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Read more Back to School columns from the archives
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A
Few Words Before School Starts
by Mad Dog
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School is
important. One day you’ll look back on it fondly as having been the
best years of your life, though chances are that epiphany will occur
during group therapy while you’re buzzed on Prozac. |
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It’s
easy to tell that it’s back to school time — everything is
shorter. The days are shorter, parents’ tempers are shorter, and the
line at the movie theater to see lame sequels and recycled TV shows is
so short you can sit in any seat you want and have plenty of room to
stash that Tub-O-Popcorn, 55-gallon drum of Coke, and seven-pound box
of Milk Duds you just shelled out $24.95 for.
This
means it’s time to sit down and have a talk with the kids about the
importance of an education, be they your kids, your sibling’s, or
the ones that live next door who spent most of the summer tied up and
gagged in your tool shed so you could have some peace and quiet. Kids,
you see, need guidance. They need advice. Actually they need it like a
hole in the head, but since they’re smaller than we are, they’re
going to get it anyway. After all, we heard it, and since we were
taught that it’s better to give than to receive, we’re going to
give it to them whether they like it or not. And there’s no question
which of those categories this falls in.
In
case you don’t feel comfortable having this discussion, or just
can’t find a slot between The
Surreal Life, Rock Star:
INXS, and So You Think You
Can Dance to do it, cut out the rest of this column and hand it to
your target kid. After they stop looking at you with a blank stare
because they forgot what they’re supposed to do with paper that has
words printed on it, they’ll ask you to email it to their cell
phone. Whatever you do, don’t ask them how to do that. You’re
supposed to be the one in charge here. It’s bad enough they have to
reset the clock on the VCR every time the power goes out, don’t
remind them that you can’t remember how to turn on the computer.
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Parents don’t
want to hear that your goal in life is to be a Doritos taste tester,
the winner of next year’s Nathan’s hot dog eating contest, or the
unofficial sixth member of *N Sync, so lie if you
have to. |
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OKAY KIDS, START PRETENDING TO READ HERE!
School
is important. One day you’ll look back on it fondly as having been
the best years of your life, though chances are that epiphany will
occur during group therapy while you’re buzzed on Prozac. Even
though the thought will pass, you should still make the most of these
years.
First,
get plenty of sleep and eat a good breakfast so you’re alert and can
pay attention in class. After all, you never know when it will pay
off. A few years ago eighth-grader Daniel Barnes memorized a telephone
number that was on his state-required reading comprehension test and
dialed it when he got home, discovering that it was an offer for phone
sex. Now that’s an education.
Next, study hard and stay in school. Remember, the alternative is
working, and trust me, that’s no fun. If you do well in school you
can go to college, then graduate school, postponing the need to get a
job for a long, long time.
Whatever
you do, don’t let yourself be channeled into a career just because
your parents think it’s a good idea. Do what’s right for you.
Parents naturally steer their kids towards careers like law, medicine,
and investment banking. That’s because they like the idea of getting
free legal advice, free medical care, and a new house because you
plundered yet another company by buying it and dismantling it in the
name of progress. And who can blame them? Of course they don’t want
to hear that your goal in life is to be a Doritos taste tester, the
winner of next year’s Nathan’s hot dog eating contest, or the
unofficial sixth member of *N Sync, so lie if you have to. Remember,
it’s for their own good. And yours.
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Most Americans say sexual satisfaction is more important
than job satisfaction. Thus, you might want to sit down and think
about which is more important to you so you know where to focus your
energies. |
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Set your sights high. Think outside the box. And no, that doesn’t
mean using your brain when the TV’s turned off. Remember that
innovation is good. The Japanese are growing square watermelons
because they fit better in a refrigerator, which is a great idea. So
why don’t you consider creating thin, flat tomatoes that don’t
need to be sliced before being put on a sandwich? A company in
Syracuse, NY, Transgenic Pets, is developing a non-allergenic cat, so
maybe you can create dogs that don’t have to be walked. They could
be disposable — once they fill up you just toss ‘em away and get
another.
Paint-by-numbers
is another good inspiration. They’re the paintings from the ‘50s
which allowed anyone to create ugly art by not coloring neatly between
the lines, something we supposedly get past by second grade. The
Smithsonian National Museum of American History (motto: “Boy, are we
desperate for exhibits”) displayed the paintings, which upped the
coolness factor. You’d be cool too if you came up with variants like
movies-by-number, TV-by-number, and pop music-by-number. Okay, maybe
this is a bad example, plenty of people are already doing this.
Like
it or not, your career is an important consideration since as an
American you’ll be working longer hours than anyone else in the
world. That’s right, we edged out the Japanese by putting in an
average of 1,966 hours per year. To put this in perspective, that’s
37.8 hours per week, 7.6 hours per day, and an awful lot of Web
surfing on company time.
Be
careful though. Remember that your career isn’t the most important
thing in life. According to a survey by Columbia University and the
National Institutes of Health, most Americans say sexual satisfaction
is more important than job satisfaction. Thus, you might want to sit
down and think about which is more important to you so you know where
to focus your energies.
Either
way, remember that practice makes perfect, doing your best is the
goal, and homework will be more fun if you decide sex is the most
important thing. But whatever you do, don’t tell your parents you
heard this from me. I need to keep my job. There are still a lot of
Web sites I haven’t checked out yet.
©2005
Mad Dog Productions, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
These columns appear in better newspapers across the country. Read
them while waiting for the kids to get home from school so they can
reprogram your VCR.
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