The Mountain Hike of Doom! It’s A Trap!

There’s a special kind of confidence you feel when you’re young parents. The kind that makes you believe you can do absolutely anything, even when every sign in the universe is flashing “You’re not built for this, turn back now, before its to late!” That was us the day we decided to tackle Apple Orchard Falls in Roanoke, Virginia.

We had read—somewhere, from someone we clearly should never trust again, likely a blog post—that this was a “family-friendly” hike. Three miles. Easy. Scenic. Great for kids. With a 200ft. water fall at the end to reward you for your efforts.

Looking back, I think the person who wrote that review either A) has no children, B) has legs made of titanium, or C) is deeply evil and enjoys watching families suffer.

When we started, the trail was lovely. Paved. Gentle. Birds singing. Trees swaying. The Appalachian Mountains whispering sweet sweet encouragement. I was wearing flip-flops, because obviously this was going to be a walk in the park.

Oh, how wrong we were.

Logan, our oldest, was three at the time—full of energy and absolutely no stamina. Kara couldn’t walk yet. And in a poetic twist, the rest of us would soon join her in that condition.

About a quarter mile in, the trail stopped pretending it was friendly and revealed its true form: a steep, rocky, Appalachian torture chamber. One moment we were strolling. The next moment we were basically clinging to a rock face like confused, underprepared mountain goats, while chords of dueling banjos drifted over the wind.

I remember thinking, “Huh. Maybe flip-flops weren’t the right footwear.” But at that point the only way out was through, and pride is a powerful thing. So I kept going, slapping my bargain-bin sandals against rock like I was auditioning for a survival show.

Then Logan stopped. And not like a normal “I’m tired” stop. He turned into a full-on statue. Sat down on the trail, folded his arms, and decided that his journey was over. Absolutely refused to move another inch. A three-year-old weighs approximately twelve thousand pounds when they don’t want to be carried, and as I stared at him, I briefly—just for a second—considered leaving him there to be raised by chipmunks.

Before I got too far into that plan, Jo—my fearless, dramatic, and always sacrificial wife—stepped in to help. And by “help,” I mean she attempted to maneuver herself and Logan down a rocky section and performed the most spectacular, heroic fall I have ever seen. She twisted, turned, threw her weight so Logan didn’t roll off the mountain, and in the process, she broke her knee.

At least for the purpose of this story she broke her knee. In real life, she hurt it so badly she eventually needed surgery, so you should feel about 12% sad for her. The other 88% is reserved for “What were we thinking?”

That was the moment the mountain made it clear: we were not going to see any falls. We weren’t even going to see anything falling except us. We were done. The dream died right there next to a mossy boulder and a very confused toddler.

Turning around felt like admitting defeat—and it absolutely was. But when your wife is injured, your toddlers are staging a sit-in, your infant is along for the ride, and your footwear has the structural integrity of wet noodles, pride becomes optional.

The walk back to the van took roughly three eternities. Every rock mocked me. Every incline felt personal. At one point, I’m pretty sure the mountain whispered, “Should’ve worn shoes, buddy.” Between my wives shattered knees, Slayden on my back, Logan on my shoulders, diaper bulging to the point of pending nuclear explosion, and kara in my arms, the shoes were the 5th worry on my list.

By the time we finally stumbled back to the van—bloody, bruised, limping, and spiritually broken—we didn’t celebrate. We didn’t talk. We just sat there, breathing like we’d escaped a prison break. I searched for the nearest McDonalds, we deserved a coke, and a burger… and a lot more than McDonald’s could sell us. Jo googled, nearest ER.

We left a lot on that trail. Some of our innocence. The last of our pride. And, a chunk of Jo’s knee.

The mountain won that day. And I’m completely fine letting it keep the title.

hope today is a FLAT one!

-austininva

for more chaos, check out the page! https://www.facebook.com/oldedom

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

Verified by MonsterInsights