Wednesday, February 6, 2008

Better Parenting thru Child Abuse

Inspired by my life-long friend Mark Caddell, when my son Alec turned 13, I took him aside and had one of those father-son quality moments where we bonded. I told him about a very special movie that I wanted him to watch.

"What is it," he asked? He looked up at me expectantly, listening to my every word with great reverence.

"It’s a movie that changed my life. It made me a better man. It’s the story of a poor black sharecropper and his rise from poverty to become a millionaire with his own disco and his own disco friends."

"What is it," he asked again?

"It’s a movie called The Jerk starring Steve Martin."
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He never forgave me. I warped his fragile little mind. But that’s what dads do. Hopefully, someday, he’ll take his son aside and tell him of the magical movie that changed his life when it was released in 1980. Maybe he’ll tell him the story of how a down-and-out ex-navy pilot, who was shot down during the war, saved an airliner full of passengers when the Captain and co-pilots were incapacitated. He’ll tell his son how the movie Airplane touched him deeply and taught him how to love again.

And the circle of violence continues.

Back then his taste in music was sickening.

My boy was about as sharp as a pound of wet leather. I tried to give him lessons from a music master. "The thing about music," I pronounced loudly and with an overly Texas drawl, "I say, I say, the thing about music is, you can tell a lot from a person by his choice in music. So, this is important.

For instance, the first time I heard a mariachi band I thought, what the fuck happened to Mexicans that would make them do this?" Then I told him how my aunt, who lived in San Miguel for a few years, had a mariachi band play outside her window at daybreak until she paid them $5 a month. I had always suspected those bands were an extortion plot.

Indian (the quick-e-mart kind, not the casino kind) music is like their food post vomit. Then I told him not to do drugs; implying that everyone from India had to be on drugs when they wrote that crap. "You know, the Beatles were fine young boys before the Maharishi filled them full of LSD in the 60's."

"Dad, does America have Indian music?"

"It’s called free-form jazz. Don’t let shithead listen to it. It’s causes seizures in dogs." I told him polka was the oversized retarded German love child of music and if it had an inbred American cousin, that would be Dixieland.

"What’s Dixieland?"

"Okay. I’ll only explain this once. Dixieland is forcing happiness and sunshine up your ass with jackhammer made out of butterfly wishes and Ethel Merman’s early career as a scream singer. And if I ever catch you listening to that crap, you are grounded for life! No driving privileges, no cell phone; you’ll sit in your room alone and stare out the window for months if I catch you with that devil music! Mark my words. I’ll hire a de-programming if that’s what it takes."

"What’s bluegrass?"

"Bluegrass?!? What do you know about bluegrass?"

"Nothing. Honest. I heard a few kids talking about it in school."

"Well, you stay away from it, you hear me boy?!? Bluegrass is how white trash mountain folk serenade their livestock before they fuck ‘em. It’s mostly about sheep and what pretty eyes they have."

My job here is done.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

What on earth are you talking about? Mariachi music is brilliant! My own late, lamented father, who was born in St. Petersburg, Russia, and killed by a moose while crossing the Bering Strait with his Las-Vegas-born mail-order bride and their three small children at the tender age of 97, had a passion for mariachi music that mere mortality could not quell. My brothers and I, who are now successful whale marketers in our hometown of Barrow, Alaska, went on a quest to the Mexican mainland to scatter Dad's ashes - well, we actually never made it further than Corpus Christi before realizing that my brother Dumas had left Dad's ashes going around and around on the baggge carousel in Seattle - we came to realize what a magnificent musical form mariachi is. So do not EVEN diss it, because if you do, we will have to go all whale marketer on your ass.

Affectionately,
Magda

Anonymous said...

Every time I hear the music it brings a tear to my eye. It is a passionate and very moving style of music that only a true musician could understand. I guess you don't see the emotional movement behind each mariachi piece because if you did, you would not be downing such a great work of art, eh?

Sincerely,
Dumas / Barrow, AK

Tommy Korioth said...

Dear Magda,
Salutations. Thanks for your response. I am looking forward to you going whale marketer on my ass. But you wouldn’t be the first. I’ve never been able to say no to whale marketers. The way you process blubber always arouses my blow hole. How do you guys keep finding me?

Anonymous said...

Great BLOG!!!
You have made me smile today.
Thanks for stopping by.

Chana
www.bunnyburrow.com