The other night I ate at a real nice family restaurant. Every table had an argument going.
– George Carlin
You’ve read this far. It might be time to meet the peeps. We’re a tiny little family, but we’re bursting with character…and different ideas about a fun vacation.
It’s been four and a half years since my last confess--er, trip report. Well, I mean I took the trip in 2009, but the trip report ended in 2010, so technically it’s been three years since I last posted.
Anyway, my point is that things have changed since then.
Me
I’m not a strict vegetarian, I eat beef and pork. And chicken. But not fish because that’s disgusting.
--Jim Gaffigan
Don't ask about the chains.
They say that the one thing that’s constant is change. I’m 43, but still learning and growing every year. Well, not growing physically. In fact, I’ve replaced my trusty ol’ treadmill with P90x and Insanity and discovered that I can get into shape a whole lot faster with them than I can walking in place for an hour. So, actually, I’ve lost a bit of weight since my last trip, thanks to the genius of Tony Horton and Sean T. But that’s not really what I’m driving at.
I’ve grown spiritually. I was an atheist for twenty years. But last May I was baptized (or, as Patrick called it at the time, “appetized”) in front of my family and friends and a whole auditorium of strangers. Patrick was there to witness, which was only fitting since he was the reason that I was brought back to God. After his conception, I began to question everything. It was a long, slow, deliberate path back to Christ. It took me a long time to realize that Patrick was a gift from God. And now my faith is so much stronger than my atheism ever could have been.
I’ve also expanded my pallet. I was a vegetarian for ten years. But now I eat
And lots of it. Chicken, pork, beef, turkey, fish, and lamb. Grilled, baked, roasted, smoked, cured, and fried. You name it. I eat it. If it flaps, it’s food. If it moos, it’s mine. I can’t get enough of that animal flesh, probably because I deprived myself for so long. One of my favorite things on the planet is our smoker. In fact, one of my best recipes (besides bad trip planning) is pulled pork. I make a mean dry rub.
For those of you that need smelling salts, let me explain. No, there is no time. Let me sum up. I went veg because I thought it was the healthiest thing for me. Now I read that grains and carbohydrates aren’t as awesome as I once thought. I ditched the veggie burgers with fifteen ingredients and replaced them with grass-fed, locally grown beef burgers (with avocado but without the bun). Can’t say I miss the veggie burgers all that much. Oh meat, how I’ve missed you.
[kisses and gropes chicken breast]
On a somewhat related note, I have a lot of used vegetarian cookbooks for sale. Cheap.
To celebrate my road to Christ (which is now lined with charred and smoked flesh), I think I ought to plan a trip to Disney. Seems like the most logical next step, don’t you think?
Dan
I gotta quit smoking, doctor's orders. And the drinking, court orders.
--Dave Attell
You're not writing bad things about me in a public forum, are you?
This man smoked for 24 years. I have spent countless years holding my breath while kissing him. I have rolled my eyes countless times whenever he came home with another carton of cigarettes. I have sighed countless breaths at every smoking section in every public setting. But two years ago, he gave it up for good. Patrick inspired him to quit…Dan realized that he wanted to be around to see his son grow up. Although I’m known to be quite critical of prescription medication, Chantix has become my all-time favorite drug. All hail.
Around that time when he threw away his final carton of coffin nails, he also managed to get his bachelor’s degree.
WITHOUT MY KNOWLEDGE.
Yes, you read that right. The man earned a whole degree and I never knew. I mean, I realize now that all the warning signs were there. I probably should have been a little suspicious when he left us for four years. “I’ll be home for dinner sometime in 2012.” Actually he did it all online at work (which was funded by work). One day during dinner he says all casually, “Oh hey, I finished the Vandelay report. And I also got my bachelor’s degree today.” I almost choked on my charred chicken bone and managed to squeak out, “Whoa, back up. Beep beep beep. You finished the Vandelay report?”
Something else you should know. The man spends hours—I mean HOURS—alone in the garage with his new truck. The one he never wanted to buy. He’s done a lot of work to it, yes, but I know there’s only so much work a man can do to a vehicle. I began to get suspicious when he would come in the house, a sly smile playing on his lips and his crotch reeking like exhaust. Trying to catch him in the act, I will suddenly throw open the garage door and ask him what he’s doing. He’ll have a beer and a guilty look every time. I never thought the man was capable of infidelity until he met this Dodge Ram. I swear that truck has been violated something awful. Sometimes when he comes in after hours in the garage I’ll say, “Have you been humping your vehicle again?” I get an innocent look and a “Whaaaaaat?” Then he’ll mutter something about crazy talk.
Stop talking about my truck, woman.
One time I sent Patrick out there to ask him if he was done kissing his truck because dinner was ready.
Yes, I use my son as a weapon. Bad mommy.
Unfortunately, tragedy struck Dan’s family last year. His father passed away in February 2012 from a stroke. Dan was overwhelmed with grief. Alex was his best friend. But the devastation to his mother was even more apparent. She lost her lifelong companion of 54 years and the pain of losing him was too much for her. She died of a broken heart one year after losing her husband. Almost a year to the day. We buried her in February 2013. Dan has been struggling to learn to live without both of his parents.
Patrick's letter to Grandma.
I figure the best way to cheer him up is a Disney vacation.
Patrick
Having a child is surely the most beautifully irrational act that two people in love can commit.
--Bill Cosby
Our peanut.
Sup?
Fear the camouflaged six-year-old.
Ah, our boy Patrick. The boy who inspired me to become a Christian and for Dan to quit his lifelong smoking habit. He came along after six years of infertility. From the womb I could tell he was a character; if he was even slightly uncomfortable in there, I got a nice punch in the ribs. At six weeks old he started screaming. I think it stopped a month and a half later. When he was two I caught him with his index finger in mouth.
Patrick: Mmmmmm.
Me: What’s so yummy?
Patrick: [removes finger] Booger.
When he was three and at airport security for the first time, he didn’t just stop at his coat and shoes. He was taking off his pants and underwear too. Dan and I just barely saved him from getting his first Indecent Exposure infraction.
At four, he had this to say about Dan’s large lesbian sister:
Patrick: Aunt Donna is a boy.
Dan: No, Aunt Donna is a girl.
Patrick: No, she’s a boy.
Dan: No, Patrick, I’m telling you. She’s a girl.
Patrick: [getting impatient] A Boy!
Dan: [turning red and talking through clenched teeth] SHE’S. A. GIRL.
Patrick: Nope. You’re wrong.
(By the way, this same large lesbian sister was on the recently-aired episode of
Hardcore Pawn entitled “Scent of Deception,” riding Les around the parking lot on her 1989 trike.)
Patrick can name all fifty states just by looking at their shape (backwards, forwards, upside down, doesn't matter). Any sentence with the words “booger,” “fart,” or “poop” is the Funniest. Thing. Ever, especially at the dinner table. He is currently experimenting with power struggles, which are always fun. He is
extremely opinionated. For those that know me and Dan, this news, I’m sure, is no surprise.
For the longest time, I couldn’t get Patrick to show a strong interest in any particular subjects. I wanted him to get obsessed with something…anything…and see him dive into it, full-tilt boogie, and without abandon. For five years of his life, I never really saw this kind of obsessive passion in anything. I pushed things like cars, dinosaurs, rocks, pirates, even insects. He was mildly interested, but never involved. I felt like a failure as a mom.
And then we went to Cedar Point in August. We’ve been going every year since he was two, but this year was different. This year he was tall enough to ride his first roller coaster.
Enter Patrick’s new obsession…roller coasters.
We have paper all over the first and second floors with his roller coaster drawings on them. He draws them in the car, on the computer, in the living room, at the dinner table, on vacation, and at school…if they would only let him. Even now as I type, I am surrounded by at least twenty sheets of computer paper scattered around the desk with his ink all over them. He spent an entire Sunday in September (eight-plus hours) designing his own amusement park. He designed, named, and put height restrictions for each ride, figured out a location and dates it would open, how many employees he would need, how much tickets would cost, and even came up with security and bad weather plans. At one point that day I had asked him if he wanted to watch a movie (bad mommy!), figuring he needed a break. He just said, “No thank you,” and went back to his task. I couldn’t believe the focus and drive in my little six-year-old.
Patrick going over his amusement park drawings with Dan.
My little guy is OBSESSED. Nothing mild about it. His favorite state shape is Ohio, his favorite place is Cedar Point (“I wish we could live there,” he says every day), and his favorite thing to sit in is Iron Dragon. He watches point-of-view roller coasters on
YouTube. He makes his own roller coasters using anything that looks like it could be a ride: the back of a chair, the arm of a couch, the toilet, your head, or a handrail. He can name all sixteen roller coasters in Cedar Point, what the height requirement is, and when he’ll be old enough to ride it. He’ll quiz me in the car. “Mommy, name a roller coaster that is blue and bumpy.”
So…a warning to new parents…be careful what you wish for. As excited as I am that Patrick found his passion, I think my eyes are going to stick for as many times as I’ve rolled them when he says, “Mommy, let’s talk about roller coasters.” How many times I wanted to scream ENOUGH ALREADY! when he pulls out the Cedar Point map and makes you trace the path to every attractions (in order) that he will ride next year as he traces the path on the map with his finger….days one and two…which are different. And both must be done. Lunch stops are included. Fortunately, potty breaks are not.
Anyway, I figure the best way to celebrate his passion for roller coasters is a trip to Disney World.
So let’s revisit that moment when I finally made the reservation with Disney Reservations…
…Let’s see. I remember that I hung up. I spun around in my chair. I screamed something about going to Disney World. And then I was met with a wall of silence. Or a symphony of crickets. Whatever. It wasn’t exactly what I was expecting. Or maybe they didn’t hear me. Well, let’s find the family and try this again.
Dan's in the kitchen, holding an envelope.
Me: Didn’t you hear me? I made reservations at Disney!
Dan: Did you get the AAA discount?
Me: Yep! I don’t need no stinkin’ travel agent.
Dan: That’s my little travel planner. [goes back to reading mail]
Me: [standing, waiting for a reaction, ready to scream in joy]
Dan: Too bad we can’t drive our trailer to Hawaii.
[silence]
Dan: Is
Suits on tonight?
Okay, so Dan had the Been-There-Done-That attitude. No matter. I found Patrick at his desk, scribbling roller coasters in his notebook.
Me: Hey Peanut.
Patrick: [not looking up] Hi Mommy.
Me: Guess what! No…look at me…guess what?
Patrick: [blank stare]
Me: We’re going to Disney World!
Patrick: Uh huh.
Me: No, seriously. This is a big deal. Disney World is the best place ever.
Patrick: Do they have any roller coasters?
Me: Yes! Of course!
Patrick: [wide-eyed] How many?
Me: Ummm….four.
Patrick: [snorts and goes back to his drawing]
The next day, however, I dragged him to the computer. “Check this out!” I said, pulling up a POV video on Space Mountain. “It’s a roller coaster from Disney World.”
The blue light beginning really got his attention. “Oh cool!” he said. My heart swelled. And then…the POV plunged into night vision darkness. After ten seconds of that he said, “This is boring,” and walked away.
What was I thinking, showing him a video of a dark ride? How dumb is that?
“Come back!” I said, my voice thick with desperation. “Here’s another one!” Patrick reluctantly wandered back in as I stumbled around You Tube for another video. Finally, before he could get away, a Big Thunder Mountain Railroad POV video came on the screen. Much to my disappointment, the “view” was nothing but the front train car, which blocked everything. To top it, the coaster only goes—what? Twenty miles an hour? After watching hours of roller coasters that do sixty miles an hour or more, this “train ride” looked pretty lame to my boy. In a matter of seconds, I lost him again, and he shuffled back out of the room as I frantically searched for a better POV video of it.
I, now insane with determination, muttered to the empty office. “Just you wait, Patrick. I’ll find a video and you’ll totally love it. You’ll want to watch this sucker over and over. And then I’ll find something even better. Like Expedition Everest or something. That’s right. So awesome you’ll weep. You’ll be begging me to take you on it. You’ll see. Oh…you will see.”
Mad? Me? Yes. And I am determined to do whatever I have to in order to get these two knuckleheads excited for our magical freaking vacation.
-------------------
Now that I have all of my ingredients, let stir this mess up and see how it cooks up. Cuz mama is hungry for some misadventure.
Next installment: Our first weekend in The Beast