow.

CHAOS THEORY: July 2007

Like the end of television season, summer has clearly hit the world of blogging.  The internet seems to be humming with the ennui of long lazy days unfettered by anything substantive.  Dullness seems to be running rampant.  In fact, as Neal Pollack says, the dullness seems to almost defy description, even in the blog format...where banality is rarely an impediment!

Here at Casa MetroDad, I've taken a vow to spare you from the minutiae of my daily life.  However, as usual, I've got a bunch of random things on my mind so I've decided to throw up another Chaos Theory post.  However, unlike previous Chaos Theory posts, all of today's ramblings seem to be centered primarily on parenting. 

So, for those of you without kids, feel free to either (1) skip this insufferably long post entirely, (2) consider me a cautionary tale, or (3) try not to vomit from any sappy parent-related gushing.

So without further ado...


MORE NON-SEQUITUR RAMBLINGS OF A 2.5 YEAR-OLD!

At the Peanut's age, you almost have to spend every single minute with her in order to fully understand the context of everything she's saying.  If not, you'd probably think you just encountered the weirdest little kid in the world.  Anyway, here are some recent gems:

1. BossLady and I have been teaching Peanut how to cross the street in Manhattan.  Our coaching method basically entails waiting at each corner, pointing at the pedestrian signal, and telling her, "When the red hand is there, you have to stop.  When the white man is there, then you can go."  It's practically become our mantra and the Peanut is proving to be a quick learner.  In fact, she's so proud of her newfound knowledge that she feels compelled to instruct other people on how to properly cross the street. Yesterday, she sidled up to a stranger who was standing off the curb and emphatically stated, "You have to listen to the white man!" Ironically, the guy was African-American and, while shaking his head, he gave me one of those "damn brother, what the fuck are you teaching your daughter?" looks. 

This shit doesn't happen to other people, does it? 

2. The Peanut loves dressing herself.  Last week, I was going out to walk the dog and she insisted on coming so I told her to hurry up and get dressed.  What does she end up putting on?  Hawaiian pajama pants, a Polo shirt dress, a pair of sequined red tap shoes, Mardi Gras beads, pink sunglasses, and a duck whistle in her mouth.  As we got in the elevator, I looked at her and said, "Dude, you look like a homeless Minnie Pearl."  Yesterday afternoon, we walked outside our building and our resident homeless guy was passed out drunk on our stoop.  When Peanut asked me why the man was sleeping, I said he wasn't sleeping, he was just homeless.  The Peanut carefully walked up to him and with great curiosity exclaimed, "You're Minnie Pearl?" 

3.  The other day, Peanut found an old pack of rolling papers from about 10 years ago.  When she asked me what they were, I told her they were "nose stickers" and proceeded to lick them and stick them all over her face.  We both were laughing our asses off and, after we were done messing around, I tossed the rolling papers into the trash.  Well, apparently Peanut went into the garbage and grabbed a few more because when I was picking her up at daycare today, she reached into her pocket, pulled out a few rolling papers, and yelled out, "Look Daddy, nose stickers!"  I really should start saving for her therapy now, shouldn't I? 

MY NAME IS SLIM SHADY!

Last week, we were leaving the apartment and I had to go back to turn off all the lights.  Suddenly, the Peanut turns around and yells to me, "C'mon, Pierre! Let's go!" 

WTF?  I didn't even know she knew my name! 

Apparently, this is a phase that all kids go through.  However, after the initial shock wore off, I sat Peanut down in the elevator and explained to her that, during the entire course of her lifetime, she was to call me, "daddy."  When I see kids call their parents by their first names, I always envision these weird Laguna Beach parents who want to "chill" with their kids and "hang" together.  Shit, that is NEVER going to happen to me.  In fact, I even told Peanut that if she ever felt the need to call me something other than "daddy," she should go with "Mr. Daddy." 

Just kidding. I think. Ok, maybe not really.  All I really know is that if I ever called my father by his first name when I was a little kid, my ass would still be sore!  Is this an Asian thing? 

THE FRESH AIR FUND

We've recently been spending our weekends at my good friend The Doctor's beach house in the Hamptons.  While The Doctor takes a 19-minute private helicopter ride, I've been spending my Friday afternoons sweltering in non-stop traffic for 4 hours while the Peanut kicks me in the head from the backseat.  However, it's all been worth it to see my lovely daughter exposed to life outside the city.  In the past few weeks, she's discovered the joys of sleeping in until noon, spending entire days in the pool, running around on the beach naked, and drinking martinis until 4:00 am. 

Oh shit, that's not her.  That's me!  Has anyone seen my daughter?  She was just here a second ago!

HOT CHICKS WITH DOUCHEBAGS

I am not joking when I say that, almost once a week, I get an e-mail from a father directing me to the website Hot Chicks With Douchebags.  Without fail, the e-mail usually says something like, "Holy cow, MD!  Have you seen this site?  As a fellow father with a daughter, this really isn't helping me cope with the fact that my little girl is going to be dating in the next 10-15 years!  What do I do if she ends up with one of these tools?" 

At first, I found myself mildly amused.  After all, if I raise my daughter properly, I can't imagine that she'd ever end up with guys like the Rooster, Yellowtail, or Pumpy.  But then I started thinking, "Hey, these women look fairly normal.  I'm sure they all have fathers.  And at one point, they must have been cute, little toddlers who were the apple of their father's eye."

Needless to say, I'm now obsessed not only with the site but with making sure that my daughter doesn't end up with a douchebag.  Being a very proactive parent, I'm constantly using everyday life to teach my daughter important lessons.  In our daily lives, everything is a case study.  Why not douchebaggery? 

While scouring the internet for teaching materials, I came across Big Daddy Drew, a retired (but hilarious) daddy blogger.  Thankfully, Drew has not only compiled an excellent working definition of douchebaggery but also identified some prime living examples

For all you fathers with daughters out there, consider this a Public Service Announcement.

SOUND BITES: RECENT TV QUOTES ABOUT PARENTS AND/OR KIDS

"Sometimes the clothes at Gap Kids are just too flashy. So I'm forced to go to the American Girl store and order clothes for large colonial dolls."---Angela, discussing her petite-size shopping habits, on "The Office"

''I'll go unlock the kids and make us all breakfast.''---T-Bag on "Prison Break"

''My mother used to tell me every day is my birthday...but that was to cover for her addiction to beer and cake. It ended up killing her, on what turned out to be my real birthday.''---Jay on the "Sarah Silverman Program"

''Angelina Jolie adopted her first child in Cambodia, her second in Ethiopia, gave birth to her third in Namibia, and now from Vietnam. She's working her way down the alphabet. Stay cool, Yemen, she’s coming.''---Jimmy Kimmel

''He was a great dad. Every year he got so mad when Santa didn't bring me presents.''---Homer, defending Grandpa, on "The Simpsons"

IMMIGRATION & ASSIMILATION AT THE PICNIC TABLE

Growing up in a Korean immigrant household, I missed out on many "American" things.  I've talked about this issue before but, now that I have a young daughter, I find myself trying to recreate the missing "American" parts of my childhood.  For some reason, many of them center around food. 

For example...growing up, my brother and I didn't spend cool summer evenings roasting S'mores outdoors on the barbecue.  We spent them massaging my father's calloused feet while eating beef jerky on the floor next to the fan. 

We didn't have BBQ chicken picnics on the beach.  We gnawed on pig's feet in the back seat of the Oldsmobile while my father drove us to cheap motels in the Poconos.

Flash forward to the summer of 2007. 

BossLady, Peanut and I are like the all-American family.  We're constantly having picnics outside or eating on our rooftop deck.  We'll whip up some pasta salad, roast a chicken, grill some baby-back ribs, and eat fresh corn underneath the stars.  It's all so damn normal.

However, there's a small part of me that wistfully looks back on those weirdly dysfunctional summer family dinners and wishes that they were a part of the Peanut's life also.  It's funny getting older, isn't it?  All those little things from our childhood that we hated and thought scarred us emotionally frequently turn out to be some of our fondest memories.

Ok, well maybe not the rubbing feet part. 

COOL PARTY TRICKS FOR THE TODDLER SET

This morning, I was still half-asleep when Peanut crawled into our bed and asked me to read "Goodnight, Moon" to her. In my groggy state, I just turned over and said, "why don't YOU read it to ME, Peanut?" 

Next thing I know, I hear the Peanut reading, "Goodnight room. Goodnight moon. Goodnight cow jumping over the moon. Goodnight light, and the red balloon..." 

In total shock, I look up and see that she's actually reading.  As she's speaking each phrase, she's turning the pages of the book in perfect accordance.  Needless to say, I jumped out of bed, turned to the BossLady and yelled out, "Holy Shit!  The Peanut can read!  She's a fucking genius!"

Of course, BossLady just started laughing at me.  Turns out that she's read the book to Peanut so many times that the kid has the words and the page turns completely memorized. 

Damn, I almost thought I had the next Mensa kid!

Quick story:  when my buddy Kyle had Lasik surgery, he stayed with his grandparents.  The next day, his grandmother asked how the operation went.  Kyle replied, "It's incredible, Grandma.  Go across the kitchen, pick up that bottle of ketchup, and hold it up for me."  With his grandmother standing about 75 feet away, Kyle starts reciting, "Tomato concentrate made with red ripe tomatoes, distilled vinegar, high fructose corn syrup, salt, spice, onion powder..."

Needless to say, his grandmother was about to have a heart attack until Kyle confessed that he had memorized the ingredients 15 minutes ago so he could play that prank on her.

Now I know how she felt.  Damn, punk'd by your own flesh and blood!

MONKEY SEE, MONKEY DO (A METRODAD RANT)

Parenting is the most important job on the planet next to keeping Lindsay Lohan off the nation's highways.

Now I'm no expert on parenting.  However, if there's one thing I've learned, it's that kids are the sponge and us parents are the Super Soakers.  The tendency of children to emulate the behavior that they see from their parents has got to be the closest thing to an absolute truth that there is in parenting.

Last week, I caught the Peanut zoning out in front of the television.  She was lying back on the couch with one hand down her pants and the other one grasping the remote.  I remember thinking to myself, "Now where the heck would she pick up something like that?"  Two hours later, I found myself in exactly the same position.  What can I say?  We're all products of our environment.

And although we all undeniably impact our children in different ways, there's no denying the effect we all have on them. 

Now, before I had a kid, I like to think I was generally a pretty decent guy.  Sure, I was a hedonistic young man and would sometimes lapse into moments of selfishness.  Like when I'd toss Cuban cigars out my convertible while giving old ladies the finger for cutting me off on the Long Island Expressway.  Then there were all those times I yelled at waiters for bringing me the wrong vintage of Cristal champagne.  And hell, I can't even recall how many fights I had at the polo fields because my horse's mane hadn't been brushed properly.  What can I say?  I used to be a major a-hole!

All kidding aside, there's no doubt that being a parent has made me a better person. Personally, I strive to live my life by setting an example for my daughter that she can both emulate and respect.  I want her to see her parents treating people kindly.  I want her to see them trying to help those who are less fortunate.  And I want her to see that, at the end of the day, we're all in this shit together. 

Even when having to deal with all the crap that life throws your way, I try to behave as if my daughter is watching my every move.  Because you know what?  Most of the time she is. 

But as I look around today, I see a lot of parents living in denial.  Their kids walk around with this sense of entitlement and are frequently rude, self-absorbed, pushy, and cruel.  Now, I'm not saying all kids are like that.  It just seems that every time I walk into a playground or a restaurant these days, I'm amazed at how many maladjusted kids are roaming around.  Meanwhile, the parents walk around and wonder where this behavior is coming from.  However, is it ever really much of a surprise?  Teachers, friends, neighbors alike all seem to know.  Why is it that the parents never do?

Don't get me wrong.  Parenting is hard work.

But look, if you're going to have a child, you need to do the rest of us a favor.  Commit enough time, love and wisdom to those tiny humans so that we're assured that your kid won't someday end up in a Texas bell tower with a high-powered rifle and a grudge anytime soon. 

Kids are a lot of responsibility.  Maybe some people should start off a little lower on the responsibility ladder before working their way up to having a kid. You know, start off getting something a little easier, like a job. Or a dog.  Or three days sober in a row. And then, if you can handle that, work your way up to the care and responsibility of another human being.

If you are a parent, try to set better examples for your kid.  Don't be an asshole to other people in front of them.  Treat others as you'd want your own kid to be treated.  Rise up out of the mire of your own narcissism and get selfless.  You want to make the world a better place?  Start with those little ones right in front of you.  Be good to them, show them the right way to treat people, and they'll return the favor to you in spades.

Look, I'm not saying that I'm a perfect parent but I like to think that I can stare between the stars into the blackness of heaven and say with a smile on my face, "I'll do anything and everything to be a good parent."

And as Dennis Miller once said, "when you can say that, you're finally ready to be a real parent.  Almost.  Get yourself a copy of The Lion King." 

"Ok, NOW you're ready!"