I once heard that the definition of insanity was dong the exact
same thing more than once and expecting a different result.
(Strangely enough, this is the same principle that leads to questions
like, “You're pregnant? How did that happen?”)
My son, when asked what he wanted to do for his eleventh birthday,
(I was praying it wouldn't be a party at Chuckie Cheese, I hate that
rat, but kids seem to love him.) didn't hesitate. He wanted to have
a sleepover with a few close friends.
You might recall he had a sleepover with a friend this summer that
ended up with an in depth discussion of Creationism vs Evolution that
morphed into a Star-Wars-themed analysis of wormholes. You also
might be thinking that this lead to the topic of this blog. But,
once I heard about the plan, I had some hard questions for my wife
and son.
“How many is a few?”
“Two, maybe three,” my son answered.
“Will I be allowed to drink?
“Of course,” my wife answered
“Can we add rum to their drinks if they get out of hand?”
“Dad!” That was my son.
“I'm just kidding.” (No, I wasn't)
So, I was perfectly fine with the sleepover concept. The party
would start at six pm. My wife and I could handle two additional
kids until ten pm. We had video games, movies, a tree house, a large
yard, and dek hockey equipment. No, I was not at all worried about
the party.
The part about doing the same thing more than once and expecting a
different outcome was... Well there's no delicate way of putting it.
My wife.
I should have gotten a clue as my son and I were driving home from
dek hockey (Yes, I'm coaching again this season, so expect another
Herb blog post.) and my wife called. “Could I pick up one of my
son's friends?” She was running a little late getting last minute
things for the party.
This is the same woman that volunteered to chaperone my son's
kindergarten Christmas party and somehow, scheduled a root canal for
the same day. Of course, the root canal was scheduled so it wouldn't
interfere with her stuff for the party, but just to be safe, could I
maybe be ready to run over to the school. Shockingly, after her root
canal, she didn't think it would be a good idea to go the Christmas
party. So, I got to start off Christmas being traumatized by a
roomful of five-years hopped up on sugar and Christmas anticipation.
So... My son and I picked up his friend. I asked my son how many
of his friends were going to come over. Two or three had morphed to
five or six. I still wasn't worried. In dek hockey, I can manage
twelve armed and armored kids. (If you're looking for a mental
image, think of a tuna in the middle of a shark feeding frenzy...)
As the kids started to arrive, I couldn't help but notice how
quickly the parents drove off. Their derisive laughter wasn't giving
me much confidence. Eventually, I was looking into the frantic eyes
of five boys that had been looking forward to a sleepover for a long
time.
“Ok guys, here are the options.” As the parental leader,
(since my wife was still out getting those essential last minute
items) it was up to me to keep things organized and under control.
“We have video games, movies, dek hockey or you can play in the
tree house.”
Here was my first mistake. If you give a group of boys several
options, they will choose all of them, each with a different choice.
So, they did all of them. At once. And... it worked. They had
rules that made no sense to anyone over thirteen.
When my wife finally made it home from the last minute shopping
(Apparently, they grew the actual flour that they then ground for the
cake.) she was ready to take over the social activities.
“Did you feed them?”
“Yep.”
“Where's the pizza?”
“Outside.”
“What? Why are the plates still on the table?” In her
senility, she'd gotten out plastic cups and plates for them to eat
off. When the pizza arrived, I did what any sane father would do. I
waited until they ran by in a fairly good re-enactment of Lord of the
Flies. Then I put the pizza boxes and drinks on the driveway. They
would sense their primary food source. Sure enough, I checked back
later and the pizza was gone. I knew they weren't hungry because
there were only a few teeth marks on the pizza boxes.
“Where are they?”
“Outside.”
“What are they doing?”
Sometimes you have to wonder why mothers are even allowed around
sleep-overs with their naïve questions. Next would be something
equally inane like, “Are they all still alive?”
Just then, five overly excited boys ran by in a blur. There was a
tint of purple so I knew my daughter was still keeping up with them.
The primal screams of “KILL HIM!” made my wife blanch enough for
me to remind them of the primary rule. “No killing, guys!”
That was more a guideline. I'd made sure each parent knew of my
80-20 rule. As long as 80% of the kids were still whole in the
morning, it was a success. With 5 kids, that gave me a whole one to
work with. So far, I had plenty of wiggle room, but we still had to
get them to sleep and my wife had canceled my hotel reservation for
the night...
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