'Did you read the interview in
'A few months back?'
'Uh-huh.'
'Disgraceful.'
'Did you read the one in
'No.'
'God, it was practically the same interview.'
'I don't know why they give her the time of day.'
The fact that one of these ladies was my mom made me feel particularly sad because my mom is beautiful. And she's always on a diet. Sometimes, my dad calls her beautiful, but she cannot hear him. Incidentally, my dad is a very good husband. He's just pragmatic.
After the dentist's office, my mom drove me to the cemetery where a lot of her relatives are buried. My dad does not like to go to the cemetery because it gives him the creeps. But I don't mind going at all because my Aunt Helen is buried there. My mom was always the pretty one, as they say, and my Aunt Helen was always the other one. The nice thing was my Aunt Helen was never on a diet. And my Aunt Helen was 'corpulent.' Hey, I did it!
My Aunt Helen would always let us kids stay up and watch
I won't start listing television episode memories, except one because I guess we're on the subject, and it seems like something everyone can relate to in a small way. And since I don't know you, I figure that maybe I can write about something that you can relate to.
The family was sitting around, watching the final episode of
Then, he walked up, patted my shoulder, and said, 'This is our little secret, okay, champ?'
'Okay,' I said.
And Dad picked me up with the arm that wasn't holding the sandwich, and carried me to the room that had the television, and put me on his lap for the rest of the television episode. At the end of the episode, he picked me up, turned off the TV, and turned around.
And my dad declared, 'That was a great series.'
And my mom said, 'The best.'
And my sister asked, 'How long was it on the air?'
And my brother replied, 'Nine years, stupid.'
And my sister responded, 'You… stupid.'
And my dad said, 'Stop it, right now.'
And my mom said, 'Listen to your father.'
And my brother said nothing.
And my sister said nothing.
And years later I found out my brother was wrong.
I went to the library to look up the figures, and I found out that the episode we watched is the highest watched anything of television history, which I find amazing because it felt like just the five of us.
You know… a lot of kids at school hate their parents. Some of them got hit. And some of them got caught in the middle of wrong lives. Some of them were trophies for their parents to show the neighbors like ribbons or gold stars. And some of them just wanted to drink in peace.
For me personally, as much as I don't understand my mom and dad and as much as I feel sorry for both of them sometimes, I can't help but love them very much. My mom drives to visit the cemetery of people she loves. My dad cried during
Incidentally, I only have one cavity, and as much as my dentist asks me to, I just can't bring myself to floss.
I feel very ashamed. I went to the high school football game the other day, and I don't know exactly why. In middle school, Michael and I would go to the games sometimes even though neither of us were popular enough to go. It was just a place to go on Fridays when we didn't want to watch television. Sometimes, we would see Susan there, and she and Michael would hold hands.
But this time, I went alone because Michael is gone, and Susan hangs around different boys now, and Bridget is still crazy, and Carl's mom sent him to a Catholic school, and Dave with the awkward glasses moved away. I was just kind of watching people, seeing who was in love and who was just hanging around, and I saw that kid I told you about. Remember Nothing? Nothing was there at the football game, and he was one of the few people who was not an adult that was actually watching the game. I mean really watching the game. He would yell things out.
'Can'mon, Brad!' That's the name of our quarterback.
Now, normally I am very shy, but Nothing seemed like the kind of guy you could just walk up to at a football game even though you were three years younger and not popular.
'Hey, you're in my shop class!' He's a very friendly person.
'I'm Charlie.' I said, not too shy.
'And I'm Patrick. And this is Sam.' He pointed to a very pretty girl next to him. And she waved to me.
'Hey, Charlie.' Sam had a very nice smile.
They both told me to have a seat, and they both seemed to mean it, so I took a seat. I listened to Nothing yell at the field. And I listened to his play-by-play analysis. And I figured out that this was a kid who knew football very well. He actually knew football as well as my brother. Maybe I should call Nothing 'Patrick' from now on since that is how he introduced himself, and that is what Sam calls him.
Incidentally, Sam has brown hair and very very pretty green eyes. The kind of green that doesn't make a big deal about itself. I would have told you that sooner, but under the stadium lights, everything looked kind of washed out. It wasn't until we went to the Big Boy, and Sam and Patrick started to chain-smoke that I got a good look at her. The nice thing about the Big Boy was the fact that Patrick and Sam didn't just throw around inside jokes and make me struggle to keep up. Not at all. They asked me questions.
'How old are you, Charlie?'
'Fifteen.'
'What do you want to do when you grow up?'
'I don't know just yet.'
'What's your favorite band?'
'I think maybe the Smiths because I love their song `Asleep,' but I'm really not sure one way or the other because I don't know any other songs by them too well.'
'What's your favorite movie?'
'I don't know really. They're all the same to me.'