I figured that, while my son remains firmly lodged in the wife’s uterine grotto, this was a good time to write him a letter for when he’s born — especially since, when he’s born, I won’t have time to write this letter, I’ll only have time to wash the poop out of my hair. We are now just about at “full-term” (though we’re likely to have a handful of weeks remaining where he stubbornly hides out and refuses to emerge). So, here we are: a letter to my as-yet-unborn son. Please to enjoy.
Dear Son:
Hello, boy. Welcome to the world.
I am your landlord overlord ski instructor father. You will be seeing a lot of me, and so it behooves us both to find clarity in terms of our relationship. Do you agree? (Pee in my mouth once for yes, twice for no.)
I’d like immediately to express my sincerest apologies because, as it turns out, I am clueless as to how to be a father. I don’t just mean how to be a good father, but rather, how to be a father at all. One supposes that since the title is earned by dint of breeding and not necessarily by habit or by skill, I guess being a father is no more the sum of being a human piping tube whereupon I… erm, frosted your mother’s, uhhh, cupcakes and made a soft, spongy-headed cupcake baby like yourself (we’ll get into the specifics of sexual reproduction when you’re a little bit older, like, say, when you’re around 24 or so). That said, being a father is an entirely different enterprise then Being A Father, and it’s this latter identifier that gives me trouble.
Consider: I can barely take care of myself. If I did not have your mother present, one could make a safe bet that I’d be found on a ratty couch out in the woods, my hair a nest for nuthatches, my body encrusted in the debris and feces of nature. I’d be trying to play XBOX by plugging a controller into the puckered knothole on an oak tree. I’d be surviving on a diet of acorns and venison ordure, which is just a fancy of way of saying “deer poop.” (This is one skill I may be able to offer you, the skill of making things sound much better than they are. I am a writer, after all, or as your friends’ parents will call it, a “marginally-employed drunken vagrant.” We are also talented liars, and so you should expect that at least 33% of the things that come out of my mouth are utter bullshit, usually said in response to answer a question I have no idea how to answer. I will never lie to be malicious. Rather, I will lie to shellac over my ineptitude.)
The point being, I am a woefully clueless human being, and so you will come to me at times looking for answers, and because I’m kind of a dick, I’m going to pretend I have the answers rather than highlighting my own deep uncertainty. You’re going to ask things like, “Daddy, what are clouds?” or “Where do puppies come from?” or “How do I navigate the terrors of a solipsistic universe?” And, instead of being honest with you, I’m just going to make stuff up. “Clouds are unicorn farts,” I might say. “Puppies are made when human babies are stolen from their cribs and taken to the moon to be turned into werewolves.” “Because bees, that’s why.” I will pray that these answers satisfy you. Sorry if they don’t.
Actually, in thinking about it, there exists an unholy armada of things for which I should apologize.
Here they are, in no particular order.
One: I am terribly clumsy. It’s a good bet that I will drop you. So, wear a helmet.
Two: I have all the patience of an ant on a sugar rush. This, combined with my general lack of manly skills, will ensure that all your Some Assembly Required toys will in the future be put together by a liberal swaddling of duct tape and super-glue. In fact, it is safe to assume that all your toys will lie embedded in a big wad of tape with only meager hints of proper “toy shape.” This should explain your stroller, by the way.
Three: I cannot promise I’m going to be very good at assuaging your childhood fears. “Daddy, I think there’s a monster outside my window.” “Holy crap, I know, right? There’s monsters everywhere, kid. Did you see this image of the chupacabra I found on the Internet? That’s crazy, right? Not nearly as crazy as serial killers, though. Those dudes will sneak into your room and steal you away into the night so that they can use your bones to build their Scarecrow Gods. By the way, have I told you about skin cancer yet? Here, look at this mole. Does it look like skin cancer? It feels like skin cancer. I think I’m dying.”
Four: We live in a world where terrible things exist. Like, for instance, jeggings. Sorry about that.
Five: You’re going to find a lot of pressure exerted upon you to “be a man.” Nobody knows what being a man really involves except for the biological factor of likely owning and operating your own penis. Beyond that, it’s all a big hazy fog of nobody-really-knows. It isn’t about carpentry or karate, it isn’t about deer hunting or banging bar sluts. It might have something to do honor and loyalty and being a stand-up dude. It definitely has something to do with peeing in the snow while standing up. Like I said: hazy. Worry less about being a good man and worry more about being a good person.
Six: I’m probably going to make you watch a lot of Star Wars. But maybe not the prequels? I dunno. Do you really want to watch a movie that talks a lot about “trade federations?” Besides, the protagonist of the first three movies spoils the really cool reveal in Empire Strikes Back (if I recall, it has something to do with Bruce Willis being both alive and dead at the same time). Further, the protagonist of the prequels is a total douche. He ends up being a wife-abuser and a child-murderer, which puts him somewhere on par with Freddy Kruger from the Nightmare on Elm Street movies. So when the time comes where we’re supposed to believe that Darth Vader has some good in him, you’re suddenly all like, “Yeah, but that guy was a real asshole, and I’m suddenly having a hard time getting on board this whole ‘redemptive path’ thing — maybe Luke should’ve just lightsabered that guy in the head and washed his hands of the whole affair.” Plus, then Luke makes out with his sister? Wow, yeah, I dunno, maybe we’re not going to watch Star Wars after all. Too complex. Here, read some James Joyce instead.
Seven: No, really, I’m going to make you read James Joyce.
I’m sure I’ll find other things for which to apologize. Keep an eye out.
All that being said, this feels like a good time to let you know of my Blueprint For Fatherhood, which is to say, the designs I have for you, my son. Some parents have great, often vicarious aspirations for their children: “He shall be a doctor.” “He will be a powerful litigator.” “He will marry a woman with good breeding hips and a kick-ass dowry.”
My aspirations are admittedly meager in comparison.
These are my aspirations for you.
First, that you are not eaten by squirrels. I figure that, as a father, my first task is to keep small woodland creatures from trying to eat you. They will constantly be trying to eat you. I am the thin bearded line between life and death by squirrel-nibblings.
Second, that you grow up and become a functional human being who can exist amongst others without pooping up the metaphorical hot tub that is our society.
Third, that you are not a drug addict. Or a Republican.
I’m just kidding. You can be a drug addict and we’ll still love you.
Fourth, that you love books. And also, that you love stories in general.
Fifth, that you become a famous anthropologist, just because it’d be really cool for me to tell other parents, “That’s my son, the famous anthropologist.” To be clear, I might tell them this anyway. So, you don’t actually have to become a famous anthropologist. In fact, we might just make that your first name. “Ladies and Gentlemen, Famous Anthropologist Wendig.” Nickname: Famanthro.
Sixth, that you’re not a jerk. The world is home to too many jerks.
Seventh, that regardless of all of the above, you’re a healthy and happy little human. Or, if you don’t end up being human, that you’re a happy and healthy robot, Sasquatch, demigod, or dryad.
Oh, and eighth, that you don’t end up being a writer. Because those guys are fucking crazy.
To recap:
I don’t know what I’m doing, I will lie to you, but I will protect you from squirrels.
In return, you will be a famous anthropologist who reads books and isn’t a jerk.
One day I hope that you look back upon this letter and realize that, despite the face of confidence I put forth, I actually don’t know anything about anything and that it’s okay that you don’t necessarily know anything about anything either, especially when the time comes to have a child of your own. I also hope you think back to those first moments, days, even years of your life, and this letter helps to explain the competing looks upon my face of Pants-Shitting Terror and Blissful Wonderment. Because I must say, I am eagerly looking forward to meeting you, my son, even though your first instinct will probably be to poop in my hair. In fact, that will probably also be your instinct through much of your life, especially when you become a dread teenager. It’s okay. You can poop in my hair and laugh about it. It’s part of our contract, I suppose.
I expect to meet you soon. Likely in the next month or so. Even though I do not yet know you, you are my emergent progeny, my heir to der Wendighaus, my cherubic spawn.
I love you, son.
Peace in the Middle East.
Love,
Your Father
P.S. If you happen to be a girl, that’s okay, too, though you might have some explaining to do in regards to the so-called “turtle shot.” What was that thing, then? The Loch Ness Monster? Regardless, your nickname will still be Famanthro, so don’t think you’re wiggling out of that.
P.P.S. Your mother is awesome. We’ll defer to her judgment in times of confusion.
Justin D. Jacobson says:
If it’s a girl, you can’t go with Famanthro. That’s just cruel. Use Famanthra.
You’re welcome.
May 9, 2011 — 6:15 AM
Michael Webb says:
Awesome.
It’s probably no comfort at all, good sir, but my little bundle of joy is now 6’3″ and just turned 15. I still don’t know what the f&*k I’m doing.
May 9, 2011 — 7:12 AM
Kate Haggard says:
This might be the best thing to read on the Monday morning of an uncertain week.
Pssssst. You’ll want Famanthro to at least be a little bit of a writer if you want him to be a famous anthropologist. See, I’ve got this here BA in anthropology and the professors that I had that are famous anthropologists themselves all said that creative writing was the best thing ever to pair with anth. A lot of the work is writing, and – in order to get famous – writing for more than just your colleagues. So you might want him to be at least a little bit of a writer.
May 9, 2011 — 8:10 AM
terribleminds says:
Psssh. In the FUTURE, all famous anthropologists will be TV stars. Writing’s totally a dead-end career.
— c.
May 9, 2011 — 8:12 AM
Shullamuth Smith says:
Hells to the yeah for Joyce. Raise that kid up right!
May 9, 2011 — 8:46 AM
Lindsay Mawson says:
The nice thing about babies is that for the first few months, they just lie there. That gives you ample time to scratch your head (or beard) and try to figure out what the hell you’re supposed to be doing. They’ll just look at you most of the time (with judgemental eyes) but they can’t say anything yet. Enjoy that.
And as for squirrels… you’ll be lucky if squirrels manage to catch up to the kid when he starts walking (and/or running), and even manage to weigh him down a little. You might even want to just make a live squirrel vest for him (attach some nuts?), just like a weight vest. Or adorn your house and yard with shiny things. That’ll slow him down.
When babies are actually animated, they start to be funny. When they’re 15 months, like my daughter, they’re always making you laugh. You won’t even remember that you don’t know anything because really, you know EVERYTHING compared to the kid, and you’re like a god to them. Good luck!
May 9, 2011 — 9:00 AM
Jeanne Veillette Bowerman says:
Do as I did — start the therapy fund before the college one. 🙂
You’re going to be a great dad, Chuck. Hell, you already are.
May 9, 2011 — 9:20 AM
Scott Holmes says:
Nicely done, Chuck. As a father, I can tell you without hesitation that none of us know/knew what the hell we are/were doing. My kid is five now, and I have a 16-year old stepdaughter. I’ve learned a bit along the way, but still realize I am clueless and that her mom knows everything. Once you accept that, things are much easier.
The lying to your kid is perfectly acceptable, needed, and, frankly, useful as hell. If nothing else, the lying buys you time, whic will be in short supply. Eventually, they’ll figure you out. Then they’ll just chuckle and laugh at “the silly old bastard in the corner,” which then means you’ve made it. You’ll have reached that status where you’re just a blithering old fart, where they’ll hear you talk, but won’t really be listening. You’ll be left alone. A mere trinket on the mantelpiece. Then you’re golden.
You’ll be fine.
Really.
May 9, 2011 — 9:29 AM
Pamala Knight says:
What an awesome letter!! It will make things SO much easier when your wife tries to explain all the “why’s” about daddy to him, lol (that is when she’s not being her own good kind and awesome self by bailing you and me out of the slam). My boys have two generations of BIG FISH-type males to overcome or join. You know, nature or nuture. Crazy runs bone deep, believe you me.
Being the mother of not one but two sons, I volunteer to Skype baby Wendig in so he can see that the nutty parents (*cough* fathers *cough* *cough*) can be survived and even celebrated. My husband wanted to name the heir Wolfier the Dane and I did the lalalala I’m not listening to you when he picked up the John Norman book to try to convince me of a good name for the spare. So, as far as I’m concerned Famantrho is all right if you can get it past your wife.
Good luck and watch out for their aim.
May 9, 2011 — 10:26 AM
KJ says:
Dude, I kept the squirrels AND the chipmunks away from my firstborn son & he still decided to become a jerk. It may be because he just turned thirteen. Or because I’m a single mother & since there’s no dad to poop on, I catch all his shit? Anyway. No offense, but from the way you talk about your confusion and ineptitude, I’m super surprised you managed to get your wife pregnant in the first place. 🙂
May 9, 2011 — 10:34 AM
terribleminds says:
@KJ:
Even monkeys know that Tab A goes into Slot B.
— c.
May 9, 2011 — 10:36 AM
Rick A. Carroll says:
Alright, looking up I realize I am going to have to break out my strap-on ovaries to comment today. Consider them locked in place, with the fallopian tubes set on frape</i.
Your son is going to be badass. Or your daughter. Whatever, I respect his/her's privacy. The best way I can be sure of this is Michelle (and not because you would be a bad parent). For a couplefew years, you have subjected her to you. Seriously man, if she can put up with you and still have desire to reproduce, you're going to kick-ass. Your sonaughter is going to have the coolest dad south of the Canadian border, until I get sick of that jackass' showboating and gank him on his way out of the McDonald's playground. Then it's all you.
Also, fucking squirrels. Finally, someone else sees through their clever disguise. Baby eating rodents.
May 9, 2011 — 10:39 AM
Weston Ochse says:
This was just terrific. You’re going to make an awesome father, Chuck.
May 9, 2011 — 12:14 PM
terribleminds says:
Thanks, @Weston! And thanks, all.
— c.
May 9, 2011 — 12:33 PM
Angela McConnell says:
I got a little snot in my tea…again. Very funny. I can’t wait to read you on the other side of “expectant.” Bwa-ha- — I mean, you’ll do great. You might get some good story ideas. Sleep deprivation will do that to you. I once hallucinated an entire novel thanks to my sleepless wonder. In any event, excellent letter, explains all the important things he will need to know and doesn’t hold back on the truth about the ugliness of the world (read: jeggings). You’re going to be a great dad. 🙂
May 9, 2011 — 12:21 PM
Anthony Elmore says:
I had to Google jeggings and one of the alternate searches was “pants for girls with neither taste or a butt.” However, I do love a gal in yoga pants.
One of life’s blessed ironies is that those who think they’ll be the worst parents turn out the best ones. You have no delusions about what’s ahead and are humbled by the prospect. It’s the parents who think their kids are child-gods who end up with greedy, hateful larvae. You’ll do fine. Just try not to drop the tot.
May 9, 2011 — 1:18 PM
Ben Kirby says:
An excellent letter, Big Daddy! (You neglected to mention the new nickname you’ve acquired whether you want it or not: “Big Daddy”. You have to admit: Big Daddy Wendig sounds pretty good.)
As a father of a little tyke myself let me just confirm for you: yes to the dropping (helmets are fairly cheap), yes to the jeggings, yes to scaring the holy hell out of him, funny enough, yes to squirrels eating him — ducks, too.
Yes to ignoring Star Wars, but I warn you this only opens up what I call the Indiana Jones Conundrum. Best of luck.
Just fantastic that you sign off “Peace in the Middle East”.
Don’t forget to get some rest.
Heh, just kidding — you’re not resting. Ever.
May 9, 2011 — 2:04 PM
terribleminds says:
@Ben:
“Big Daddy” it shall be.
— c.
May 9, 2011 — 2:30 PM
Maggie Carroll says:
(( Quick! Before my internet craps out again! ))
Dear Chuck:
The first kid is the hardest. Also the scariest.
It’s not going to matter how many late-night squirrel hunts you’ve participated in or how many pith helmets and codpieces you possess; you’re going to quiver with fear when that tiny human being is placed in your arms for the first time. The third time. The ninth time. The fifteenth time. You’re going to become hyper aware of shit you didn’t even know existed. Or maybe it existed in the margins of your periphery. Who knows? Regardless. You are going to sit up nights in a cold sweat thinking about all those laughably cute childhood diseases and the ones that aren’t so cute. (Speaking from experience, SIDS is the scariest four-letter word I know.) All those articles about faulty car seats and killer jolly jumpers and razorblades in apples at Halloween.
Your boots will be playing patty cake with each other as you think about all the dumb shit you’ve pulled, and praying to whatever you recognize as a higher power that your child won’t be half as dumb as you were because holy shit, did you give your parents a hard time and they say what goes around comes around ten times worse.
You will be measuring to the millimeter how thick their slices of bananas are, because you read on some online parenting page that the number one choker of young children is too-thick banana slices and you thought it was absolute horseshit until you heard about the kid down the block with the mother who didn’t pay quite enough attention to the size of the fruit pieces she fed her son and there was a three-ring circus of ambulances and Heimlichs and headless-chicken running-around trying to get it all sorted and by GOD that is not going to be you so where’s your ruler already or maybe a tape measure would be better, more accurate.
Your hair will go grey at an alarming rate. Especially when they start talking and walking and bumping their tender, fragile heads on hard, unyielding surfaces like floors and couches and bed frames. You might think about rubber-rooming your entire house, but in the end, it won’t matter. You are going to be so proud and choked up when they start walking, but within days they will be climbing and jumping and laughing like loons while you’re having a heart attack because they’re ten feet in the air and there’s only hard linoleum to catch them and they miraculously land without breaking anything but your last fraying nerve and you pack them off to their rooms to think about what they’ve done because you really need a minute to shake another pill out of the bottle and take another swig from the flask, wondering why you became a parent in the first place and knowing this is your karmic fucking debt for all the stuff you put your parents through.
But none of that matters. None of it matters. Because the sheer fact that you’re scared and afraid and uncertain means you give a shit. You care about their well being, their safety. You know enough to know you know absolutely shit-all, and you know enough to know that you have a lot to learn.
Fear, panic and barely-controlled terror means you’re doing it right. The first time around, anyway. By the third kid, I promise, a nuclear bomb could drop, and you won’t even budge off the couch to see if it hit the swing set.
Welcome to the club. Check your sanity at the door because you’re sure as fuck not allowed to take it with you. 🙂
Love,
Maggie
May 9, 2011 — 2:25 PM
terribleminds says:
@Maggie:
Well-played. Nicely done with the letter format, too. 🙂
I appreciate the thoughts, and happy to know my neuroses are, erm, if not normal, then perhaps useful in some way.
— c.
May 9, 2011 — 2:30 PM
Maggie Carroll says:
( PS: The above is based on my personal experiences, and should not be taken as an assessment of anyone’s particular parenting skills. )
May 9, 2011 — 2:29 PM
Elle Rohan says:
That was excellent. You’re already ahead in the father-game and don’t even know it. 🙂
May 9, 2011 — 3:23 PM
Nate Wilson says:
This is fantastic. In fact, I shall now blatantly steal it and use it for my own nefarious purposes, by which I mean I’m going to give it to my own firstborn son, who’s arriving next month. I may even keep the references to Wendig, just to throw off the little bugger.
You’re going to be a great father. And by proxy, maybe I will be, too.
May 9, 2011 — 4:40 PM
terribleminds says:
Congrats, @Nate, on your own incoming wee one. 🙂
— c.
May 9, 2011 — 4:49 PM
inkgrrl says:
Yo Big Daddy Wendig! Are the cameras in the cartoon animals’ eyes all on the same circuit, and when will you let Famanthro know it’s not ALL in his imagination?
Seriously, that is a killer cute nursery setup y’all have, and you are gonna be a great Dad!
May 9, 2011 — 6:08 PM
terribleminds says:
OMG, cameras in the owl eyes. DONE.
@Inkgrrl knows what up.
— c.
May 9, 2011 — 6:14 PM
Stephen Blackmoore says:
Dear child.
Having known your father for only a short while I can only offer this.
Hide.
Hide yourself. Hide your toys. Hide your playmates. And for god’s sake when you’re old enough to know what it is and why you have it, hide your porn. Considering how much he spends on the stuff your stash won’t last puberty.
Should things become too much for you, remember that he is easily distracted by shiny things. A few glittering coins tossed into the corner with a command of “Fetch,” should stand you in good stead. Failing that a bourbon soaked rag should do the trick.
Good luck, boy. May you grow up to be as cool as your father, as clear thinking as your mother and as full of guile as the great god, Korthax The Glib, from whom your father has received all his dark gifts.
The day you punk your dad will be a great day indeed.
May 9, 2011 — 9:40 PM
terribleminds says:
I don’t think $250 a
monthweek is really all that unreasonable in terms of porn expenditures.And Korthax can suck the fat one. I’m tired of his shit.
— c.
May 9, 2011 — 9:44 PM
Jamie Wyman says:
I giggled so much my husband asked what was making me fall apart. Rather than read him what I thought was so awesome (all of it) I just sent him the link. Now I’m all teary-eyed, too.
Good luck to both you and your son. Enjoy every damn second. Even the pooping in the hair.
May 9, 2011 — 9:49 PM
B. says:
What a great letter! I think you’re already ahead of the game. Just remember that the diaper is the FIRST thing you check when he wakes up screaming, that being able to say “No” is a necessary skill (for his sake as much as your own), and that doing the best you can is okay.
It really is.
Congratulations and good luck!
May 9, 2011 — 10:19 PM
Karin says:
Love it! By far the best letter to an unborn child I have read. Famanthro is one lucky little chupacabra.
May 10, 2011 — 1:02 AM
Mistersuckerfish says:
My boy is a little over as year old, & this basically captured the essence of my own thoughts on the entire beginning experience. Well done sir!
May 10, 2011 — 1:58 AM
Paula says:
The best thing about babies, is that they have nobody to compare you to. You might have given him chocolate pudding for breakfast, forgotten to bathe him for seven, er I mean two days, and let him play outside in his underwear in the middle of winter (although maybe you won’t do that; it doesn’t snow where I live), but you’re the only father he has ever had, and he won’t know you’re just winging it. He’ll think you’re the best. At least for the first 9 or 10 years.
Have fun, they’re lots of fun.
May 10, 2011 — 8:31 AM
Louisa Klein says:
hi Chuck! i can see yu’ve followed mu advice about pretending, good boy! it really works, trust me, my parents did a wonderful job thanks to this very simple rule: they didn’t know what they were doing, but they were damn good at acting as if they did! What abou the child’s name? Why don’t we have a competition to decide the weirdest name (or nickname) for yur child? Of course we want names for boys AND girls! (I actually hope it’s a girl, to be frank). best wishes!
May 12, 2011 — 7:31 AM
Piper Bayard says:
I love this blog. You are far more eloquent than I am. I just tell my kids (two teens), “I don’t know what the hell I’m doing. You’re my guinea pigs.” All the best to you, your wife, and Famanthro.
May 13, 2011 — 1:09 PM
Kevin "Doc" Wilson says:
I’m the proud father of two boythings. I have three things to pass on:
1. Never go to the bathroom. That’s when they get the eggs.
2. It takes almost 3 hours and 96 band aids to get lip gloss out of cat fur.
3. Apparently you have to let bologna dry between the pages of a human osteology textbook before a Wii will eat it.
May 15, 2011 — 12:46 PM