Oh the frustrations! A tongue-tied kid, wanting badly for wit, timing, and bravado, I never could say the right things to the girls, the toughs, the parents, nobody. Yet as I mature, one by one the missed zingers crystallize. Great spaghetti monster, grant me the power to go back! Permit my return to the most frustrated and botched of childhood conflicts, and I will emerge the imaginary verbal victor.
Childhood Conflicts Re-imagined After 3 Semesters at Reed College:
Clean Your Room!
Dad: Clean your room!
Me: Later. I’m doing something.
Dad: Yes, you are doing something and it’s called cleaning your room.
Me: Cleaning this room? Given the regressive gender roles in this house, I assumed that Mom would just add my room and laundry to the cleaning she does for you.
Dad: Watch it. She’s busy preparing dinner; the Robinsons will be here within the hour.
Me: House guest, in an hour? Will she have time to iron her most festive Burqa?
Dad: You’re the one who ought to hide his little face in shame. Your mother is worried sick Gene Robinson will see this sty of a room and have the house condemned. He works for the city.
Me: Really? Your guest plans to tour my room? Why? So he can report back to the council that we’re in compliance with the regime?
Dad: Save the theatrics – showing guests around one’s home is a normal, polite social convention. Which is more than I can say about the smell in here, what is that?
Me: Mussolini couldn’t have said it better himself. Maybe Mom should iron one of your brown shirts while she’s at it.
Dad: …it’s like cheese, but I definitely don’t want to eat it – is it coming from your feet?
Me: So you’re sure he’s coming up here? Does that not strike you as sick? You offer this Gene Robinson a scotch, only to have him decline until after he’s done perusing my underwear drawer?
Dad: What’s sick is living in this filth.
Me: Does he plan to go through Sheila’s hamper, too? Jesus, where do you meet these fascists?
Dad: You’ve got a pretty smart mouth for someone eliminated in the first round of the spelling bee.
Me: How dare you! That spelling bee was a sham.
Dad: The only sham is that hippie school. Four grand a semester and they can’t teach an eleven year-old to spell the word night.
Me: I can and did spell it: N-I-T-E.
Dad: Incorrect son.
Me: So now you’re a prescriptivist too? That judge was a linguistic Nazi. Countless English speakers acknowledge that N-I-T-E is a perfectly acceptable variant, but he felt entitled to pack them off…
Dad: I’m about to prescribe a size eleven steel-toed suppository. Clean this room. Not tomorrow, T-O-N-I-T-E.
Me: Like mop it?
Dad: Yes genius. Take a mop to the carpet. No, do not mop your room. Just deal with this mess.
Me: Oh so you mean re-order my room?
Dad: I mean for you to return this room to the way it smelled when I bought the house, which makes the room not technically yours, since last time I checked I own still own the place.
Me: Ah, property rights. I suspect you do hold the title to the house, although if you’re going to get all capitalist I think you probably owe Mom big time for unpaid housework.
Dad: I’m going to owe you an unpaid beating if you don’t clean this room.
Me: Clean it with a mop? Or re-order it?
Dad: At least three opened bags of Doritos sit in your sock drawer, but the whereabouts of your socks remains a mystery. And your bed is covered with some sort of magazine clippings. Are you scrap-booking? Or making a collage? Re-order it before I re-order your calendar to permanently grounded.
Me: Well that’s just it Dad. It’s one thing to make a legal claim on this property and ask me to clean it, although why I should be cleaning your property is a whole separate question, but we’ve established that you’re asking me to re-order my living space. As in, make choices about where certain items go in accordance to your preferences.
Dad: You prefer trash on the bed and cheese-like smell?
Me: Yes! You’re asking that I move certain highly-valued artifacts, such as these liner notes on my bed or the panoply of flavored corn chips I’m sampling as part of an experiment, and place them in a location of lower prominence. To reconstruct my most immediate reality so it complies with your perspective. In short, you’re not just asking me to re-order this room, which may be yours, but to alter my very innermost values. Surely that’s going too far?
Dad: Christ on a candy cane. You sound like a Gilmore Girl.
Me: Paris or Rory…wait, how did you? Have you been going through my things? I’ve just been watching those to critique the socio-cultural implications of new family…
Dad: You’ve just been hiding the tapes under your mattress since Season Two. Your poor mother has deluded herself into thinking it’s smut just so she can sleep at night.
Me: Hey, I think someone’s at the door. I’ll get it.
Dad: No, I’ll get it. Clean your room now.
Me: Later.
Dad: Where you lead, I will follow … Anywhere (Anywhere) that you tell me toMe: Ok, ok: right now. Keep your voice down.
Dad: Clean.
On the next installment of Childhood Conflicts Re-imagined:
Childhood Conflicts Re-imagined After a Summer Backpacking Europe:Finish Your Dinner!
Mom: Finish your dinner!
Me: Finish this dinner?
Mom: No, the salad bar at the Golden Corral. Yes, the plate in front of you. Those peas are getting cold.
Me: Ach, the peas. My blunder! I assumed you’d plated these in the Andalusian tradition, as a small dish to share. I hadn’t wanted to seem greedy.
Also coming soon:
Childhood Conflicts Re-imagined After Reading the Complete Works of Thomas Wolfe:Lost in the Richland Mall.
And:
Childhood Conflicts Re-imagined After a Two-Week Voluntour of Nicaragua:Your Poor Mother!


Salon.com
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