Wednesday, January 30, 2008

Single Dad Rules

Rules for single Dads

For the last 2 ½ years, I have been the single father and sole caregiver of a very healthy, vivacious little blonde-haired, blue eyed bundle of girlish energy. I have learned some things that I suspect women know instinctively.

Guys, however, are not so fortunate. We need at least a “Heads-Up” before we can be expected to handle such a formidable challenge as raising a child single-handedly as it were.

Now I’m not saying I haven’t had help. I’ve had lots of it - from family, friends, and occasionally strangers I’ve met in the baby aisle at Wally-World.

Here are a few things for guys who may find themselves in this situation to remember.

1) When you are in the bottle/formula aisle for the first time, with no female of your own to rely on for answers, stand around reading labels, comparing products, and storing the information away for later and try to look ridiculously helpless. Trust me guys, it won’t be hard. Sooner or later, a mother, or better yet, a grandmother will come along. Don’t be shy, ask for her advice, or even downright help in choosing the right bottle for your baby. Listen to her advise on formula too. My Doctor had me use a particular formula for my daughter because she didn’t have a mother and no access to the nutrients that newborns get from breast milk, so that wasn’t a hard decision for me at all. The bottle however, I still shudder when I think of the trauma choosing the correct bottle for my daughter was.

Then there’s diapers. Guys you have no idea how many varieties of diaper there are. I know, you go there, or went there with your wife when your kids were little and it was no big deal. Let me tell you, that was because the only things you were thinking at the time was, “How much will this cost,” “ How much longer is this gonna take,” or/and “Look at her!” I know. I’ve been there with the first three. When I walked into the diaper aisle for the first time, it was “Oh My GOD! What do I do now?” Panicking, I looked around until I found a young woman with like, 12 toddlers in tow, and explaining my situation, asked her for her help. “How much does your baby weigh?” she asked, I said, “I don’t know, like 5 ½ pounds?” She looked at me for a minute, then deciding I was definitely lacking in the brains dept., she asked, “ Is your baby a Premie?” Knowing that she was indeed premature, I exclaimed, “Yes! She is a premie! Thank you!” She looked at me, “Well, calm down, I haven’t helped you yet. You have a lot to learn, don’t you? Look here at the packages, it tells you the diaper size and how many pounds the average baby is for that size, see?” I saw. They had cleverly placed the information I needed right there in plain sight! Why hadn’t I noticed that before? Amazed at my new discovery, I went to hug the nice lady. “Don’t touch me, bub,” she said, pushing me back, then towing her tribe around the corner, she turned back to me and said, “Good luck.”

Later, while talking with my sister, between her laughing and gsping for breath, I found out that it’s considered bad etiquette to hug a strange woman in Wal-Mart. Who’d have thunk it?

Car seats - These devices are not made for men to deal with. Read the instructions carefully. I know that violates guy code, but in this case its necessary. If you can, you may want to practice on a doll first. Get the idea in the living room of kitchen. Guys I’m not kidding, you have got to know exactly what you are doing by feel, from putting your little bundle of terror into his/her seat, to buckling him/her in. Meanwhile, little Johnny/Janie is going to be wriggling, crying, holding all of his/her toys, or so small that you’re afraid you may lose him/her in that huge car seat. The other main obstacle to happy-happy, joy-joy in car seating your kid is that back seats of automobiles are not built for a man’s shall we say, bulk? Yeah, that’s a good word, bulk. I’m not fat, I’m bulky! Sure, ok. I had a Lincoln Town car when my baby was little. Guess what? The back seat was exactly 2/3 of the size I needed to fit in there comfortably to attach my little angel to her safety seat. I can imagine the engineering crew up there at the acme car seat company snickering. I think they did this on purpose. I would kind of do an off hand pass of the baby into her seat, then while bracing myself on the seat with my off hand, I would fish around in there amongst my baby for the various straps, buckles and snaps needed to make her safe enough in the car for us to make a five-minute trip to the local convenience store. Meanwhile, I know that I’m under a time constraint, and as I miss that left-side strap for the third time, the twinges in my back are telling me that time is fast running out. Finally! After 3 ½ years of buckling the child into the car, I can stand up. No I can’t, my back is stuck. I look like a capital “L” upside down, waling around the driveway, cursing and rubbing my back for another 2 years, until I can straighten up again. Once we get to the store, the whole thing happens in reverse. After a couple times of this, you learn to plan your trips. To minimize the back aches. After a couple of hundred years of reaching in, placing and removing your child, you forget about back aches, you become an automaton, much the same as a lot of the mothers I’ve seen out there, inserting and extracting their very own little bundles of back pain, into their cars.

Fords law states that it is mathematically impossible to create a car which actually comfortably fits an approved safety restraint seat for small humanoids, and makes it easy for apes like us to attach and detach said small humanoids.

Colic - Colic happens guys. It happened to my child, it will happen to yours. You will begin feeling sorry for the little guy, holding him or her, patting, petting, bouncing and eventually crying with him/her, About the time you begin pounding your head on the wall and screaming out your despair, it will dawn on you to call for help. Now listen to this next piece of advice carefully: DO not bother to call your ex. She will only laugh and hang up on you. This is a rule. It is a rule of human behavior. Exes are cruel, God made them that way. Otherwise, they wouldn’t be your ex, and you wouldn’t be in this predicament. Go get some Karo syrup and some anti-gas medicine for children. Give little-bit a dose of the gas stuff, then follow it up with a nice bottle of formula, milk, or cola, whatever you deed your precious little bundle of….er…baby, mixed with Karo. About a teaspoon for 8 ounces. Then start burping said kid. It’ll come up eventually, and after 2 or 3 days of being awake and crying hysterically at each other, you and your baby can get a little sleep, you both deserve it. There is a “Guy Code” out there that men never cry. Generally this is true enough, or at least we tend to hide the tears, but guys, let me tell you, spend two or three days alone with a crying, screaming infant and you will break down.

Diapers, again - Never, ever put a finger down a diaper, sight unseen. You will regret having done so, and I guarantee you, guys, that whatever you use to take it off of your finger, will not remove the smell, or the memory of baby crap under your fingernail, even the stuff that’s strong enough to take off skin will not remove the smell.

On a related note. Say, after a year or two, you’re walking across your living room, or sit down on the couch. You will notice what appears to be a chocolate crumb. You will be tempted, and may even automatically pick it up. Guys normally find little crumbs like that and automatically put them in our mouths, usually surreptitiously, because we know that it’ll gross out our women-folk and we don’t need the lecture again. Gentlemen, I’m here to tell you that if you do place that little morsel in your mouth, it will break you forever of the habit. If your little bundle of joy happens to be 2 or 3 by the time this happens, and is nearby, you’ll hear a tiny, cutesy voice, saying, “Ewww, Daddy! Gross!” You will immediately find that as it melts in your mouth, not on your hand that it is indeed, “Ewww, Gross.” Please see the paragraph above pertaining to hand cleaning, but substitute the word “Mouth,” for the word “Finger.”

Language - A rule of child rearing, “If you say it, you will hear it repeated. If you do it, you will see it repeated.” Guys, those of you who’ve had the benefit of raising your little one with a partner, know that you can defer much of the embarrassment onto your significant other, or her family. If, however, you bear sole responsibility, having your little sweet angel sit up in church on Sunday and tell the Pastor, “Dammit!” in a clear, loud voice, just as he’s making an altar call is not a pleasant experience. Neither is it pleasant when you and your child are shopping at the grocery store, and the buxom young lady you’re been noticing comes near, and your little one who has never spoken a clear word in his or her life looks at you and utters these words, “Wow, Daddy! Look at them Hooters!!” You must understand that although they may not be able to speak clearly at present, they understand more than you think they do, and they have memories, and at night, when you think they’re sleeping peacefully, they are in fact, practicing.

There are so many other things I’d like to say, and so much more to cover, but I think this gives you an idea of what it’s like, and ladies, I bet it gave you a good chuckle. So, for now, I bid you adieu. (Besides, she’s getting up from her nap.)

Friday, January 18, 2008

Passings

Mr James Richard Hunt
January 11, 1963 - January 15, 2008

ALVARADO -- James Richard Hunt Jr 45 passed from this life trucking his way to heaven on January 14,2008. Funeral; 2pm Monday Jan. 21,2008 at Emerald Hills Memorial Chapel. Burial; Emerald Hills Memorial park. Visitation; Sunday 2-5pm Jan.20,2008 at Emerald Hills Funeral Home. He left this world doing what fulfilled him, he loved his family and enjoyed seeing new things through his grandchildren's eyes. He is survived by his children; James Dean Hunt,Sandra Hunt, Joshua Hunt and Justin Patton, grandchildren,Kyle, Kaleb and Laken Hunt, aunts and uncles and a host of other family and friends.

James was six feet tall, well maybe five-eleven. He weighed three hundred and fifteen pounds at death. He was egregrious, sometimes bubbly, and sometimes glum, but always friendly, never met a stranger. Always supportive, and sometimes a pain in my butt. He was my dear friend. He was a truck driver. He was a father, and a husband. He was in the middle of a project to rebuild his barn and corral so that he would have a place for the pony he was going to buy his grandson this year.

In his work, he was one of the best drivers I have ever met. Like all drivers, he was eccentric to some extent. He was opinionated. He always wore a cowboy hat, sweat-stained, brownish ranch-cut stetson. The kind that George Strait made famous, but in a darker color. he also always had on a worn pair of brown cowboy boots. They looked like they'd been through the war, or something. He wore Eli shirts, and wranglers. The jeans usually sagging badly. He never had the money to buy himself clothes, his kids always came first, and lately, his grandkids.

He was divorced, but was still very much attached to his wife. He never called her his ex. To the day he died, she was his wife. She was deeply in love with James, but needed a normalcy in he rrelationship that he could never provide. Both of them dated, and he'd had an on and off, love-hate relationship with another woman for several years, but i used to tell him, he might as well give that up because he still was in love with his wife. He'd grin and say, "I know it, Fred."

I had a rollover wreck a year and a half ago. I was not wearing my seatbelt. When I started getting around again, a couple of months later, James came up to me in our local coffee shop, grinned and grabbed my shoulder, "Fred," He said, "It's good to see you up and around. You know the only reason you're here is the Grace of God. You really shouldn't have survived that wreck. I think God saved you for that little baby's sake. You'd better hit your knees buddy, and thank God for saving your life." That was James.

One time, I set him up on a blind date with my girlfriend's best friend. It was a total disaster. She said that he spent the whole night talking about his wife, his off-at-the-time ex-girlfriend, and his kids. She said to never set her up on a date again, thank-you-very-much. I laughed about it, but never got involved in James' dating life again. I even told him I wasn't going to go there ever again. Thing is, he'd asked me to set the whole thing up in the first place. He thought she was pretty. In his own way, he was trying to open up to her, sort of let ehr into his life. He didn't realize that was inappropriate. When he figured it out, he just laughed, "Well Fred, I guess I sure blew that one, didn't I? Oh well, there's other ones, and maybe next time I'll keep my big trap shut! HAHAHAHA"

James signed his pickup over to his daughter, so that she wouldn't have to rely on anyone else to get her to work, and back. For himself, if he couldn't drive his big truck wherever he needed to go, he'd call me or one of his other friends for a ride. That was James.

He had fought stomach cancer to a standstill a few years back. He had a peptic ulcer from worry, and his thyroid gland had up and quit on him about ten years ago. He couldn't afford to pay for his house, fix up the barn, and by his medicine all at teh same time, so his ulcer had been acting up and his thyroid levels were non-existant for about the last three months, but even though he'd ask for a ride, now and then, he'd never ask for help getting his meds. I would have gladly done that for him, but he made sure that I didn't know. His daughter told me after he died.

James rolled his truck over last Tuesday. He wasn't wearing his seatbelt either. Where my rollover had thrown me to the right, and had trapped my left leg, keeping me inside the cab of the truck, his threw him out the driver's side window. The truck rolled over on top of him. Another one of our buddies was following him, and had stopped and run up to the cab of James' truck. He said that he hollered, "James, are you alright?" James looked up at him and said, "Get me out of here!" He said that just after James said that, his eyes rolled up and he quit breathing. They had to get a wrecker to pull the truck up off of the body before they could move it.

I was talking to his daughter tonight, and she said that he rdad had called her earlier that day, out of the blue and said that he wanted her to know that he loved her. She said, "I know, dad. I love you too." James said, "No, I want you to know that I really do love you, even though sometimes, I've been pretty mean to you, yelled at you, or whatever. I just want you to know that I love you, I always have loved you, and I always will love you, no matter what. Ok?" She said, "Ok, dad. I love you too." She said that was the last words they exchanged.

I don't think he knew that he was going to die that day. Not consciously, anyway. I know that he was tired. He was tired of his lifestyle, tired of trucking, and never having enough, enough time, or money. He was going to look into another way of making a living, he'd said recently. He wasn't sure what yet. I guess it didn't matter after all.

Anyway, the fact that I lived through a horrible accident, and one of my best friends died in an almost exactly the same accident less than two years later has gottne me contemplative. You cna believe me when I tell you I came home tonight, and hugged my little two year old a little tighter, and told her I love her a little more often tonight than I usually do, and when it came time to put her to bed, we prayed for our friend James, and his daughter too.

We all just take so much for granted, and the reality is, we should never fall into that trap. We should be grateful for the too-high grass, the idiot driver, and all the othe rlittle annoyances we have everyday. We should never take the "I love you's" for granted, or th elittle things we should do for each other, because it can all be gone in the next heartbeat. We should be kind to one-another, always taking each other's frailties, and weaknesses into account, and balancing them against the strengths that each and every one of us has. We should remember the five-year olds that we were once. The wonder and joy that each day, each breath brought into our lives. That five-year old is still there in all of us. We've just learned to cover him or her up, to shelter and protect the innocense and wonder that we all still feel. We should let that out a little bit more.

Be kind to each other, my friends. You never know when one of your friends will be remembering you this way. Hopefully, we all will have friends who care for us, and who'll remember us for the friends that we were.



More stuff about Illegals

This was sent to me by my cousin - Note that I have not included my opinion, or editorialized this in any way. I'm reposting this for the conversational value. I agree that this is a major issue, but have not come to a set conclusion as to what, if anything, should really be done to address the issue. What do you good people think?

Quoted E-mail follows:

RIDICULOUS!


It's time we wake up. Listening to the Partisan "politicals ", I have been hammered with the propaganda that it is the Iraq war and the war on terror that is bankrupting us. I now find that to be
RIDICULOUS.

Now .... I hope the following 14 reasons are forwarded over and over again until they are read so many times that the reader gets sick of reading them. I have included the URL's for verification of all the following facts.

1. $11 Billion to $22 billion is spent on welfare to illegal aliens each year.
http://tinyurl.com/zob77

2. $2.2 Billion dollars a year is spent on food assistance programs, such as food stamps, WIC and free school lunches for illegal aliens.
http://www.cis.org/articles/2004/fiscalexec.html

3. $2.5 Billion dollars a year is spent on Medicaid for illegal aliens.
http://www.cis.org/articles/2004/fiscalexec.html

4. $12 Billion dollars a year is spent on primary and secondary school education for children here illegally and they cannot speak a word of English!
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0604/01/ldt.0.html

5. $17 Billion dollars a year is spent for education for the American-born children of illegal aliens, known as anchor babies.
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0604/01/ ldt.01.html

6. $3 Million Dollars a DAY is spent to incarcerate illegal aliens.
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0604/01/ldt.01.html

7. 30% percent of all Federal Prison inmates are illegal aliens.
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0604/01/ldt.01.html

8. $90 Billion Dollars a year is spent on illegal aliens for Welfare &social services by the American taxpayers.
http://premium.cnn.com/TRANSCIPTS/0610/29/ldt.0! 1.html

9. $200 Billion Dollars a year in suppressed American wages are caused by the illegal aliens.
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0604/01/ldt.01.html

10. The illegal aliens in the United States have a crime rate that's two and a half times that of white non-illegal aliens. In particular, their children, are going to make a huge additional crime problem in the US.
http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0606/12/ldt.01.html

11. During the year of 2005 there were 4 to 10 MILLION illegal aliens that crossed our Southern Border also, as many as 19,500 illegal aliens from Terrorist Countries. Millions of pounds of drugs, cocaine, meth, heroine and marijuana, crossed into the U. S from the Southern border. Homeland Security Report:
http://tinyurl.com/t9sht

12. The National Policy Institute, "estimated that the total cost of mass deportation would be between $206 and $230 billion or an average cost of between $41 and $46 billion annually over a five year period."
http://www.nationalpolicyinstitute.org/pdf/deportation.pdf

13. In 2006 illegal aliens sent home $45 BILLION in remittances back to their countries of origin.
http://www.rense.com/general75/niht.htm

14. "The Dark Side of Illegal Immigration: Nearly One Million Sex Crimes Committed by Illegal Immigrants In The United States ".
http://www.drdsk.com/articleshtml


The total cost is a whopping $ 338.3 BILLION DOLLARS A YEAR Are we THAT stupid to let this go on?

Thursday, January 3, 2008

UH-OH!!!!

Folks, my infernal 'puter crashed just before Christmas, and I just got it back in working condition yesterday, so to all of you, a Belated Merry Christmas and Happy New Year from me!