Bad Parent?
First, just a couple of events. Wednesday night at 6:30 I will be doing readings and signings at the Spingville, UT library with two great authors and really funny people: Jessica Day George and Janette Rallison. Drop by if you are in the area.
Also, the Strymakers Writers Conference is this Friday and Saturday. Tons of awesome authors will be there. Can't wait to see everyone who is coming. Now to the tough stuff.

Does writing automatically make you a bad parent?
As a writer, you tend to hang around with a lot of other writers. Go figure, huh? But one of the interesting things about this is the gender ratio. Not sure what I mean? Imagine taking Home Ec. in high school as a guy. If you did, you did it for one reason. Because the rest of the students were girls. Well, okay, maybe you didn’t want to get beat up by the things in wood shop. Anyway, my point is that there seem to be many more female writers than male writers. And nearly every female writer I know beats herself up about not being a good enough mom. “I feed my kids cold cereal.” “I haven’t vacuumed my house since every movie starred the brat pack.” “I once sent my son to school with nothing but a slice of cheese and a Twinkie for lunch.”
First let me just say that your kids aren’t going to remember what they had for lunch at school. Okay, maybe they will but you can just tell them that they are remembering an episode from Fairly Odd Parents. Second, your male counterparts would be 1000 worse as moms. We would feed our kids Coco Puffs with no milk because it went bad. (And we would have taken the prize out first.) We wouldn’t ever have vacuumed because we wouldn’t have thought to buy a vacuum. (That’s what shag carpet is for.) And while we would probably send our kids to school with cheese and a Twinkie, we would be proud of actually remembering to pack a lunch.
So I guess it’s time for me to confess too. I am a bad parent. No really, a bad, bad parent. I paid my nineteen year-old five bucks last week to drive out and buy fried rice at the local Chinese food place wearing a Fruit Loop box on his head. I teach them the wrong words to Church hymns. “All creatures of our God and King. Stick out your tongues and try to sing. Hallelujah. Hallelujah. Oh praise Him.” The last part is sung with your tongue out of course.
When my kids scream for help because they got their head stuck in the banister or have the net basketball game collapse on them, my first thought is, “Where is the camera?” Of course none of them was permanently injured, and I got lots of great pictures.
I also lie to my kids—a lot! All of my children know that in the (fairly likely) event of a rollercoaster flying off the tracks, your only hope is to jump out and aim for the hot dog stand. I get them to bite unsweetened chocolate bars. I told my son that when he turns twelve he will get a secret decoder ring and learn a secret handshake that will get him free video games at Block Buster. I once told a ghost story at my daughters sleepover that was so scary, the guest of honor had to go home.
It’s my fault that in any large gathering (be it church or a movie) my kids start whispering, “See if you can find the woman who used a rolling pin to curl her hair.” Or, “Where’s the boy who wanted to be Pinocchio when he grows up?” Getting a laugh is the highest compliment in our house. Which is probably why my son nearly needed stitches after falling from a friend’s desk while pulling his shirt over his knees to look like a midget, and recently walked around his room with his lunchbox zipped over his head. Also, my kids have never been to the Grand Canyon, Yellowstone, or Mt Rushmore, but they have been to Disney Parks more than a dozen times.
So yeah. Bad parent. But somehow when I come do a presentation at their school, or get them ARCs from their favorite authors, or tell really cool bedtime stories (that are still kind of scary) they forgive me. No next time you worry about writing making you a bad parent, remember that your kids probably won’t remember what lunch you sent them to school with. And if they dodo, just just blame it on false memory syndrome. Kids are really gullible that way.

14 Comments:
hehe ^.^ That really made me laugh!
you sent the guest of honor home with nightmares!!!! that is both hilarious and horrible!
Can I still sign up for the conference? due to complications, it turns out my parents forgot to actually turn in the application after filling it out...
There's nothing quite as comforting as bad parent validation.
Just yesterday my twelve year old son said, "Mom, I bet you can't wait for summer. I'll do one chore a day and then the house won't be a wreck all the time."
...Oh no, they're starting to notice...
Oh Scott, this is funny. I'm ready for you next book.
I wish one of parents were on author (that would make my life so much easier)...ah well. No use moaning over something you can't change.
Here's something you might have a tip on. Neither of my parents show much interst in my writing (they only really care about grades and violin). Any advice as to how I can arrous the interest I so desperately seek?
Ok, Scott, I'm know for a fact that you have done all those things but you have to balance it out. For example, you've taught two teenagers to drive and are so relaxed you fall asleep in the passenger seat. Thats miraculous! You take your kids out on one on one adventures and they are -in fact- adventures! And you hosted 1400 kids under the age of 19 at your house for your son's missionary farewell luncheon. If that doesn't qualify for parent sainthood I don't know what does.
That was so great!! I LOL so much my kids had to come over to the computer to see what was wrong!
Now, remember on Saturday night at the Whitney Awards, that getting a laugh is a high compliment...OK? You will know what I mean during LDS Womens Book Review's presentation of Best Romance.:)
Ha, HAAAA!!! So true! I especially like the Fruit Loop box on the head.
I wonder if one of the reasons you don't hear as many dads ripping on themself is because they know they're a rotten parent, but don't mind the fact, so long as their kids come out okay in the end.
By the way, I've noticed that deal with the guy authors. Either there just aren't many out there or they don't blog. You're one of the first LDS author guys I've found, though I've been actively involved on the LDS women author communities.
Do you know other guy authors? I'd love to connect!
- Chas
http://chas.willowrise.com
That was way funny! Can you put a post about the second book? I want to hear more about it!
Your faithful reader JKLOL
Soccerboy11
Scott, you're not the only dad who taught their kids the wrong words to songs. My dad was a Scout leader for almost all of my growing up years. (Which probably tells you plenty without any more explanation.)
I know several unauthorized versions of "How Gentle God's Commands" and though I don't remember my dad paying any of us to wear cereal boxes or anything else odd on our heads, I have several pictures of him wearing odd totally non-hat-like items on his head.
I adore my dad, and always have. He taught us the important things and worked hard, but when it was time for fun (and occassionally even when it shouldn't have been), we had oodles of fun and have great memories of growing up.
From kid to father, thanks for not posting the embarrassing pictures ;)
You're ALSO the only dad cool enough to be in a newspaper article about the creative lunches you made us.. what dad puts potato chips in his kids' peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, and drops in a napkin with a fun poem written on it? :)
I'm supposed to send the kids with lunch to school????? Why didn't anyone tell me????
How on Earth does messing with your kids make you a bad parent? That's just preparing them for the real world, which ALSO sucks! I'd love to see some of those pictures :-)
Thanks for reassuring me that I am not a bad parent even though I feel like it when I get mad at my kids for smearing peanut butter, markers, and hair gel over various surfaces of the house. I posted a review about the Scrapbox on my blog, if you’d like to see a pic, come visit!
come on man! wake up and post some more! ^.^ I have pictures of you and Mrs. Savage from the Storymakers Conference ^.~ I'll have to pull them out if you don't post something soon! (same threat for James....hmm, I need some new ones...)
I'm so extremely curious as to whats been happening in your life! (besides summer vacation of course!)
Okay, in all honesty, I'm going to post them anyways ^.^ (some of them are hilarious!) I just wonder about the author that suddenly went quite!
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