Category Archives: Touchy Subjects

In Defense of Banning Children

Simple Mom’s post about banning kids from certain businesses got me thinking. I don’t mind if kids are banned. I welcome it.

The longer I have kids of my own, the less tolerant I am of other people’s kids. One night I went out to dinner with my mom in the art district and we got to sit next to a family with a child who requested things by screaming in their general direction. Lovely meal.

When my kids were smaller and we would go out to eat, we would be put in the unspoken kids’ section. I know it exists. An entire restaurant and we managed to be placed in a group of 6 tables that all have families with small children? This annoyed me because my kids don’t get away with everything. They say “please” and “thank you” to the waitress. They sit on their bottoms in their seats. They do not hang over the back of the booth and disturb the other customers.

I had to sit near people who allowed their kids to chuck salt shakers at each other’s heads, throw all of their food on the floor, and run around the restaurant. I used to be a waitress and I know it’s hard enough carrying a tray of hot food without having to run a toddler obstacle course.  If you don’t want to parent during a meal, leave your kids with a babysitter. The restaurant in North Carolina that put up the sign, “Screaming children
will not be tolerated,”
has the right idea.

Kids need to be held to higher standards. They need to know the proper way to act in different places and situations. I’m a big fan of the church whisper: a mom bends down, whispers something in a child’s ear, the kid’s eyes get big, and they stop doing whatever it was they were doing. That’s probably the most powerful sermon in the place. My mom’s whispered threats in church would singe my hair, but I was good. I wasn’t lying across a pew and coloring at 13 because my parents didn’t give a damn about teaching me the proper way to act.

There are some places where small children shouldn’t be in the first place, regardless of their behavior. When Paul and I went to the last Batman movie, a couple came in with a 3-year-old and an infant in a car carrier. Really, people? And they sat in the second row, I guess so they could make sure the baby got the full effects of the surround sound.  The parents would get more and more annoyed with the little girl’s constant requests for a bathroom break. Who knew little Sally wouldn’t be interested in watching people get stabbed, shot, and blown up. Between their constant trips in and out of the theater, the loud talking, and, most disturbing, the thoughts of what an R-rated movie was doing to that little girl’s mind, it was not an enjoyable experience for us. Some parents make me want to hand them a card that says, “A donation has been made in your name to Planned Parenthood.”

Are my kids good all of the time? No way. They have bad days. They even have terrible days. However, I will not subject other people to my kids’ bad days. I give them a
warning about their behavior. If it continues, we leave. Does it suck? Yes. I hate leaving somewhere, especially if we paid to get in, but it only takes one time for my kids to realize that I am not joking around.

I think if restaurants and movie theaters advertised “no kids” nights they would increase their income. I would love to know that I could eat dinner or watch a movie in peace.

After this rant, you might be thinking that I am one of those snobby parents who thinks everyone should adhere to my parenting standards or keep their kids away from me. Well, you’re right.

9 People You Should Unfriend Today

Before I joined Facebook, I wasn’t sure what to expect, but it sounded like a fun way for people to connect with their friends.  Instead of being a place where people can work on their virtual farms in peace, surrounded by their friends, it has become a source of stress for a lot of people.

A recent article on CNN said 85% of women are annoyed by their Facebook friends. Why do we do this to ourselves?

I recently went from nearly 200 Facebook friends down to 52 and it’s wonderful. (I’m thinking about trimming it even more.) How did I do it? The first step was to get rid of the annoying people…
1. The Activist Friend: The person who repeatedly posts things like: My religious/political view is the only right one and everyone else can go die. When a sweet little old lady posted about how she wished the president was dead, I started to realize that Facebook was affecting my quality of life.

2. The ghost friend:  Their face is on my friends list but they’re never actually on Facebook. My husband is one of these. Every 3 months he logs on, sees 70+  friend requests, and logs off. I figure it will be years before he realizes I unfriended him.

3. The couple users: Their love for one another is pasted all over the other’s wall. Then they argue about who loves who more and lol about how they’re sitting right next to each other on the couch, yet still talking on Facebook. Isn’t that cute? Yes, it’s so cute that I want to hire a hitman to take out your internet access.

4. The “always be closing” friend: Yes, it’s great when our friends try to better themselves by trying to make a little money on the side. However, if their posts are only about their latest product or, sadly, the pyramid scheme they still think is a great idea, then they have to go.

5. The shitty speller: Ur posts r unintelgble. Some of these folks can be helped by using Firefox with its squiggly red line under misspelled words. Unfortunately, it won’t help the”ain’t got no” or the  “their, there, they’re” problem.  It may mean I’m a bad person, but I would much rather unfriend someone than correct their spelling and grammar.

6. The cryptic poster: All his statuses are obscure references or song lyrics. It’s an attempt to appear more intelligent when there’s really nothing there.. I call these “The Emperor’s New Posts.” Maybe if I got a hipster decoder ring…

7. The Eeyore friend: They only get on Facebook when they want to complain. I’m sorry you lost your tail for the 50th time, but you’re making me want to kill myself.

8. The “remember when” friend: Yes, we went to the same high school (is it 15 years ago already? Yikes. *fills out AARP application*) but our lives are way different now. I don’t know about being bff’s on Facebook for the rest of eternity.

9. The friend whore: Not the friend who’s a whore (those are juicy status updates), I mean the people who are in some kind of contest to get the most friends ever and who easily have over 500 friends. Unfriend them and chances are they won’t even notice you’re gone.

These 9 kinds of people were easy to cut, but trimming down on close friends and family was trickier. (I discuss that in my next post: How to Unfriend People Without Losing Any Friends.)

Would you let your 7-year-old get plastic surgery?

This Good Morning America segment focuses on the rise of plastic surgery in minors. Seven-year-old Samantha’s mom says her cup ears are the reason she will be bullied in the future. The plastic surgeon says they could “impact her developing self-identity.”

I would like to add that, as someone without cup ears or a hump on my back, I was bullied in school; I think we would be hard-pressed to find anyone who wasn’t. If it’s not appearance, it’s clothing, hairstyle, money, what your name rhymes with; bullies will find something.

Might I also add that, for a woman who supposedly cares so much about her child’s appearance, she certainly didn’t bother to keep her bangs from getting butchered.

It’s her decision, but I lean more toward the “Boy Named Sue” school of thought on bullying: Instead of surgery, put her in karate class.

What would you have done?

What it Takes to be Beautiful

As part of Dove’s Real Beauty campaign, this 2006 video shows the process of becoming society’s version of beautiful. I’m not sure if it means my expectations are too high or I just don’t spend enough time getting ready in the morning.

Related post: The Downside of Dove’s Real Beauty Campaign

How To Support Japan And How Not To

Donate to The Red Cross instead.

Already some idiots are claiming that the Japanese people were asking for it because a majority of them are atheists. A country full of atheists that don’t even loot? We’ve got to get a bible over there quick!

The blindness of mainstream Christianity astounds me. They seem to be too busy shoving a belief system down people’s throats to see the real needs.

This is exactly why I don’t support mission trips (sorry Mom and Dad). If you aren’t bringing clean water to a village or food to starving children then I have no use for it.

At a church we used to attend, the youth had a field trip to London. LONDON. They left Chattanooga, TN, a few hours away from Appalachia, where people lack basic dental and health care, and they went to London.  Send all the support requests you want, I’m not paying for your vacation.

(The next time they had a youth mission trip, Paul said, “Where are they going now? Vatican City?”)

In Japan, so many people have lost everything (people they love, shelter, food, and water). They need to be fed and comforted, not inundated with religious rhetoric.

The Sanctity of Marriage

Auntie Em! Storms hit Chattanooga

We had quite the interesting day Monday. There was a big storm system headed our way with a strong chance of tornadoes.

Most Chattanoogans said that tornadoes never hit our fair city because it is surrounded by mountains. The theory is tornadoes bounce off the mountains or lose all of their energy getting up them and never make it into the valley. Then in October a tornado hit the dam and a few houses, causing quite a bit of damage. Now the whole city takes the tornado watches much more seriously. read more »

Woman sues McDonald’s for putting toys in Happy Meals

I was watching Nightline last night (no, the going to bed on time thing isn’t working out, why do you ask?) and they had a story about Monet Parham suing McDonald’s because they put toys in Happy Meals. *gasp* I know! When did that start?!

Her main reasons:

  •  My baby is begging for unhealthy food just to get the toy.
  • She won’t stop.

Her solution:

  • McDonald’s needs to offer healthier choices in the Happy Meals or stop putting toys in them.

I know where she’s coming from. When we were thinking about having kids, I didn’t read any of those silly parenting books because I knew I could trust big corporations to have the best interest of my children in mind at all times. Oh, wait. That would be stupid.

Now, Monet says that she does tell her child, “no,” but the kid keeps seeing McDonald’s commercials and wants those toys soooo much.

Let me fix that for you. First, your kid is always going to bug you for crap that isn’t good for her, but it’s your job as her mother to regulate her intake. Second, turn off the TV if she becomes thrall to every product advertised.

My kids mostly watch PBS, which is educational and commercial-free. On Saturday’s they get to watch an hour of Sonic X. I told them that if they begged me for the crap on the commercials, they would lose the priviledge of watching Sonic. Gracie will bring up Twinkletoes in conversation, but she doesn’t beg for them.

Would my kids eat junk and watch TV all day if they could? Of course! Ever since Gracie found out that someone made candy into a necklace (fashionable and tasty), she would choose that over any other food if she could. But my kids know that isn’t an option, so they mostly ask for things they have a shot at getting.

I think Monet Parham needs to get over her issues and go back to being a mom. Parenting can be a chore at times, but you shouldn’t run out and sue any business that makes it harder. Anyway, last time I checked, you could buy the toys individually. Try that, Sparky.

‘Tis the Season

I am chock-full of Christmas spirit this year. I have reindeer antlers on the van and have listened to Little Drummer Boy all the way through, many times, without stabbing anyone. And because my heart has grown three sizes (I think I just need to lay off the junk food and it may return to its normal size), you will only get one Christmas rant from me this year.

1. I don’t know if this just happens in the Bible Belt, but every year someone gets their nose bent out of shape because someone didn’t tell them “Merry Christmas” or Wal-mart took down their Christmas trees. Link

So here stands this God-fearing citizen bitching about some retail chain not knowing the real meaning of Christmas when the whole reason they went to the store in the first place was to buy copious amounts of merchandise because baby Jesus told them to.

Really, people? Because a store that doesn’t pay a living wage and exclusively sells merchandise made by foreign workers in inhumane conditions would be okay if someone just said, “Merry Christmas” on the way out. What part of Luke is that in again?

2. House fires. No, I’m not going to complain about people’s houses burning down, I’m going to complain about the media. Everybody on board now? Good.

If someone’s house burns down in December the news says it’s a tragedy because “it’s right before Christmas!” So…a house fire at any other time of year isn’t a tragedy? If you lose all of your possessions and none of them happened to be obscured by wrapping paper, I guess you lucked out?

<end rant>

Now I’m off to celebrate the real meaning of the season: Keeping the pagans from having a peaceful solstice. Happy Festivus!

Season’s Greetings

A local radio station here in Chattanooga (98.1) has been playing Christmas music for about 3 weeks now. Normally that would annoy me, but I promised Paul that if he didn’t make me do all the things that stress me out on the holidays I would ooze so much damn Christmas spirit he would be shocked.

That means the kids get to blast Christmas music all the time. Pandora in the living room, the car radio, the radios in their rooms…

We were driving somewhere the other day and Baby, It’s Cold Outside came on. (You know, the one that’s a duet with the lady trying to leave and the man talking her out of it. I’m not saying the song is about date rape but at one point she does say, “Say, what’s in this drink?”  Hmmm….)

Thirty seconds into the song, Gracie asked, “Why does he keep interrupting her?” I explained that it was a duet. Then the man sang, “It’s up to your knees out there.” Wesley said, “It’s up to her knees? I wonder how tall she is. Mom, how tall is she?” I really don’t know, but I am starting to suspect that most van accidents are caused by children’s questions.

I’m off to eat some mistletoe…

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