30 Sep 2006 12:26 am
It's really late at night after a very long day. I took a look at a friend's entertainment site, I-Mockery.com, and found a classic nugget of a Halloween story. I haven't laughed out loud so hard at something I read online for a very long time, maybe ever. Maybe it's the hour, maybe it's because I have my own daughter, maybe it's the booze (just kidding to those who were shocked by the last statement), but I present:
MY DAUGHTER'S HALLOWEEN-THEMED BIRTHDAY PARTY
--by Max Burbank--
Originally Published on I-Mockery
[Edited for content]
My Daughter decided recently that she wanted to have a Halloween theme for her Birthday party, and since this October features a very spooky Friday the 13th, that would be the ideal day to have it. I should explain, my daughter's birthday is in June. You may think that means her Mother and I are bad, lazy parents, but wait until you have kids of your own. She's lucky to get food, clothing, shelter and the occasional kind word, let alone a party within six months of her Birthday. If you think you'd do any better, you have a maximum of one child. And since you're here on I-Mockery, chances are high you'll never get kissed without saving your allowance for months, let alone reproduce.
Now, you might think my Daughter's desire for a Halloween Birthday party means she's some sullen little Goth, or worse still, a Wiccan, which in my book comes just after Hippie and just before Republican. Well, not under my roof, gentle reader. **** that noise. Pardon my French.
We live in Salem Massachusetts, the city so nice we based our entire economy on exploiting the tragic, state sanctioned murder of innocents based on invisible evidence only a gaggle of Teenage girls could see. Everyone here does Halloween up seriously. Well, not the guy that spends the entire month of October on the common with a very nice painting of Hell hung around his neck passing out tracts about damnation to unsuspecting tourists. Actually, that's a pretty good costume when you think about it. At least he's only there in October. The businesses in Salem start doing their Halloween thang in early September, just like I-Mockery. The local consignment store has a very fine window display of Zombies right now. They sell used furniture, old clothes, and discarded ceramic nik-naks. NIK-NAKS! And they have a window full of zombies in SEPTEMBER! Are you following me here? So it's perfectly natural that my daughter wants a Halloween themed Birthday party. What's unnatural is that she asked me for help. I mean, she's known me her whole life.
I was of course, eager to help my daughter plan her soiree, if by eager you mean after I'd slept off the massive hangover you'd wake up with every day too if you had the personal fortitude to endure the physical abuse I indulge in nightly.
I imagine the poor little sprite had in mind black and orange crepe paper streamers, bobbing for apples, spooky lighting and some sort of pre-packaged CD combining horrifying sound effects and public domain renditions of "The Monster Mash." It's just a little bit sad that at eleven-years-old she still imagines I might be useful in accomplishing anything so pedestrian.
Sitting her down, I explained to her that the key to setting the proper Halloween mood lies in suspense, and a carefully orchestrated series of events calculated to create a growing suspicion that something is going terribly wrong. Her little Spencer gift notions would serve perfectly as an overture, but after that she should leave it to me.
"Dad," she said, rolling her eyes in a way she certainly didn't scrape off of my DNA, "I need to know what you're thinking of. You are not doing anything I don't know about or anything I don't say is okay first. These are my friends."
I could have told her that when she was my age she would see pictures of her 'friends' in photo albums and have no idea who they were. I could have told her that her whole notion of 'friends', which is so important to her youthful nature would one day be replaced by 'acquaintances I can tolerate'. What would have been the point? She'd never believe me, and time is always a better teacher than your parents. Lord knows I didn't listen to mine, especially after the trial.
"Very well," I said, steepling my fingers before me and regarding her with a baleful eye, "But mark me well, daughter, for I must convey this information as quickly as I may, before the knowledge of it DRIVES ME MAD!!"
I could see she was sorry she'd asked. She really doesn't appreciate how hilarious I am. She's had me her whole life, she has no idea what boorish lumps her friends fathers are, and I suspect that if she does, she thinks their 'well paying jobs' more than make up for any other deficiency. I have no doubt she'll regret it when I'm dead. DEAD, I SAY! That is so spooky.
"Ok, ok," I told her, rushing ahead before she could grow any older and lapse from pre-teen insouciance to full blown teenage unacceptability, "We'll decorate the entry way and the living room as you have suggested. We'll let the party get rolling; give it an hour or so, plenty of time for your guests to settle in. Play whatever little party games suit you. Do a terrifying Mad Lib. Pin a cartoon eye-ball on a cartoon Frankenstein face. It is of no concern to me. At the appointed hour, the clock shall strike... thirteen times! On the thirteenth chime, the lights will flicker and go out. Your mother shall appear in the hallway with a candle. She shall wear a tangled black wig, and pale make-up, and a make-up scar shall ring her throat. Your guests will be momentarily frightened, perhaps become a touch uneasy. I imagine tense, girlish giggles. But of course they recognize your mother. All falls within the known bounds of Halloween. What fun these Burbanks are! Most parents would never do anything so odd, or put so much effort in to their parties. With any luck at all, no one will notice I have left the scene.
Your costumed Mother beckons you and your guests into the darkened hallway, and there she reveals... A PIÑATA! A very SPOOKY piñata. The spookiest the local party store has! Maybe a skull. Or an Alien. A big... nasty... bat or something. In turn, each child is blindfolded, spun about, allowed to swing wildly at the piñata with a stick! Eventually one of your 'friends' will succeed in breaking the piñata and imagine her horror when she is sprayed with BLOOD as the mangled party game disgorges a horrid mass of candy, gore and plenty of store-bought RAW HAMBURGER!"
"***** ******, Dad!"
"Don't swear," I admonish, "It's coarse. People will think you are a Swede. Besides, the blood is transparently fake. They will of course wonder if the hamburger is some indication that your parents don't know where to stop a joke, and are perhaps dangerous. Some of them may decide they wish to leave, but will find the hallway door has closed and locked behind them. They have no option but to go on. And so my bride shall lead them down the stairs, greeting their plaintive questions with silence. Your role here is to calm them. 'Isn't this great?' you say all enthusiastically, 'wait until you see where we are going to have cake!'
Ah, that terrifying cusp of the soul your friends shall enjoy, their poor young minds hovering on the tipping point between dawning terror and the need to believe that all is as it should be. This is a birthday party! Nothing can go wrong! But what about the clotted bits of hamburger clinging to this girls dress, that girls hair? Is anyone truly safe in a house where adults have filled a festive piñata with RAW HAMBURGER?!
Down you go, down, down into the basement, pitch black but for the tiny pin prick of your mothers candle, a flickering weak light that far from piercing the gloom, accentuates it! A formal table is revealed as your mother touches her flame to the ancient cobwebbed candles on the abra centerpiece, and in the flickering light we see not a cake, but a huge, black shrouded sepulcher!"
"I don't have any idea what a sepulcher is." my daughter interrupted.
"Hush, child!" I hissed, "I don't either! NO ONE DOES!!"
"Dad, no way. I'm not having anything on the table that I don't know what it is. And while we're on the subject, you can forget that junk with the piñata. Candy. Just candy. No fake blood, no hamburger."
"OK, OK!" I shouted, rushing onward before she could rain on more of my parade like some big parade rainer onner. "For the purposes of my plan, a sepulcher is a big cage with a black cloth over it so you can't see what's inside! Try to get back in the mood here. OoooooOOOOooooo! OOOOooooOOOOOOOOoooo! Ok, spooky, spooky, spooky chills! Ready? And... GO! All the guests are seated. The eerie silence is broken only by the audible breathing of your nervous guests. Your mother says nothing, only stands beside the sepulcher OK BOX, CAGE, WHATEVER, GET BACK HERE THIS INSTANT YOUNG LADY!
The tension builds. Surely the cake is hidden here, what else could it possibly be? Finally, when it can be born no longer, your mother tears away the shroud revealing ME!
There I crouch, n@ked but for an adult diaper, eagerly devouring a WHOLE ROAST CHICKEN I have purchased from the hot case at the SUPERMARKET!! THE SUPERMARKET!! AH HA HA HA HA HA HAAAAAAA!! AH HA HA HA HA HA HAAAAAHHH!!"
"Dad." She says. "What the hell?"
"You comprehend there will be no flatware?" I ask. "We're talking bare handed, mostly n^de, roast chicken devouring here. It's very frightening."
"No. No. Thanks but no thanks." She says turning away. "Jeez. I'm sorry I asked."
"What if instead of Roast Chicken I was feeding from a mop bucket full of Beef Stew?" I shrieked after her, cleverly. "Would that be bourgeois enough for you?! OR IS EVEN BEEF STEW TOO FRIGHTENING?!"
She does not understand. And truthfully, how could she? Children know terror better than adults, but they have no notion of the slow growth of horror memory entails. I call after her, try to explain that years from now, decades perhaps, her friends will lounge on therapists couches and tell of the night they saw their school-mates father, crouched in a cage, wearing a diaper, eating a roast chicken with his hands. They will remember the grease shining on my cheeks, my rolling eyes, the red lines where the diaper chafes my unaccustomed skin. Even on their deathbeds, they will remember...
She cannot understand what a really terrific idea this is.
And honestly getting the wife to do her bit in this seems like a pretty long shot. She can be a darn good parade-rainer-onner herself. Kid's gotta get it from somewhere I guess.
Oh well. Next time she won't ask for my help, which was the point before I realized how awesome my idea was. For the moment I shall retreat into my melancholy. Soon I shall look for the yellow pages. There are calls that must be made. I must comparison shop and find a worthwhile price on whole roast chickens.
I'm gonna miss this.
1 year ago
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