Thursday, September 29, 2011

Hey Pool Losers, Your Kids Aren’t That Cute

                                                       
Photo by littlegraypixel, via Flickr
On the last official weekend of summer, I went to my family’s summer home in a small town in Pennsylvania (a place I call Buttcrack because of it’s vicinity to…nothing) for what I foolishly thought would be a weekend of relaxation. Oh how wrong I was.

The small lakefront cottage is inside a “gated community.” This means nobody can get in or out without a key or checking in with security, though somehow this never stops vandals from throwing garden statues into the lake, untying people’s docks, drawing penises on the dock, or other such mischief. But in Buttcrack, PA, what else is there for the punk ass teens to do?

The community shares two swimming pools, tennis courts and a community center. Last summer I made the mistake of going to one of the pools on a holiday weekend, where I witnessed an embarrassing display of ignorance as a morbidly obese woman yelled to a Russian man to go back to his country, that “This is America!” The argument started because the woman, with her skinhead looking husband and two equally obese neo-naziesque children, tried to bugger into the pool and hoard some lounge chairs, cutting other people in line, resulting in the Russian man calling her ignorant. Her subsequent display only proved his point. Later, the man tried to apologize, but the woman's red-faced husband actually stood up and chased the poor speedo-clad Russian away.

This year, seeking a little fresh air and reading time, I decided to try again. It was a cloudy day, so the pool was empty. No sooner had I sat down with my family, a bee began to buzz around me annoyingly, while I swatted and tried to remain calm. Relentlessly, it returned, getting right in my ear and buzzing uncontrollably. Do what I might, the bee pursued me with the reckless abandon of a stalker pursuing a stalkee, until I had to jump into the cold water to escape its hostile attack.

I finally stormed over to the opposite side of the pool and sat down. I was already annoyed by the bee incident and the lifeguards (because they were young, dumb, and not manning their posts. And let’s face it, because I was jealous over the loss of my youth, when I too had been such a lifeguard). That’s when the Pool Losers came in.

The family consisted of a mother, aunt, father and three small children. As they entered, they made the huge empty space seem like a crowded Walmart at Christmas. Their screaming loud voices pierced through my peace and quiet like Jon Bon Jovi and Bret Michaels had pierced through my heart in middle school.

Next thing you know, the kids got it in their head to have a talent show of sorts. The game went like this:

1) Stand as close to our lounge chairs as humanly possible without actually sitting on our laps.
2) The mother and aunt, who planted themselves about 25 feet away from the kids and therefore had to shout across us to converse, would call out a topic, e.g., “THE OLYMPICS!”
3) The kids would do a rendition of “THE OLYMPICS!” while walking towards the water and jumping in.
4) The mother and aunt would clap, guffaw and shout, scoring the child from 1 to 10. That’s IF they were paying attention. If not, the children would screech, as if their young lives depended on it: “MOMMMM watch MEEEE. WATCH MEEEE. MOOOMMMM!!!”
5) The cycle would repeat itself, endlessly.

Now I know a pool is a place for kids to have fun and not even I can begrudge the children their fun (after all, they are the future). But this pool was the size of two Olympic pools and nobody was there but my family, and theirs. So why did these Pool Losers feel the need to get up in our grill? Shout across us? Scream at the top of their lungs? Laugh over their children’s painfully silly renditions? Allow their kids to stand a millimeter away from where others were trying to read? Because they, like most parents and family members, thought their kids were cute. And so should everyone.

After about 20 such renditions, when even my ever-patient stepfather was about to go postal, I contemplated shouting out “LIBRARY!” or “DROWNING VICTIM!” to the kids. Instead we passively aggressively decided to get up and move, all the while huffing and puffing under our breath. As we walked past the mom and aunt, I heard the mother say, “OK kids, time to pack up and go!”

“Are ya kidding? Now you’re leaving?” burst forth from my lips, as we headed around the corner, where the monsters’ father, sitting peacefully with a book and noise cancellation headphones, had the right idea.

So, to end this rant, I’d just like to give the Pool Losers a helpful FYI: Your kids really aren’t that freaking cute. OK? Thanks.

7 comments:

  1. They were annoying as hell, but when you were little and at the Mt. Kisco Memorial Pool, you were SO CUTE!! :)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Putos mocosos!!! (let's see who can translate this...)

    So this time, I have to agree with you. Ok, normally, I hate children that yell: I just can't understand why they can't behave like a civilized person. If they behave like animals, they should be treated like that. And keep them on a leash.

    I have a couple of experiences similar to yours. The first one happened this summer. I took my mother to a spa in La Toja island, in Galicia, so she could have a relaxing holidays. A great spa. Probably one of the best in Spain. And, obviously, one would expect a spa to be a QUIET place. And it certainly was, and people behaved nicely except for one day, when my mother was the only guest in the spa area and a family with 4 children literally took over the place. Can you imagine 4 maniac children running and yelling inside a hammam??? So yes, at the end, she had to do like you did: leave and leave them alone. Hoping they have some kind of accident...

    The other "experience" is related to my neighbors. They enjoy playing in the street in front of their house (and just under my window). That's normal. Their parents are just there taking care of them. Everything is OK. But this summer, at siesta time, they discovered a new game: play a drum and a whistle like a maniac, for TWO HOURS.

    So yes, just like you, this summer I've been thinking a lot about Herod the Great, and his Massacre of the Innocents...

    ReplyDelete
  3. I have a similar experience as well. Yesterday I was in a pizzeria in Williamsburg, where three mothers sat watching their obnoxious, annoying, loud children wrestle each other and spin around and fall on the floor and roll around on the "floor" (read: pathway) in this pizzeria the size of a tenement. People couldn't walk through to get to the counter, they were done eating their food, yet they sat there, and did not say anything to the kids. I'm pretty patient when it comes to kids, having three younger siblings myself, but this was so obnoxious. Who lets their kids do this? Ina pizza store? Oh right, hipster moms.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I remember doing the same thing as a kid in our neighbors' backyard with a pool. I'd be like "MOOOOM! WAAAAAATCH!" as the poor woman was trying to talk to her friend and probably knock back a couple of margaritas. However, we were in a private home and NEVER would have been allowed to do such a thing in public.

    About a month ago a friend and I went to a quiet little rural B&B just 40 mins by bus from Barcelona. It was gorgeous, the people were friendly, and they allow only eight guests at a time, perfect. Unfortunately for us, three of those eight guests were the kids of the French couple, and although they were well behaved, three siblings in a swimming pool does not for an afternoon of reading and dozing make.

    @Josep, "putos mucosos" = snotty-nosed brats / stinking rugrats, etc. And no offense, but you're from a country of people so loud it puts the stereotype of Americans to shame. I was on a bus one day of kids going to wherever in the summer, and I actually had to put in earplugs. NONE of the adult supervisors told them to shut up. And the yaya next to me was going on about how HER grandson would NEVER.... Yeah, I'm sure all those kids' abuelas would say the same thing about theirs! Had I been the bus driver, I'd have told the adults to keep them quiet or get off the bus.

    Disclaimer: This writer is currently sitting poolside in the sun with no noises except the water in the pool bubbling gently, the cicadas buzzing away and a friend next to me snoring.

    ReplyDelete
  5. im afraid this happens all around the world... even in a country like swiss one would kick all those noisy children and teenagers out of the train... or any of those swiss soldiers armed "to the teeth" (a lot for being a so called neutral country) could try to impose some discipline (i guess they are just to protect those banks and the dirty money they keep inside)

    its true the fact that were getting older and therefore more and more grumpy (even someone like amy who has always been a lot)... but seriously, shouldnt exist a license exam for having children, being sterilized when failed???

    ReplyDelete
  6. I can't understand why you're 'unpublished' your stuff cracks me up. BTW my kids NEVER did that sort of thing.

    ReplyDelete
  7. For the longest time I hated kids with a fiery fury. Now, before you all get up in arms, I don't mean all kids. Chubby kids are cute. Well mannered quiet kids can be quite delightful. No, I'm talking about misbehaved little shits. Loud, obnoxious miscreants that run amok, interrupting all that surrounds them. Now that I'm in my mid to late 20's, my natural parenting instincts are starting to surface, and I'm actually developing empathy for these kids. I'm realizing that it's not their faults. At all. It's their parents fault. How can anyone expect an 8 yr old to be cognizant of their behavior? They think what they are doing is cool and funny. The parent is the one who should be saying 'No, son, that is not funny. It's annoying. It's actually annoying everyone else that can see and hear you. So how about stopping right now. Ok? Thanks lil' buddy.' But they don't. Because most parents are just as annoying as their wicked offspring.

    ReplyDelete