"My Teenage Son's Goal in Life Is to Make Me Feel 3,500 Years Old": and Other Thoughts on Parenting from Dave Barry
By Dave Barry
3/5
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About this ebook
Dave Barry isn't just funny. His hilarious syndicated newspaper column and numerous best-selling books have sparked the kind of adulation that's often reserved for rock stars or world leaders. His wit cuts right to the core of life’s absurdities.
In “My Teenage Son's Greatest Goal in Life Is to Make Me Feel 3,500 Years Old” and Other Thoughts on Parenting from Dave Barry, Dave shares his hopes, fears, and insights about his own stint as a father. “Most people make babies out to be very complicated, but the truth is they have only three moods: Mood One: Just about to cry. Mood Two: Crying. Mood Three: Just finished crying.”
Dave Barry
Dave Barry is the author of more bestsellers than you can count on two hands, including Lessons from Lucy, Dave Barry’s Complete Guide to Guys, Dave Barry Turns Forty, and Dave Barry Is Not Making This Up. A wildly popular syndicated columnist best known for his booger jokes, Barry won the 1988 Pulitzer Prize for commentary. He lives in Miami.
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Reviews for "My Teenage Son's Goal in Life Is to Make Me Feel 3,500 Years Old"
15 ratings2 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Even if you aren’t a parent, you will appreciate the humor in this little book. It runs the gamut from babies to teenage sons, and all the problems that occur between those ages. Babies have one very large gland, known as the drool gland, and teenagers have one great desire, to go as fast as possible in whatever vehicle is available. See the world through Dave Barry’s eyes - it’s a trip and a half.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5A cute, funny collection of clips from Dave Barry's columns over the years. Anything funny he wrote about parenting. You can read it in an hour or less and it would make a good gift book for a parent.
Book preview
"My Teenage Son's Goal in Life Is to Make Me Feel 3,500 Years Old" - Dave Barry
Parenthood is not unlike the Space Mountain ride at Disney World, in the sense that both experiences involve zooming along in a carefree manner, then suddenly having your stomach get collapsed like a stomped-on Dixie cup by violent unexpected high-speed turns.
Times have changed. I found this out the night of my son’s first dance party, when, fifteen minutes before it was time to leave for the party, he strode impatiently up to me, wearing new duds, looking perfect in the hair department, and smelling vaguely of—Can it be? Yes, it’s Right Guard—and told me that we had to go immediately or we’d be late. This from a person who has never, ever shown the slightest interest in being on time for anything, a person who was three weeks late to his own birth.
When we get to the tax form question about how much, exactly, we spent on child care,
we are going to have some questions of our own, including: What about Captain Skyhawk? Captain Skyhawk is a Nintendo game that I purchased for my son for Christmas because I am a bad parent who wishes to rot his mind. It cost $41.99, and I definitely view that as a child-care expense.
My son, who is eleven, has started going to dance parties. Only minutes ago he was this little boy whose idea of looking really sharp was to have all the Kool-Aid stains on his He-Man T-shirt be the same flavor; now, suddenly, he’s spending more time per day on his hair than it took to paint the Sistine Chapel.
I know how we can solve our national crisis in educational funding: Whenever the schools needed money, they could send a letter to all the parents, saying, Give us a contribution right now, or we’re going to hold a Science Fair.
They’d raise billions.
Your Prom magazine (published by Modern Bride) is chock-full of prom advice and glossy color promwear advertisements featuring models who look exactly like what high school students would look like if they were all professional models and resembled Tom Cruise or Julia Roberts and didn’t have acne.
My son is going to parties where the boys dance with actual girls. This was unheard of when I was eleven, during the Eisenhower administration. Oh, sure, our parents sent us to ballroom-dancing class, but it would have been equally cost-effective for them to simply set fire to their money.
The computer is a great teaching tool for young people. For example, my home computer has an educational program that enables you to control an entire simulated planet—its ecology, its technology, its weather, etc. My ten-year-old son