Listen to the children while they play
Now ain't it kinda funny what the children say. . .
My niece the Princess had a Bday over the weekend. The party was held as usual at a local park. In attendance: a gaggle of giggling preteens,her mom and dad, Bubba and his girlfriend, a set of grandparents, Aunts Liz and Fairweather, cousins, and assorted parents of the gaggle. Some ducks crashed the party for cake but settled for hamburger buns, while the resident geese elevated their bills and congregated at the far end of the pond, apparently peeved because their invitations were lost in snail mail.
A good time was had by all, despite the drought and a murderously hot wind that blew out the candles before they lit. There were lots of presents, and the cake featured the Princess's latest favorite TV character.
Sis (my sister, the Princess's mommy)and I ended up, once the cake was served, at a table with most of the giggling gaggle. Sis was dispensing advice to the lovelorn--all of them already have boyfriends, one gathers--and I was drowning my laughter in Sprite Zero and hearing Tammy Wynette wrily croon "kids say the darnedest things" on the soundtrack in my head when one of the little dolls began to confide in another about the breakup of her parents' marriage. In so doing she used a racial epithet she can only have learned from some adult stuck in a really bad time warp. Her companion, fortunately, had never heard the word before; when she asked her to repeat what she'd said, the offender used a more politically correct generic term, but we freaked nonetheless. Up until then she'd been angelic, if somewhat of a drama queen (and I do know drama queens, being a diva myself), and frankly we were too shocked to remonstrate with her.
Sis recovered faster than I did. I thought about throwing myself into the pond to create a diversion, then remembered I can't swim; before I could switch to Plan B--the onset of whooping cough--Sis yelled, "Time for presents!" and the moment passed.
I've since learned that, had I taken my quixotic plunge, the Princess could have rescued me; her summer swimming lessons included lifesaving skills. And the soundtrack intermittently breaks into the angry boom of the late Henson Cargill, circa 1968:
Listen to the children while they play
Now it's not very funny what the children say
Skip a rope
Skip a rope
Yep, it's 2007 and this is the freakin' New South--
Oh, God, we grownup clods need to be careful of our words in front of kids, unless we want our dirty linen--and our words--waved like red flags in screamingly inappropriate moments and places.
Till next time, fair thee well.