Don’t Pee on Electrical Fences… And Other Useful Wisdom

If anyone ever asks you to pee on an electric fence, just say no. It will shock you, and you’ll feel dumb and numb for doing it. I speak from experience, but that’s a story for another day.

Today, I want to tell you about a dog.

When my wife and I got married, we agreed: every proper family has a dog. It’s just what’s done. So, we decided to adopt one from a shelter. On our way to visit my family that weekend, we stopped at a few shelters. No luck. All bulldogs and pit bulls—which, let’s be honest, make up most of the population in any given shelter.

Finally, at our fourth and final stop, we pulled into the Norfolk SPCA. Just when we were about to give up, we saw him. The last kennel had a mutt who had mastered the full Sarah McLachlan “In the Arms of an Angel” face. I mean, this dog worked it.

We took him out to the run yard to see how he behaved. He played, responded when called, even kind of sat. And more importantly, he genuinely seemed to like us.

We were sold. We paid the fee, loaded him up in the Subaru, and took him home. We named him Oliver—yes, because of the orphan from the book. We spent the weekend showing him off like proud new parents.

It lasted two weeks.

That’s when Oliver decided he’d had enough of the “good dog” phase. He turned into a break-out artist. A door rusher. A canine blur powered by Golden Retriever legs and a rocket engine. Once loose, he was gone for hours unless he decided to come back.

After the third wild goose chase across the neighborhood, we made the adult decision: we bought an electric training collar. Not because we wanted to be cruel, but because the remote would let us correct him before he disappeared over the horizon.

I tested it with the little tester strip it came with. Zap! It worked. We fitted it on him, and when we beeped, he gave a little ear flick. The manual said that was a good sign—meant we probably wouldn’t even need the shock.

That would’ve been great. But Oliver had other plans.

While Jo and I were cleaning up the packaging, Oliver went straight for Jo’s dinner plate on the table. We called him. Nothing. Beeped him. Ignored us. Just kept eating faster.

So I hit the shock button. On max setting.

Bazinga!

Oliver yelped and shot across the room like a missile… straight at me. He leapt onto my lap in a full panic. And here’s the important part—he landed on my hand. The one holding the remote. The one still pressing the button.

I was yelling, he was yelping, and Jo was laughing so hard I’m surprised she didn’t pee herself.

It took almost a full minute for me to wrestle him off and let go of the shock button. The poor guy was just trying to crawl into my skin to escape the invisible pain, not realizing he was the cause of it.

But it worked. After that, Oliver never ran again. If he slipped out the door, he’d go about ten feet until the collar beeped—then he froze, statue-still, waiting for me to carry him home like a guilt-ridden toddler.

So yeah, $80 for the collar, one free electrocution for me, and a permanent lesson for both of us. Not bad.

Hope today’s a good one,
austininva

Set Sail on Lake Logan

Once upon a time, a little boy named Logan began to potty train. He used pull-ups and underwear and he learned very quickly what he needed to do. It was funny when, in the middle of a conversation, he would run in to exclaim to all present, “ME POOP, ME POOP, now yummy?” And obliging, I would hand over a small handful of jelly beans.

While we are on that, someday, I wish for a life, where I drop my pants, do my business, and get food for free. I feel someone needs to make a form of government where the basis of power is based on this principle.

Now, for all the humorous events that occurred during potty training my 3-year-old, this short post isn’t about that. Rather, it’s about the terror that every parent should have with a little boy who is freed from the shackles of his diaper.

My wife and I were in the kitchen, busy moving some furniture during my quarterly re-arrangement of the house, when Logan came rushing in with a loud shout of, “PEE PEE PEE PEE!”

This usually means one thing. It’s his way of telling me:
“PULL THIS CAR OVER RIGHT NOW FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, BEFORE I PEE OVER EVERYTHING AND EVERYONE YOU HOLD DEAR!”

To which I have responded by flying across four lanes of traffic to exit the interstate in 0.018 of a mile. (Yes, I’m that good.)

So Jo ran out of the kitchen, wondering why Logan couldn’t get into the bathroom. She found the door was open, there was toilet paper, but yet Logan yelled more emphatically than before: “PEE!”

I began to worry that he had leaked in his underwear, but as Jo checked, that option was removed from the list. She began asking 20 Questions—a 3-year-old’s favorite game.

  1. Did you pee?
    A: Yes
  2. Did you pee your pants?
    A: No
  3. Did the dogs pee?
    A: Yes, um… no
  4. Did the pee in the toilet get flushed?
    A: No
  5. Where’s the pee!?!?
    A: Here, Mama. Right here.

Around that question, I heard the conversation shift into something more frantic:

“Oh no… wait… oh no, please no… NOOOOOOO!!!!!!”

  1. DID YOU PEE ON THE FLOOR!?
    A: Um…. Yes

My wife then came into the kitchen, sat dejectedly in a chair, and said that I was needed in the living room.

I walked in, and Logan looked at me, grabbed his rear end, and said,
“I Sorry, Dada. Sorry, Dada. No spank.” His remorse fell on deaf ears, as my eyes beheld the newly formed lake in the living room floor. He picked up a single paper towel and tossed it onto the lake he had just created in front of the couch. It floated, for a moment, the unstoppable rush of the yellow liquid swallowing it up like the Atlantic did the Titanic.

Needless to say, it was explained in very specific directions, that we don’t pee on the floor.
I don’t, however, think he bought my reasoning—because he kept referring to the dogs’ favorite indoor accident spot.

Today is Friday. And then it’s the weekend…
16 more years. You can do it. Just 16 more years.

hope your days a good one
-austininva

The Fried Chicken Crisis

by austininva

When a woman is pregnant, I’m sure it’s supposed to be a wonderful time. I mean, the commercials portray this time of life as blissful and magical—a time when humanity takes a breath, smiles more, and is generally nicer to one another.

As anyone who has been pregnant—or known someone who has been pregnant—can tell you, that is the furthest thing from the truth.

Your nights are spent aching, tossing and turning, searching for that one centimeter of bed that’s actually comfortable. And wouldn’t you know it? That one centimeter just happens to be in the last four-inch strip of the bed your husband is clinging to for dear life.

Heat and cold take on new and miserable meanings. You will never be comfortable again while the baby is growing. It’s always either too hot or too cold—sometimes both at once.

And your appetite? It transforms into that of an alien. Pickles, peanut butter, anchovies, and chocolate… the cravings defy belief. Even moms-to-be shudder once they realize what they’re actually eating. All the while, the food can’t be eaten fast enough.

If you haven’t guessed yet, my wife and I are expecting baby #2, and the pregnancy has hit full force… at just 6 weeks in. I love my wife, and it was at her behest that I write this post. Let’s be honest: this stuff is just too funny not to share.

We had a long day of errands, and the sun was finally setting. In our house, after a full day out, it’s just easier to grab dinner on the way home. This particular day, we decided to get food so that Logan the Terrible could be locked in the dungeon—I mean, lovingly tucked into bed.

Chores: done. Shopping: done. Ice cream melting in the trunk: check. A good day, overall.

Throughout the day, Jo had been commenting—over and over and over—how much she really wanted some fried chicken.

Which is pregnancy code for:
“We better go get fried chicken now or someone will suffer a slow and painful death, and they will never find the body. And if they do, it won’t be recognizable as human.”

So I did what any survival-minded husband would do: I stepped on the gas and hunted down the nearest chicken place.

Suddenly, Jo lurched forward in her seat and yelled, “THERE! POPEYES!”

I swerved hard into the parking lot—possibly sending a nearby car off the road—but in times of war, sacrifices must be made. I zipped around the building and hit the brakes hard… only to reveal, to Jo’s horror, a line.

To be fair, it was a long line. About five cars deep.

I glanced over, preparing to apologize for the delay—but stopped short. Jo’s upper lip was trembling. Tears welled in her eyes. And then? The floodgates opened.

She knew it was nothing, but she couldn’t help herself. That line of four cars (yes, one pulled away) was the last straw.

Through the sobs, she tried to explain—as only a pregnant, hungry woman can—that life was unfair, that this was too much, that surely not all these people wanted fried chicken.

As the line inched forward and we hit two cars left, she turned to comfort our son, who—watching his mother collapse into tears for no reason—began crying too.

Next in line, the tears started to dry. Jo wiped her face and turned to the menu, scanning with intense focus.

I considered telling her the menu hadn’t changed…
They sold chicken.
And chicken.
And, oh look—more chicken.

But the look on her face as she read that menu said it all:
“Now is not the time.”

We got our food. We drove home. We ate. We put Logan to bed.

Later that night, Jo snuggled up beside me and whispered sweetly into my ear:
“If you ever tell anyone I cried in the Popeyes drive-thru, I’ll have to kill you.”

But I’m lucky. My wife can laugh at life’s funny moments. If she couldn’t, I wouldn’t last very long, because I lead a very funny life.

And not too long after that night, she recanted and suggested I write the story down.

I love my wife. I love my life. And let me tell you—there is a never-ending stream of humor in both.

Hope today’s a good one,
austininva

A Sparkler Sword Incident (A Glorious Fourth of July Memory)

Ah, the Fourth of July. That magical American holiday where we celebrate our independence by feeding our kids enough sugar to give a hummingbird heart palpitations and then hand them flaming sticks and tiny explosives to chase each other around the yard. God bless the USA.

Now, every family has their own traditions. Some go to parades. Some have cookouts. Some set off fireworks responsibly, at a safe distance, while everyone wears eye protection and a smug expression of adult competency.

We are not that family.

We are the family where things always start off wholesome and picturesque—flag cupcakes, patriotic playlists, Jo handing out watermelon slices like she’s hosting a lifestyle segment on Good Morning America—and then somewhere around dusk, things take a hard left turn into Lord of the Flies: Stars & Stripes Edition.

This particular year, we had gathered the family in the In-Laws driveway for a traditional fireworks display—which is really just a collaborative dad effort lighting things on fire while yelling “BACK UP!” at children who have zero concept of personal safety or common sense. Among our arsenal were a few dozen boxes of sparklers, because those feel just safe enough for kids. You know, like swords, but with the added bonus of flame and molten metal flakes that shoot out at you!

Now enter Logan. Sweet, sneaky, future demolition expert Logan. At the time, maybe six or seven. Old enough to understand instructions. Young enough to pretend he forgot them the second chaos presented itself.

I handed him a lit sparkler and gave the usual dad lecture: “Buddy, this is fun, but you don’t point it at people. No swinging. No dueling. This is a light show, not a lightsaber. Understand?”

He nodded seriously, the way kids do when they absolutely do not understand but are just trying to get the grown-up to stop talking. Then he looked at the sparkler. And then—oh, I saw it. That look. The one every parent knows. The slow, creeping grin that starts in the corner of their mouth like a villain about to monologue. The gleam in the eye. The shift in posture from trustworthy child to goblin with a mission.

Before I could utter a single word of protest, Logan whipped the sparkler in a wide arc like Excalibur itself and took off screaming “FREEDOM!” while charging Jo and her sister like a tiny, fire-wielding revolutionary war hero.

Jo let out a scream that could peel paint off a battleship and took off across the yard, sandals flopping, sister screaming right behind her. Logan was cackling, sparkler raised like he was leading a cavalry charge. Every time Jo looked back, he’d wave the sparkler a little and shout something vaguely patriotic. I am pretty sure I heard him yell, “’MERICA!” at one point.

I tried to run after him… (you believe me, right?) But I was doubled over laughing, and also slightly worried that if I intervened, I might get sparkler’d myself. The good news is, he eventually ran out of sparkler juice. The bad news is, now he knows where we keep the lighters.

Later that night, as the real fireworks boomed in the sky and the kids collapsed into sticky, sunburned heaps of giggles, I looked at Jo—still slightly singed, soul frizzed out from the trauma—and said, “Hey, at least no one ended up in the ER.”

She just narrowed her eyes and said, “Next year, we’re only giving him a glow stick.”

Happy Fourth of July from the Olde Dominion. May your watermelon be cold, your sparklers properly aimed, and your children only moderately unhinged.

hope todays a good one,
-austininva

Kid Konversations with Kara

Sometimes the conversations I overhear coming from the next room over are absolute comedy gold—sparkling nuggets of nonsense that make me laugh out loud mid-coke sip (which is always a dangerous game in a house with a long haired dog). Other times, they make me cock an eyebrow in quiet concern, like, should I intervene or just let Darwin handle this one? And every now and then, a few special exchanges make me stop everything I’m doing and seriously reevaluate how the human race has made it this far without just giving up and handing the planet over to the dolphins.

This morning’s gem falls somewhere in that magical middle ground—hilarious, humbling, and deeply educational. The kids had just finished their gourmet breakfast of what ever flavor packet of oatmeal they grabbed and a suspiciously sticky banana (seriously, how does fruit get that sticky?), and I had sent them off with vague but hopeful instructions to “clean up.” You know, the kind of parenting that feels responsible but is really just a clever way of buying yourself seven minutes of uninterrupted sitting.

From the kitchen came the clink of dishes being clumsily stacked, a spray of running water, and then—right on cue—the kind of quote that could only come from the feral minds of my offspring.

“Wow, you’re so good at dishes!” said Slayden, in a tone that was half amazed and half deeply confused, like he’d just witnessed a squirrel doing math.

There was a brief pause, and then Kara, the reigning queen of smug wisdom in our home, replied with utter certainty and no hesitation whatsoever: “Slayden, girls are just better than boys.”

Now let me paint you a picture here. Slayden is my tank. He’s the one most likely to break a door handle just by existing too hard near it. He’s seven years old, built like a mini M1A1 Abrams, and wakes up every day with the energy of a Red Bull-fueled jackrabbit. He doesn’t walk through the house—he charges. And yet, despite all that bravado and brute force, he looked at his sister with awe. Not anger. Not argument. Just acceptance. Like some tiny part of him went, yeah, that checks out.

Kara, for her part, didn’t even look up. She just kept rinsing a spoon like she was a lady Solomon. Cool, collected, and handing down gender-biased truth bombs without flinching.

Slayden after receiving the highly sophisticated and gilded smackdown of the century, took a moment to process what had happened to him, and the ran into the Living room, and returned with a pillow, holding it aloft and declaring, He was better at something in this life, No one could contest that the pillow he held aloft could be held up any better by anyone else, ever.

And indeed, in that moment, I let him hold that belief. Hold on to that pillow Slayden, and don’t let the man, or in this case, the sister get you down!

It’s moments like these that remind me that my kids are growing up—and faster than I’m ready for. They’re figuring things out in their own wild, unfiltered ways, and I’m just the lucky bystander with a front-row seat and a running notepad.

Welcome to Kid Konversations. God help us all.

hope todays a good one,
-austininva

Mattress Handles are Survival Tools

by Austininva

My father is a man of few words, packed with wisdom, and armed with a sense of humor that most people wouldn’t understand—nor survive. My wife, to this day, still isn’t sure if he loves her… or is slowly plotting her disappearance. He maintains a deadpan expression no matter what, radiating seriousness like a statue in a courthouse.

But like “I before E except after C,” there are exceptions to the rule.

This story is one of those exceptions. Some of my dad’s best comedic moments happened around the dinner table. We were mid-meal, enjoying a solid home-cooked spread, when someone—I can’t remember who exactly, but let’s be honest, it was totally my mother—let loose what might be the most powerful fart ever unleashed in recorded human history.

I’m not exaggerating. Air raid sirens had nothing on this. We had discovered a natural foghorn.

My dad slowly put down his fork, turned to my oldest sister, and asked, “Do you know why there are handles on the sides of my mattress?”

My sister, trying her best, replied with the logical answer: “To help you move the bed around?”

My father, without missing a beat, began to edumacate.

He told us about his nighttime routine. First, a pep talk in the mirror: “You got this. You da man.” Then, he’d slip under the covers with precision, careful not to disturb the beast sleeping beside him.

And that’s when he dropped the knowledge bomb.

The mattress handles, he said, weren’t for moving the bed. No, they were for holding on for dear life when the gale-force farts began.

The image of my dad, clinging to the mattress as a hurricane of methane blasted him into oblivion, shattered us. Laughter. Weeping. Utter collapse.

He wasn’t done.

He explained how the alarm clock had to be taken outside to recover—electronics couldn’t survive a blast like that. The houseflies would be mid-flight and just drop, like paperweights falling from the sky.

The dogs would howl. Cats outside would screech and flee. Neighborhood raccoons were filing noise complaints.

He claimed to have converted the family car to run on the methane he harvested, proudly showing us a mason jar like it was a vintage wine. “The preferred method for collection,” he said.

When the gas attacks came, he’d remake the sheets, brace himself, and call out into the house like a WWI soldier: “GAS! GAS! GAS!” Though the kids would sleep through it, the house would regret dinner. Especially if the meal was chili. Or worse—your mother’s favorite: full-fat milk over cereal.

At sunrise, the battle over, he’d crack a window—to let the last of the agent fade into the air—and begin his day. Calm. Confident. Knowing he had survived. Protected his people. Held the line.

We, his children, would awaken clueless to the heroics of the night. Unaware that beneath that calm, silent exterior… lived a warrior.

So now you know: those handles on your queen or king-size mattress? They’re not for moving the bed. They are to give Dads a sporting chance.

They’re for survival.

Oh, and I totally told my pastor this story two days later at church…
#NoShame

My Little Toothbrush Tyrant

There is a clear hierarchy established within our household. The order of authority and roles is as follows:

  1. Me and Jo
  2. Moira
  3. The dog (Which one, depending on the day.)
  4. Probably Slayden
  5. Kara if she hasn’t tattled
  6. Logan when he’s not hiding snacks
  7. The vacuum

Around bedtime, however, the list becomes chaotic, and it turns into a free-for-all. Everyone scatters with an agenda that must be completed before sleep is possible. It’s never the agenda I have planned, though. Moira may be the worst; she has reached the age where she thinks she knows best. Two years old. This night, Moira’s agenda revolved around teeth. You see, Moira believes—no, knows—that bedtime is when she becomes the family dentist.

It started simply. I was teaching her that we brush our teeth before bedtime, you know, normal life. She let me brush her teeth, spit a tiny amount into the sink, and we wiped her mouth. “All done,” I said, not knowing how I had just set the stage for future torments. She grabbed a toothbrush and said, “Dada, open mouth.”


I thought it was cute.
It was not cute.

She jabbed me deep in the tonsils, as though she was desperately trying to clear a stubborn drain. Not just any drain, but one from the 1920s, long forgotten and choked with tangled roots and a century’s worth of grimy buildup. Toothpaste bubbled and foamed uncontrollably in my mouth. My gag reflex surged wildly, threatening to overwhelm me. It felt as if my very soul was being scrubbed clean and forcibly pulled from my body. Then, almost as suddenly and abruptly as it had begun, I was instructed to spit. She calmly wiped the corners of my mouth with a gentle cloth and, with a contented smile, happily went to bed.

Now it has become a nightly routine that we both follow without fail. Every single night, I carefully brush her teeth, making sure to be thorough and gentle. Then, without missing a beat, she takes over and brushes mine. But she does it with an intense vigor, almost violently, wielding the toothbrush with the same strict authority and urgency as a TSA agent working during a high-stakes red alert situation.

The older kids observe this strange ritual with a mixture of quiet horror and disbelief. Kara, feeling uneasy, asked if she could “just floss instead” to avoid the unsettling process altogether. Logan, ever the helpful one, quickly chimed in with a practical suggestion, “You should wear a mouth guard,” trying to offer a solution. Slayden, curious and wanting to join in, made an attempt to get involved once, but was immediately met with a fierce, intimidating stare from the princess, effectively shutting him down.

Jo just sighs deeply whenever I start to complain and then calmly reminds me, “Well, you did let her start it in the first place.”

And she’s right. I did.

So now I end every night being waterboarded by a toddler with Paw Patrol toothpaste and a look in her eyes that says, “I know your dental history, peasant. Don’t forget to floss.” For someone who doesn’t even have a full set of teeth yet, she is quite adamant about tooth brushing!

Hope today’s a good one
– austininva

Ruin Your Day with Toilet Paper Confetti

(A.K.A. Why My Sons Are Banned From Sam’s Club Until Further Notice)

by austininva

It started, as these things usually do, with a nap time gone wrong.

“Well… we were bored. And toilet paper is really fun.”

Now, “nap time” is one of those sacred parental traditions—like pizza night or “forgetting” what time Chucky Cheeses closes. It’s a moment of peace. A desperate gasp of air while drowning in toy shrapnel and snack wrappers. But peace, as history has taught us, is fragile.

So there I was, basking in the blissful silence of midday, convinced for a brief moment that I had won. Slayden and Logan were tied down in bed. Kara was in her room doing “quiet time,” which in Kara’s world means rearranging her dolls and horses by political affiliation.

Then… silence. But not peaceful silence. It was the eerie, ominous calm. The kind of silence that makes your dad-senses tingle. That “there’s either sleep or a felony in progress” kind of quiet.

I crept down the hallway, cracked open Kara’s door—and stopped cold.

There, in the epicenter of chaos, stood Slayden and Logan, knee-deep in what could only be described as the aftermath of a Charmin blizzard. The floor was covered in tissue. Toilet paper was draped across furniture like party streamers at a birthday party thrown by raccoons. A pillow had been mummified. Kara’s dollhouse was now fully insulated. It looked like someone had tried to host a winter wonderland festival using every single roll from the 48-count mega-pack of toilet paper I had just bought. The last one in stock. At any Sam’s Club within a 2-hour radius! During COVID!

This was wartime toilet paper. Black market levels of valuable. The golden fleece of the pandemic era. And it had just been sacrificed on the altar of “Nap time is boring.”

When I asked why, Logan blinked at me like I was the one with problems and said with all the sincerity in the world:
“Well… we were bored. And toilet paper is really fun.”
Slayden added, “We were making snow world. For Chickee.” (One of Kara’s stuffed animals.)
I stared at them. They stared at me. The snow world stared back.

Now, let’s talk about the cleanup.

Do you know how hard it is to vacuum up toilet paper snow? You can’t. It just clogs the vacuum like a backed-up toilet on Thanksgiving, when you had to rely on Chinese take-out. Sweeping? Nope. The static cling alone made me look like I was fighting off haunted dryer sheets. For every piece I gathered, three more floated away like guilt from a toddler’s conscience.

Kara stood on the dresser like some kind of paper policewoman and proclaimed, “This is why girls don’t nap with boys.” She wasn’t wrong, just about 30 minutes late with her verdict.

Jo came in, surveyed the damage, and walked right back out again with the whispered prayer, “Not today, dear Jesus, not today.”

I eventually filled three trash bags with soggy, crumpled tissues, mourning the $22.99 plus tax lost that day. As I wondered what would take its place on the roll, the idea of Poison Ivy for the boys floated into my mind. I set the thought aside—it needed time to develop, perhaps to resurface at Logan’s wedding.

So yes, the boys are fine. The house is mostly intact. But the next time you think nap time is quiet and peaceful? Go check. Or better yet, hide the toilet paper.


Moral of the Story:
If it’s too quiet, someone is either asleep… or redecorating a room with your emergency supplies.

Hope today’s a clean one,
austininva

How to Lose Archery Privileges in 3 Seconds

by austininva

What boy, at some time in his life, doesn’t dream of being Robin Hood?

I did—on an almost daily basis—from ages 13 to 15. That dream became a near-reality one glorious Christmas morning when my loving parents gifted me a real compound bow and a dozen arrows to go with it.

At that point, I may as well have been Hood incarnate.

My band of merry men (usually my younger brother, occasionally accompanied by a maid or two—“maids” being sisters who had nothing better to do than indulge in Robin Hood or other historical time-period games) was loosely assembled and fiercely loyal.

All young boys dream of these things, sure. But I was special.
I had the bow.
I had a leather pouch.
I had semi-devoted followers.
And, perhaps most importantly—I had a backyard.

Those three ingredients, when combined, formed the perfect childhood stew.

Until the day I had an idea.
(And let’s be clear: ideas tend to end horribly for me.)

My parents had gone out for the day, leaving the house—and the well-being of my younger siblings—under my capable command. For I was a responsible 16-year-old lad, and therefore completely trustworthy.

Schoolwork was finished. PBS had nothing but boring reruns. So, we headed outside to enjoy a beautiful spring day in Norfolk.

I don’t remember all the details of our outdoor escapades that afternoon. But I do vividly recall having a flash of inspiration:
“Let’s shoot my youngest sister with the airsoft gun.”

Off we all ran into the house to gather our weapons.

But somewhere in the mad dash, that idea mutated.
“What if… we shot her with the bow?”

Now, I know what you’re thinking:
“Bows are dangerous and lethal, you moron.”
And we were thinking the same thing. So, naturally, we took steps to make it safe.

Step one: a pillow, to absorb impact.
Step two: a wooden dowel—because without a sharp arrowhead, it obviously couldn’t do any damage.
(For legal reasons, I must disclose that our definition of “logic” was still developing.)

We tied the pillow to her head. We carefully selected the smoothest dowel. She was even offered one last chance to opt out of this brilliant experiment.

Her muffled “MHMMHMHMMM!” and frantic arm flailing were interpreted, in the spirit of youth, as enthusiastic consent.

So I pulled back the bowstring—only halfway, of course, to minimize injury—and released.

Thwip.
The dowel bounced harmlessly off the pillow! Success!
All was wonderful!

…until my sister collapsed like a brick.

Turns out, a single couch pillow isn’t quite enough to blunt a wooden dowel fired from even a half-pulled compound bow at point-blank range.

As I stood in horror, trying to comprehend what had just happened, I heard the most damning words possible drift in from downstairs:

“Hey! Can someone come help unload the van?”

My sisters vanished like ninjas.
The shot sister, red mark blooming on her forehead like a Hindu bindi, sprinted downstairs shouting accusations.

I was summoned shortly after.

My parents—possibly less understanding than I had anticipated—were not convinced by my detailed explanation of the safety measures we’d taken. Apparently, the pillow plan lacked scientific rigor.

Robin Hood was forcibly disarmed.
The sheriff (aka Dad) had zero regard for my interpretation of the 2nd Amendment.

In the end, no one died. No permanent damage was done (to my sister, anyway). Just another unforgettable chapter in the epic saga of my childhood.

Hope today’s a good one!
austininva

The Spanker-in-Chief

By austininva

There comes a moment in every parent’s life when you realize that the inmates are no longer just running the asylum… they’ve unionized, appointed a representative, and now they’re demanding hazard pay in chicken nuggets.

For me, that moment came last Tuesday.

We were in the thick of post-dinner cleanup, which, if you don’t have kids, is basically like crime scene cleanup—except with more ketchup and other random stains, just fewer police reports. I was mid-lecture. The kind where my voice gets very calm, very even, because I’ve gone past mad and into that strange parent dimension where you can see sounds and smell colors.

The older three had been waging their usual civil war. Something about who got the blue cup, or who “looked at me weird,” or whose foot touched whose sacred square of couch real estate.

So there I was, in full Dad Orator Mode™️. Monologuing about respect and consequences and “how we treat each other in this house” like I was delivering a TED Talk titled “Surviving Sibling Apocalypse With Only Mild Parental Screaming.”

And that’s when she arrived.

My youngest. Barefoot, smug, eyes twinkling with the mischief of a thousand gremlins. In her tiny hands, held aloft like Simba in The Lion King, was… the Spanking Spoon.

Like a symbolic holy relic, its revered. It’s like the nuclear football: you don’t want to use it, but you keep it around to keep people nervous. A psychological Cold War of parenting.

But my youngest? She treats it like it’s a microphone at an awards show.

She strutted into the room, spoon in hand, held it out to me solemnly, with a look of firm resolve—like a medieval squire to her liege lord:

“Your duty, Father. It is time.”

I froze.

The older kids, sensing impending doom, stopped fighting mid-breath. Time itself paused. Somewhere, a Gregorian monk began chanting.

And there she stood. Waiting. Beckoning. As if I were the executioner in some 1st-grade Game of Thrones spinoff called House of Timeouts.

I tried to maintain authority. I did. I really did.

But boy it’s hard to discipline when your preschooler is offering you the instrument of wrath like a holy relic, whispering, “Do it, Daddy. Smack them all down.”

I sent her out of the room. Holding the implement of her wrath. She came back ten seconds later, this time with a second spoon—backup, in case I broke the first one on their insolence, apparently.

Long story short, no one got spanked this day, one person got a very serious lecture, and that person was me, by my two-year-old, about “not doing my job right.”

I now live in fear of the day she learns about gavels, or swords, or robes of judgment.

But I suppose I’m proud. She obviously believes in justice. In discipline. In fair and equal spankings for all, as long is all does not include her.

She just wants to make sure Daddy does it right.

Have a great day,
austininva

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