Tag Archives: parenting

Those Kids and Their Silly Jibber Jabber

Sometimes I feel silly writing parenting blog posts. Mostly because they’re about my teenage daughter, and I am fully aware of the fact that I am way too young to have a teenage daughter. But I have her, and like it or not*, she’s here to stay.

Despite my beauty and youth, however, I am often made to feel old and out of touch by many elements of my daughter’s day-to-day life. One such element in my apparent loss of fashion sense – the childish fantasies I had of sharing a wardrobe with my someday daughter never came to pass, mostly because I wouldn’t be caught dead in what she likes (and vice versa, I’m sure, but I’m pretty hot so I don’t worry about it that much).

What’s really made me feel a million years old recently though is the slang I hear coming out of her face. It’s just so stupid that I want to eat nails. Here are a few examples:

  • Legit. Legit is a word that teenagers nowadays are using in inappropriate contexts, to emphasize the… legitimacy of their statements. For instance: “Okay so when I got off the bus I legit stepped in a puddle,” or “that boy is such a nerd, he legit plays chess in the caf.”
  • Awks. Abbreviation for the word awkward. Often used in its place, or on it’s own as a one-word indicator of just how ridiculously fucking awkward they are, feel or consider the situation to be.
  • ROFL. Now we all know what this means on the internet – Rolling on the Floor Laughing. It’s been around since day one. But what you might not know is that kids are now verbally saying ROFL instead of actually rolling on the floor laughing. They pronounce it “raw-full“. They usually say it with a straight face to demonstrate how “scene” they are and then get very angry when you implement Operation ROFL’s Plan B (forced rolling/laughing by way of armpit tickle).
  • Loafting. I actually overheard my daughter use this term (via eavesdropping) a few weeks ago in a discussion with her girlfriend about how lazy said girlfriend’s boyfriend’s best friend’s little sister is. “Everytime I see her at school she’s just loafting around in the halls…” was as much as she was able to get out of her mouth before I burst through the door and demanded to know what the hell that stupid word meant. She looked at me like I was a third-grade dropout and replied, “it’s not even slang, Mom. Look it up. It means a slothful person who just bums around doing nothing.” I stared at her in disbelief before replying, “DO YOU MEAN LOAFING? IS THAT THE WORD YOU MEAN? YOUR ENTIRE SHIT-FOR-BRAINS GENERATION ADDED A SUPERFLUOUS LETTER T TO A PERFECTLY FUNCTIONAL WORD AND YOU’RE LOOKING AT ME LIKE I’M THE CRAZY ONE? Blahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh!”
  • True. Another real word used inappropriately, most often to convey assent or agreement. Me: “Gwen Junior, your turquoise Manic Panic hair dye has stained the bathroom sink. Go scrub it right now or you can’t go on the internet.” Gwen Junior: “True.”

Someday, I’ll be cool again – when my daughter’s my age and she’s busy freaking out over how stupid her kids sound. Silly kids and their jibber jabber. Back in my day…

* Most of the time I like it… she’s generally pretty rad.

Here’s What I Think

So my teenage daughter and I had a wee skerfuffle today, and she dropped a couple of F-bombs. Not one to let anger get the better of me, I simply replied as follows:

This accomplished a few things: it broke the tension, it gave me the opportunity to teach her the meaning of a couple of new words (linguistic and inarticulate, the latter of which she guessed on her own with some prompting of course), and it allowed me to share a rare bit of wisdom with her: that there are far more intelligent ways of making one’s displeasure known.

Now if only I could practice what I preach :)

The Ghost of Christmas Past

When I was a kid, Christmas was always a really big deal. We started decorating early – usually by the first week of December the farm house was all decked out in tacky holiday glory. My dad kept every single bullshit kindergarten painting I did, and up on the walls with masking tape went my blue snowflakes, bonhommes de neige, fat ugly reindeer and mangers.

Yes, mangers. Because I’m Catholic. Well, sort of. I kind of feel like God himself will strike me dead with a lightning bolt every time I tell someone I’m Catholic, because I figure he’s probably pretty pissed that I would dare call myself that. I haven’t stepped foot in a confessional since I was thirteen years old, I had a brief dalliance with paganism inspired by a teenage crush on Neve Campbell, and since my early twenties have laughingly suggested to likeminded thinkers and shocked churchgoers alike that I’d rather believe in Santa than God because I’ve never gotten a My Little Pony doll from the big man upstairs.

But I digress. Where was I? Right, Christmas.

Growing up on the farm in Northern Ontario, Christmas was very much a family affair. Grandma and Grandpa lived next door, and none of the aunts, uncles and cousins were more than a half hour away, so we spent every holiday together. We’d have supper at Grandma’s, then play upstairs with our cousins (more on our naughty shenanigans another day), and around eleven at night, everyone piled into their cars and a convoy of Styleses went to midnight mass.

What was midnight mass like? Don’t ask me, little girls like me were never able to stay awake. I expect it was worse in my church, too… it being French-Canadian and Catholic, there was actually quite a bit of Latin prayer and hymns. Kids who can’t understand what’s going on can’t pay attention. They either misbehave or fall asleep, and since corporal punishment in church wasn’t really unusual, I was one of the latter.

When my dad carried us into the house after mass, we sleepily had a bedtime snack while my parents set out the cookies and milk for Santa, and the carrots and bowl of sugar for the reindeer. Then we went off to bed. For us, there was never any of that can’t-sleep Christmas Eve anticipation.

Hey, parents: want your kids to stop driving you crazy Christmas Eve with their inability and/or unwillingness to shut up and go to sleep already so you can have one goddamn drink to stave off the complete festive bullshit your life has become? Dudes, make them go to church at midnight. For serious.

Christmas is different now. My ex was allergic to tack, so I’ve really had to rein in my wild trailer park decorating ways. Gone are the multicoloured lights, plastic Santa Clauses, snowman candles, red and green doilies, paper chain steamers, pre-lit lawn ornaments, four-foot musical trumpeting angel, and sentinel front door candy canes of my childhood, and heaven help me should anyone catch me listening to Christmas carols on the radio. While our current, grown-up holiday decor is understated, classy and quite beautiful, I do long for the trailer trashy days of yore.

Well, sometimes I long for them. Otherwise I remember how truly tacky and hideous it all looked and am glad for my classy 7′ slim Tuscan pine decorated in a simple and elegant red-and-gold scheme and clear twinkle lights, my beautiful poinsetta arrangements, and my lovely collection of vintage Christmas cocktail napkins from the 60′s.

Still, though, I wonder if I’d still be the only one in the house with an ounce of Christmas spirit if things weren’t just a little… in your face.

Crying Baby In Department Store

I witnessed something recently that angered me to no end. Now I’m all ramped up about it and I want to know what you would do.

I went to Winner’s at College Park during my lunch break, and there was a baby in the store crying incessantly. The baby sounded young, and it kinda sounded like there was something wrong (these were pretty angry/painful shrieks). My first thought was, “I gotta get the hell out of this store before that kid drives me nuts.” I didn’t spend any time wondering what was wrong with the baby – it wasn’t any of my business.

Then all of a sudden I heard a raised voice: “She doesn’t WANT a bottle or a diaper change. She just doesn’t like her stroller, you nosy little BITCH!” I saw a woman walking away quickly saying, “Fine, SORRY!”

Throughout the store, people were starting to talk about this woman and her baby. It was getting kind of ridiculous. People were criticizing the mother for not being more attentive, speculating out loud that there was something wrong with the baby, and that it was being neglected, basically just gabbing and gossiping about the situation.

As I got into the line for the checkout, I noticed a small crows of people at the front of the store. In the centre of the crowd were the mother, the screaming infant… and three security guards, who proceeded to escort her and her child out of the store. Meanwhile, another woman is ranting to a man who I assume was a manager, about how she felt bad about calling security but that she “just honestly felt like the woman was neglecting her baby and that she felt she’d done the right thing.” I didn’t bother eavesdropping further, so I don’t know what the manager said in reply.

Now, I know that there are two sides to this story. On one hand:

  • The baby did sound distressed
  • The noise was disturbing all the other shoppers
  • It’s possible, I suppose, that the baby was being neglected
  • Theoretically, calling the authorities when you suspect child abuse or neglect is the right thing to do.
On the other hand:
  • Nobody knows why that baby was crying
  • It might have been teething, colicky or overtired
  • Even mothers who have teething, colicky, overtired children have to shop sometimes
  • It was nobody’s damn business!
So, my question to you is: HOW DO YOU FEEL ABOUT THE ACTIONS TAKEN BY THE COLLEGE PARK SECURITY OFFICERS WHO THREW A MOTHER AND SCREAMING CHILD OUT OF A DEPARTMENT STORE BECAUSE THE NOISE WAS DISTURBING OTHER SHOPPERS?