Secondly, I'd like to say that parents should not lie to their children, ever, about anything. The children will eventually find out, and when they do, their feelings will be hurt, their faith in the essential goodness of humanity will be shattered, and it will be all your fault. This happened to me yesterday, with Caleb. Last year for his birthday I promised to bake him a coconut cream pie, which I had every intention of doing, but my week got way too busy with a couple of crazy call days and the morning before his party I still hadn't found a good recipe or shopped for ingredients and was lamenting such to a co-worker who pointed out that Wendy Tutkaluk bakes a mean coconut cream pie, and phoned her up, and she said she'd have one ready for me to pick up at five. So I went for it, and Caleb raved about the pie, and Pat said something like, "Yeah, isn't your mom a good baker?" and Caleb agreed, and I said nothing. So this year I again asked Wendy to bake a coconut cream pie for Caleb's birthday, and he enjoyed it with his friends, and had a second piece yesterday evening, and said, "Mom, you make the best coconut cream pies." I felt guilty, and told him the truth, whereupon he was unable to look me in the eye, and cried, and took himself straight to bed. For a whole year he believed that I was an amazing baker of coconut cream pies, and then to find out that it wasn't true... it shattered him. Think how much worse it would have been had it gone on until he was older, a teenager, off to university and bragging to his friends about my abilities, only to find out that it had all been a lie... Thank God today he is speaking to me again. It is hard, failing one's children, falling off one's pedestal as it is chipped away, piece by piece by piece.
I damaged Jule's sense of security yesterday as well, when I commented on the oil that continues to gush into the Gulf of Mexico, saying something like, "They're going to destroy the whole world with this one." Jule burst into tears and exclaimed, "But I haven't even had a chance to grow up yet!" That after watching America's Next Top Model and deciding that it's his new favorite show - the bleached-out blonde girls, especially, he found irresistably pretty.
And lastly, I would like to wish Bono well following his emergency back surgery. I was anxious all morning on Friday for no good reason, then suddenly around noon felt better, probably, though I did not realize it at the time, because Bono was finished up in the O.R. I am a little bit psychic, and I believe that he is too, and we communicated. On Monday, for the first time in months, I checked U2.com for an update about the tour, and they had just that afternoon announced that the whole North American leg was being postponed until next year. I am hoping this means new songs, maybe even a new album before they come to Canada again. It definitely means no trip to Edmonton this June, which is disappointing, but then I really could use those vacation days this fall, when Patrick's back at university and I'm alone responsible for the kids. Perhaps the three of us will take a quick trip to Paris, for a U2 concert, if I decide I can't wait until 2011. Just kidding. Can't do that. Jule's too young. Also the cost. Etc.
Darn.
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