Hereafter follows the post wherein some of my background is revealed. No, I'm no Lamont Cranston, but it's a start.
I'm 34. I'm a husband (going on 3 years), a homeowner, a father-to-be, a patent attorney, and a newly-hired federal employee. I wasn't always any of those things, in fact all of those titles recently became applicable. Like many, the law is my second career, although given all that I've gone through to make it a reality, and the extent to which I enjoy it, I really hope it's the last career I choose to pursue.
In my previous life, I monitored, audited, and managed clinical research for the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industries; I did that for about eight years, thoroughly enjoyed it, and gained a newfound respect for some companies, professionals, and the way they do business. By no stretch of the imagination is it a perfect industry; the media has done a semi-decent job of covering some of the more egregious issues concerning the sales, marketing, and general ethics of the players, but in general the adages of apples and cockroaches apply. It only takes one bad one to spoil the public perception of the entire industry; and if you find one, you can be pretty sure that there are hundreds more lurking in the shadows.
Now, this may somewhat qualify as self-promotion, given my background, but Shakespeare got it wrong; the last thing a responsible society ought to do is kill all the lawyers. Consulting with a good one, and then actually following their advice, can go a long way to keeping one out of trouble. Not all attorneys are concerned with getting you out of a jam once you're in it; the best ones can tell you how to avoid the problem in the first place. The world really NEEDS more GOOD lawyers; they help far more than they harm.
And so it is with a bit of dismay that I read about or overhear people decrying the state of the world and placing at least part of the blame at the feet of attorneys and pharmaceutical companies. Just as not all of either are saints, so too are not all of either sinners, and we should perhaps withhold judgment until all the facts are in. More importantly, we may want to consider whether perhaps judgments made previously weren't accurate, in light of additional information, and that basing a change in one's position when based on such new information may in fact be a virtue rather than a weakness. People are inherently fallible and mistake-prone. I hate to sound like a lawyer (OK, not really), but if you can convince me you've a solid foundation for your position, and can back that up with independently verifiable facts, you're going to go a long way towards persuading me you may have something. The key to that process, because it is a process, is the ability to independently research and verify facts in support of or contrary to your chosen position. "The Google" helps somewhat, but in terms of broader issues and topics, that's something that the media traditionally provided, given their specialization and their resources supposedly committed to that precise task. Its an open question whether media consolidation and corporate ownership thereof has helped or harmed that core role, but it certainly seems as though less resources are committed to reporting than are committed towards selling what is being reported, to the detriment of public knowledge and discourse. When more media time is dedicated to the previous night's "American Idol" results than deliberations over the 4th Amendment implications of retroactive telecom immunity, and just what sort of activity would require such immunity, we may have passed some critical tipping point.
Because remember, whatever the industry, the goal of any publicly held corporation is the same; return value to shareholders. All public corporations sell something or another, whether it be drugs, airtime, information, or whatever. The important question to ask is whether the benefits of their products outweigh the harm they may create. If there is little benefit provided, it isn't hard to tip those scales the wrong way. Think about that the next time your local newscast spends half their time talking about the latest missing white woman with wealthy parents, the latest quasi-celebrity admitted to rehab, or a car accident ten states away.
Where's the value in that, unless you're an ad salesman concerned with ratings?
Sunday, February 24, 2008
Friday, February 15, 2008
Absence; Making the Heart Grow Fonder?
Yes, I've been a bad biped, and haven't posted or moderated in a while. I do have a few excuses, and will make up for my absence later, but a few things:
I bought a house (OK, we bought a house, same difference when you're married).
I found out I'm having a daughter, and she doesn't appear to be genetically defective, at least so far as an amniocentesis can tell. I'm sure she'll act like a dork, but at least we'll know it's not the result of a genetic defect, just plain old genetics. Betting has now opened as to whether she's going to take after her father and be a chemist/scientist, or take after her mother and, well, not. To me, this is the best news ever. I wanted a daughter; at least now I'll a) stand a chance of being her favorite; and b) always be "daddy," at least to someone. Freaking awesome. I'm off to buy a shotgun. Boys, you've been warned.
I've become a federal employee. Technically, it isn't concrete; I haven't received the letter from HR, but it looks like I'm joining the ranks of patent examiners down at the USPTO in Alexandria, VA. Yes, I'll be taking Amtrak every morning, at least until I can start working from home. Rock on.
More to come, including greater detail. Best of all, it looks like Karma has begun to recognize my friends; Congrats, WW!
I bought a house (OK, we bought a house, same difference when you're married).
I found out I'm having a daughter, and she doesn't appear to be genetically defective, at least so far as an amniocentesis can tell. I'm sure she'll act like a dork, but at least we'll know it's not the result of a genetic defect, just plain old genetics. Betting has now opened as to whether she's going to take after her father and be a chemist/scientist, or take after her mother and, well, not. To me, this is the best news ever. I wanted a daughter; at least now I'll a) stand a chance of being her favorite; and b) always be "daddy," at least to someone. Freaking awesome. I'm off to buy a shotgun. Boys, you've been warned.
I've become a federal employee. Technically, it isn't concrete; I haven't received the letter from HR, but it looks like I'm joining the ranks of patent examiners down at the USPTO in Alexandria, VA. Yes, I'll be taking Amtrak every morning, at least until I can start working from home. Rock on.
More to come, including greater detail. Best of all, it looks like Karma has begun to recognize my friends; Congrats, WW!
Tuesday, January 8, 2008
Monday, December 24, 2007
Of Thoroughbreds, Artistes, Drafthorses, and Enigma(e)...
Lounging on the couch this Sunday past, watching my Iggles screw up yet again by winning now that they've been eliminated from playoff contention (thereby costing precious draft position) I heard the sound I've learned precedes nothing good.
Tap, tap, tap, tap.
I knew it was going to be a long afternoon, because my wife has an interesting habit, or tic, depending on how you look at these things. When irritated to the point of fury, she taps her foot. Forcefully. Rhythmically. Continually. Her students recognize this as a sign they have gone too far. I've come to recognize this as my last chance to get the hell out of her way for a while. She's generally not an intimidating woman, all five feet and two inches of her petite self, but having survived the crucible of inner-city high schools, she can command a room. She can also flay the flesh from your bones should your transgression warrant it.
This was my situation; I had done something to stoke the fire of her fury, the trick was figuring out what I had done to quickly diffuse the situation before hell was unleashed.
"What is it, Boo?"
"You didn't buy molasses. We need molasses to make the cookies. You also didn't get enough flour, sugar, and eggs to double all the recipes."
Setting aside for the moment the fact that "we" weren't making cookies, that this was in fact yet another Quixotic quest she insists on making every year, I shifted into lawyer mode. Recognizing a false premise when one stares me in the face, I aimed to undermine the substance of her argument that I had failed her, somehow.
“Well, hon, did you put the molasses on the list, and how much of everything are we short?”
Well, to make a long story short, the problem came to differing definitions as to what “doubling” meant. Silly me, I though it meant you’d take everything and multiply by a factor of two; hence “double.” Using my “old math,” we did in fact have everything we needed, considering that we’d made one batch of each cookie the previous weekend. With the raw materials on hand, we could make another single batch of each dough, thereby raising our total production to double that of the original recipe.
Apparently, she wanted to make ANOTHER double batch, effectively tripling the recipe. This she neglected to mention, choosing instead to rely on my highly evolved mental abilities to pluck that single word out of her active dura mater. I am a great many things, psychic I am not. I long ago stopped trying to read her mind, choosing to instead rely on actual communication, be it spoken or written. I am happy to serve as her own Sancho Panza, but I need to know where we’re heading to do so. We each operate differently, and there’s nothing wrong with that, but a recognition of our preferred modes of operation is critical to effectively getting along
Thus, we reach the tie-in with the post title. I am a Drafthorse; my wife, an Artiste. I look to the things to be accomplished, see what needs to be done in order to efficiently accomplish everything without killing myself, organize what I need in order to accomplish the task as quickly as possible, drop my shoulder and push to get it done, mostly so I can get back to entertaining myself or relaxing. I don’t tend to get distracted, but then again I tend to miss a lot of the minutiae that may become important later. It gets done quickly and cleanly, but it’s not going to be Monet, Manet, or any other –et for that matter. The important thing, to my mind, is that it’s done and I can move on. Good enough is often just that. That’s a Drafthorse in a nutshell.
My wife, on the other hand, is an Artiste; everything must be just so for her to begin her work, and then the work only begins if the muse has struck her appropriately. Details tend to get worked out during the course of getting the job done; planning often overlooks or fails to take into consideration exactly everything that’s required. Procrastination often raises it’s ugly head, and that’s exacerbated by the fact that she insists on taking on entirely too much. She wants to make everyone happy, and when she’s done, the results are remarkable; you will have a work of art on your hands, and nine times out of ten it’s worth the wait. Maybe not the drama in getting there, but definitely the wait.
That got me thinking about the types of people in this wide world, and a few moments of contemplation distilled into four categories; the afore mentioned Drafthorses and Artistes, the Enigmas and Thoroughbreds.
You instantly recognize an Enigma any time you’re prompted to think “how the hell did they pull that one off?” This happens a lot in law school. I have a few Enigma friends, some who know they are and happily live with that knowledge, and others who simply have no clue. About anything. Nevertheless, there they are succeeding, while the rest of us gape and wonder WTF?
We all know thoroughbreds. They’re the asses who excel at absolutely everything, inspiring envy, wonder, and sometimes hatred simultaneously. Run a marathon in their spare time, rebuild engine blocks, file taxes for senior citizens, leap small buildings in a single bound, you know the type. More impressively is the fact that they do all of these things effortlessly. Bastards.
So, it all about recognizing not what other people want, or what you want other people to do, but how you need to communicate what you need. It turns out that there was nothing more than a simple miscommunication between the two of us. Nothing on the level of parsing he meaning of the word “is,” but a significant miscommunication nonetheless. I’d like to think that this moment of clarity will help our relationship grow and mature as we enter this next stage of life together.
But it didn’t save me from heading out to get more eggs.
Tap, tap, tap, tap.
I knew it was going to be a long afternoon, because my wife has an interesting habit, or tic, depending on how you look at these things. When irritated to the point of fury, she taps her foot. Forcefully. Rhythmically. Continually. Her students recognize this as a sign they have gone too far. I've come to recognize this as my last chance to get the hell out of her way for a while. She's generally not an intimidating woman, all five feet and two inches of her petite self, but having survived the crucible of inner-city high schools, she can command a room. She can also flay the flesh from your bones should your transgression warrant it.
This was my situation; I had done something to stoke the fire of her fury, the trick was figuring out what I had done to quickly diffuse the situation before hell was unleashed.
"What is it, Boo?"
"You didn't buy molasses. We need molasses to make the cookies. You also didn't get enough flour, sugar, and eggs to double all the recipes."
Setting aside for the moment the fact that "we" weren't making cookies, that this was in fact yet another Quixotic quest she insists on making every year, I shifted into lawyer mode. Recognizing a false premise when one stares me in the face, I aimed to undermine the substance of her argument that I had failed her, somehow.
“Well, hon, did you put the molasses on the list, and how much of everything are we short?”
Well, to make a long story short, the problem came to differing definitions as to what “doubling” meant. Silly me, I though it meant you’d take everything and multiply by a factor of two; hence “double.” Using my “old math,” we did in fact have everything we needed, considering that we’d made one batch of each cookie the previous weekend. With the raw materials on hand, we could make another single batch of each dough, thereby raising our total production to double that of the original recipe.
Apparently, she wanted to make ANOTHER double batch, effectively tripling the recipe. This she neglected to mention, choosing instead to rely on my highly evolved mental abilities to pluck that single word out of her active dura mater. I am a great many things, psychic I am not. I long ago stopped trying to read her mind, choosing to instead rely on actual communication, be it spoken or written. I am happy to serve as her own Sancho Panza, but I need to know where we’re heading to do so. We each operate differently, and there’s nothing wrong with that, but a recognition of our preferred modes of operation is critical to effectively getting along
Thus, we reach the tie-in with the post title. I am a Drafthorse; my wife, an Artiste. I look to the things to be accomplished, see what needs to be done in order to efficiently accomplish everything without killing myself, organize what I need in order to accomplish the task as quickly as possible, drop my shoulder and push to get it done, mostly so I can get back to entertaining myself or relaxing. I don’t tend to get distracted, but then again I tend to miss a lot of the minutiae that may become important later. It gets done quickly and cleanly, but it’s not going to be Monet, Manet, or any other –et for that matter. The important thing, to my mind, is that it’s done and I can move on. Good enough is often just that. That’s a Drafthorse in a nutshell.
My wife, on the other hand, is an Artiste; everything must be just so for her to begin her work, and then the work only begins if the muse has struck her appropriately. Details tend to get worked out during the course of getting the job done; planning often overlooks or fails to take into consideration exactly everything that’s required. Procrastination often raises it’s ugly head, and that’s exacerbated by the fact that she insists on taking on entirely too much. She wants to make everyone happy, and when she’s done, the results are remarkable; you will have a work of art on your hands, and nine times out of ten it’s worth the wait. Maybe not the drama in getting there, but definitely the wait.
That got me thinking about the types of people in this wide world, and a few moments of contemplation distilled into four categories; the afore mentioned Drafthorses and Artistes, the Enigmas and Thoroughbreds.
You instantly recognize an Enigma any time you’re prompted to think “how the hell did they pull that one off?” This happens a lot in law school. I have a few Enigma friends, some who know they are and happily live with that knowledge, and others who simply have no clue. About anything. Nevertheless, there they are succeeding, while the rest of us gape and wonder WTF?
We all know thoroughbreds. They’re the asses who excel at absolutely everything, inspiring envy, wonder, and sometimes hatred simultaneously. Run a marathon in their spare time, rebuild engine blocks, file taxes for senior citizens, leap small buildings in a single bound, you know the type. More impressively is the fact that they do all of these things effortlessly. Bastards.
So, it all about recognizing not what other people want, or what you want other people to do, but how you need to communicate what you need. It turns out that there was nothing more than a simple miscommunication between the two of us. Nothing on the level of parsing he meaning of the word “is,” but a significant miscommunication nonetheless. I’d like to think that this moment of clarity will help our relationship grow and mature as we enter this next stage of life together.
But it didn’t save me from heading out to get more eggs.
Tuesday, December 11, 2007
Things That Are, and Aren't
Most of us are at least passingly familiar with the litany of changes that accompany pregnancy. The obvious alteration of outward appearance, weight gain, hormonal changes, various pains and discomforts. From what I understand, the mother-to-be also experiences some kinds of side effects owing to her role in the pregnancy.
I kid, I kid.
In all seriousness, all of us have friends, or family members, who have gone through this who verify that yes, there's a lot of stuff that goes along with the obvious. For whatever reason, and I am furiously knocking on what I hope is wood while typing this, my wife has experienced none of these. Yet. Did I just jinx myself? To review:
1) Morning Sickness. Have heard this is terrible. In fact, it can, in extreme cases (hyperemesis gravidarum) lead to profound dehydration, even death. That’s what led Merrell Dow to develop Bendectin, people with deformed babies who took Bendectin to blame Merrell Dow, Merrell Dow to subsequently remove it from the US market (while it remains FDA approved, is widely available outside of the US, and the US has no effective treatment for morning sickness available), and the Supreme Court to issue my favorite opinion related to the law of evidence, Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals. Up yours, Frye! I know. I have serious issues. My wife, however, does not, at least regarding this particular side effect, except for;
2) Appetite Alteration. The baby hates coffee. At least that’s what the wife thinks, since the only time she has “retention issues” is immediately following her morning half-cup of coffee. And before you militants out there get indignant (“COFFEE! WHILE SHE’S PREGNANT? UNFIT! UNFIT!!), the wife has EXPLICIT APPROVAL from HER BOARD-CERTIFIED OBSTETRICIAN. The conversation, to which I was not privy, in relation went something like this:
Wife: “well, what do I need to avoid, now that I’m pregnant?”
Doc: “Well, is there anything in particular you’re concerned about?”
Wife: “I really like wine, and I really need coffee.”
Doc: “Eh, nothing wrong with a cup every morning, and a glass every now and then.”
Wife: “Really?”
Doc: “Is lying to you really worth losing my license, given that your husband is an fear-inducing and omnipotent attorney? I just peed myself a little thinking about him.”
OK, I made that last part up, but everything else is a fair approximation of what actually took place. By and large, we (meaning American parents) have transmogrified into a bunch of whining pussies hell-bent on protecting our kids from as many ill as possible. For the love of god, my mother drank a beer a day while breastfeeding me – common medical wisdom of the time holding that brewer’s yeast was good for lactation. Or maybe my mom was a lush, I’m really not sure. I am, and I think our doc is as well, of the Benjamin Franklin school of parenting; all things in moderation. Stop and think before you act, but don’t develop a complex about it. If you don’t approve of my methods, see yesterday’s post.
Oh, the kid doesn’t like ice cream, either. What the hell is wrong with them? This better not be a trend.
3) Internal Movement. This one is a little discomfiting. Because we’re still relatively early in the process, the Wife not feeling the kid moving around isn’t that odd; after all, they’re the size of a peanut at this point (giving rise to perhaps what is destined to be their unfortunate nickname once born) and can’t move a lot of their surroundings. However, and the ultrasound bears this one out, they’re swimming like a fish. That son-of-a-gun was turning somersaults while the Wife was watching. She felt nothing, though. That’s not gonna last, is it?
4) Hormonal Changes. OK, here’s where the Wife is manifesting her pregnancy. Not so much with the mood swings, for which I remain profoundly grateful, but with her complexion. The Wife is a beautiful woman, who is constantly and consistently mistaken for someone at least ten years her junior. Now that she is nearly constantly broken out with facial acne, we could probably go for twenty years her junior. I don’t notice these things (Heck, I hardly notice when she gets a haircut; not because I don’t care, but because I’m not looking for it. And I don’t care.), but she has officially begun Freaking Out About It. It’s temporary, right? Either the acne or the freaking out? Please? Bueller?
All things considered, it’s been smooth sailing so far. My fingers are crossed, I’m thinking about breaking my Church Ban to light a candle, and I may stop by a farm to butcher a goat as a sacrifice to keep it that way. My best efforts aside, I can’t help but feel it’s not really up to me.
I kid, I kid.
In all seriousness, all of us have friends, or family members, who have gone through this who verify that yes, there's a lot of stuff that goes along with the obvious. For whatever reason, and I am furiously knocking on what I hope is wood while typing this, my wife has experienced none of these. Yet. Did I just jinx myself? To review:
1) Morning Sickness. Have heard this is terrible. In fact, it can, in extreme cases (hyperemesis gravidarum) lead to profound dehydration, even death. That’s what led Merrell Dow to develop Bendectin, people with deformed babies who took Bendectin to blame Merrell Dow, Merrell Dow to subsequently remove it from the US market (while it remains FDA approved, is widely available outside of the US, and the US has no effective treatment for morning sickness available), and the Supreme Court to issue my favorite opinion related to the law of evidence, Daubert v. Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals. Up yours, Frye! I know. I have serious issues. My wife, however, does not, at least regarding this particular side effect, except for;
2) Appetite Alteration. The baby hates coffee. At least that’s what the wife thinks, since the only time she has “retention issues” is immediately following her morning half-cup of coffee. And before you militants out there get indignant (“COFFEE! WHILE SHE’S PREGNANT? UNFIT! UNFIT!!), the wife has EXPLICIT APPROVAL from HER BOARD-CERTIFIED OBSTETRICIAN. The conversation, to which I was not privy, in relation went something like this:
Wife: “well, what do I need to avoid, now that I’m pregnant?”
Doc: “Well, is there anything in particular you’re concerned about?”
Wife: “I really like wine, and I really need coffee.”
Doc: “Eh, nothing wrong with a cup every morning, and a glass every now and then.”
Wife: “Really?”
Doc: “Is lying to you really worth losing my license, given that your husband is an fear-inducing and omnipotent attorney? I just peed myself a little thinking about him.”
OK, I made that last part up, but everything else is a fair approximation of what actually took place. By and large, we (meaning American parents) have transmogrified into a bunch of whining pussies hell-bent on protecting our kids from as many ill as possible. For the love of god, my mother drank a beer a day while breastfeeding me – common medical wisdom of the time holding that brewer’s yeast was good for lactation. Or maybe my mom was a lush, I’m really not sure. I am, and I think our doc is as well, of the Benjamin Franklin school of parenting; all things in moderation. Stop and think before you act, but don’t develop a complex about it. If you don’t approve of my methods, see yesterday’s post.
Oh, the kid doesn’t like ice cream, either. What the hell is wrong with them? This better not be a trend.
3) Internal Movement. This one is a little discomfiting. Because we’re still relatively early in the process, the Wife not feeling the kid moving around isn’t that odd; after all, they’re the size of a peanut at this point (giving rise to perhaps what is destined to be their unfortunate nickname once born) and can’t move a lot of their surroundings. However, and the ultrasound bears this one out, they’re swimming like a fish. That son-of-a-gun was turning somersaults while the Wife was watching. She felt nothing, though. That’s not gonna last, is it?
4) Hormonal Changes. OK, here’s where the Wife is manifesting her pregnancy. Not so much with the mood swings, for which I remain profoundly grateful, but with her complexion. The Wife is a beautiful woman, who is constantly and consistently mistaken for someone at least ten years her junior. Now that she is nearly constantly broken out with facial acne, we could probably go for twenty years her junior. I don’t notice these things (Heck, I hardly notice when she gets a haircut; not because I don’t care, but because I’m not looking for it. And I don’t care.), but she has officially begun Freaking Out About It. It’s temporary, right? Either the acne or the freaking out? Please? Bueller?
All things considered, it’s been smooth sailing so far. My fingers are crossed, I’m thinking about breaking my Church Ban to light a candle, and I may stop by a farm to butcher a goat as a sacrifice to keep it that way. My best efforts aside, I can’t help but feel it’s not really up to me.
Monday, December 10, 2007
Word's Spreading, So Now What?
Well, now that the first trimester threshold has come and gone, we're comfortable letting those outside of our immediate family know about what's going on. Some have been told, and others have discovered independently (like, by reading these posts and knowing who I am). Universally, congratulations and support flow into our small yet growing family. Multilaterally, and thankfully NOT universally, unsolicited advice follows.
We are happy to hear about your experiences as a parent, since we've never done this before and it’s a little scary. However, and the wife agrees with me on this point, that does not mean that we want your advice or guidance as to how we should live our lives, unless we are so forward as to ask for it. So, kindly, kindly, keep your advice to yourselves unless and until we ask you, and then don’t be offended if we completely ignore you. We’re reasonably intelligent, observant, inquisitive, and thorough adults, gifted with the security and independence that robust careers and education provide. We appreciate the value of comparable experience, and are more than willing to accept advice thoughtfully given. However, we are not you, and needn’t live our lives according to your plan or template. We’d like to at least attempt to handle this, as much as we are able, on our own. That being said, we understand our limits and are hardly too proud to seek help when its needed.
That time is not now; we’ll let you know when it is.
It’s a complex world out there, and sometimes, particularly for those kinesthetic learners among us, we need to get our hands dirty before we “get it.” That’s OK, because neither I nor my wife are dumb enough to put our little one in jeopardy in order to learn a lesson on parenting. Are we going to make mistakes? Hell yes, but then so does everyone. That’s life, and your mistakes teach you in a way nothing else can; through experiencing the pain of failure, subsequent success is sweetened. Mmm…alliteration…
Everyone is different, leads different lives, and has a different perspective on how to approach things. That’s a huge benefit of being a parent yourself; within certain (extraordinarily broad) bounds, we get to raise our kids however the hell we want. Maybe our son will take ballet. Maybe our daughter’s first toy will be a construction set. Maybe we’ll all learn to play the bagpipes and fire them up in our backyard at 5 AM on a Tuesday.
Our kid, and we’re entitled to a little leeway in how we raise them. If you keep your mouth shut, I’ll do the same. Something my father told me about people in glass houses and all…
And for the love of god, don’t touch a pregnant woman’s belly unless she consents. Otherwise, that’s battery. I know, I’m a lawyer, and I’d have no compunction about haling your ass into court to make a point.
We are happy to hear about your experiences as a parent, since we've never done this before and it’s a little scary. However, and the wife agrees with me on this point, that does not mean that we want your advice or guidance as to how we should live our lives, unless we are so forward as to ask for it. So, kindly, kindly, keep your advice to yourselves unless and until we ask you, and then don’t be offended if we completely ignore you. We’re reasonably intelligent, observant, inquisitive, and thorough adults, gifted with the security and independence that robust careers and education provide. We appreciate the value of comparable experience, and are more than willing to accept advice thoughtfully given. However, we are not you, and needn’t live our lives according to your plan or template. We’d like to at least attempt to handle this, as much as we are able, on our own. That being said, we understand our limits and are hardly too proud to seek help when its needed.
That time is not now; we’ll let you know when it is.
It’s a complex world out there, and sometimes, particularly for those kinesthetic learners among us, we need to get our hands dirty before we “get it.” That’s OK, because neither I nor my wife are dumb enough to put our little one in jeopardy in order to learn a lesson on parenting. Are we going to make mistakes? Hell yes, but then so does everyone. That’s life, and your mistakes teach you in a way nothing else can; through experiencing the pain of failure, subsequent success is sweetened. Mmm…alliteration…
Everyone is different, leads different lives, and has a different perspective on how to approach things. That’s a huge benefit of being a parent yourself; within certain (extraordinarily broad) bounds, we get to raise our kids however the hell we want. Maybe our son will take ballet. Maybe our daughter’s first toy will be a construction set. Maybe we’ll all learn to play the bagpipes and fire them up in our backyard at 5 AM on a Tuesday.
Our kid, and we’re entitled to a little leeway in how we raise them. If you keep your mouth shut, I’ll do the same. Something my father told me about people in glass houses and all…
And for the love of god, don’t touch a pregnant woman’s belly unless she consents. Otherwise, that’s battery. I know, I’m a lawyer, and I’d have no compunction about haling your ass into court to make a point.
Wednesday, November 28, 2007
And I "Need" That Why, Exactly?
So, now that the immediate family knows of our impending parenthood, and couldn't be happier or more surprised, we've entered a new phase of our relationship. The one where everyone in the world starts giving us advice. As novice parents-to-be, to a certain extent this is great; I have no idea what's going on, so a little friendly guidance is much appreciated. That my mother was a nurse for the better part of 30 years (as well as a mother of two), and my sister is a licensed occupational therapist makes their insight even more persuasive.
However, I don't need a dissertation of all the things I'll need to do, look out for, or for damn sure have to go out and buy, at least at this particular juncture. Needless to say, that hasn't stopped everyone from doing it anyway. As the first of what I'm sure will be an ongoing series, I give you "Modern Childrearing Implements You Never Knew Existed."
Exhibit 1: The "Boppy"
Don't ask. Apparently, it's to support the kid while feeding, and to help muscle development when they're learning to sit up. Me? I thought it was a neck pillow.
Exhibit 2: The "Baby Bjorn"
Those crazy Swedes. What will they think of next? The adorably boxy Volvoes of my youth, the frustratingly odd location of the ignition on all cars Saab, lutefisk, and now this; You know, for kids. Apparently, it's for carrying your kid around, either in the "puke on me" (facing inward) or "puke on you" (facing outward) positions.
Exhibit 3: The Car Seat
Apparently, even though I'll only have one kid, I'll need three of these; one "infant," one "toddler," one "booster." If you ask me, this can all be avoided by the liberal use of bubblewrap and duct tape. Of course it's legal; I'm an attorney.
It's going to be a long seven months.
However, I don't need a dissertation of all the things I'll need to do, look out for, or for damn sure have to go out and buy, at least at this particular juncture. Needless to say, that hasn't stopped everyone from doing it anyway. As the first of what I'm sure will be an ongoing series, I give you "Modern Childrearing Implements You Never Knew Existed."
Exhibit 1: The "Boppy"
Don't ask. Apparently, it's to support the kid while feeding, and to help muscle development when they're learning to sit up. Me? I thought it was a neck pillow.
Exhibit 2: The "Baby Bjorn"
Those crazy Swedes. What will they think of next? The adorably boxy Volvoes of my youth, the frustratingly odd location of the ignition on all cars Saab, lutefisk, and now this; You know, for kids. Apparently, it's for carrying your kid around, either in the "puke on me" (facing inward) or "puke on you" (facing outward) positions.
Exhibit 3: The Car Seat
Apparently, even though I'll only have one kid, I'll need three of these; one "infant," one "toddler," one "booster." If you ask me, this can all be avoided by the liberal use of bubblewrap and duct tape. Of course it's legal; I'm an attorney.
It's going to be a long seven months.
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