I love golf and I have since I was about five years old. I like to watch golf, I like to play golf, and I understand golf. Sometimes I can even inspire other people to like golf, though the TV version of the game is admittedly difficult for the first-timer to appreciate. As I type, I'm watching the final matches of the President's Cup, a USA versus the "International" competition. It has Tiger and Ernie Els and all the great players and it's going to be on all afternoon. Love it.
Still, I'm not sure if PC should play golf. Though I may not have a lot of control over this, I want him to play soccer, or basketball, or something other than golf as he grows up. Why? One of the odd things I've experienced when I self-identify as a golf nut is the many many stereotypes of golfers--rich, snobby, elitist, and even racist. Some of these are true. The game has not been the most socially progressive sport. In fact, it's been a socially regressive sport. The PGA Tour, for example, had a "Caucasians Only" clause until 1962. Since Tiger Woods, of course, golf (and Nike) has been on one gigantic public relations campaign designed to do away with this "whites only" image, and perhaps it's worked a little. When you look at galleries of TV golf tournaments there are more brown and black faces, but if you look around your local course (esp. if you live in the South) you will probably notice that the housekeeping staff and the pro shop staff are racially homogeneous. The whites are in the positions of power and the blacks clean up, by and large. The vestiges of the "whites only" clause are still visible in 2007.
But it's the cost of playing golf that keeps so many people out of golf, not overt racism. When people assume this golfer is the rich/elitist/white snob they associate with the game, I often find myself talking about where I grew up playing, a nine-hole municipal course that allowed kids to play for about $100 a summer. That course, and the Minnesota town around it, was lily-white and not all that elitist. Bus drivers, school teachers, salesmen of many kinds, and the few practicing attorneys all played there. My dad was a cop and we could afford my membership---it was the Christmas gift I looked forward to most. Sure, there are class divisions in small town Minnesota, but the golf course never seemed to emphasize those. The more prominent hierarchy there was based on skill, which is why so many kids like me were allowed to play there from an early age. We'd become good junior players and could stand up to adult restrictions on us because we could beat many of them.
The cost: on average, it's close to $40 to play eighteen holes here and there's no guarantee that PC will be able to afford that, or that we'll be able to afford it for him. Moreover, there are very few municipal courses where you can actually buy a membership for a reasonable price, and therefore save on the per-round cost, which is a problem because the only way to get good at golf is to play a LOT. The private courses have steep initiation fees in addition to ongoing costs, not to mention the fact that in many cases you have to know someone and rely on that someone to invite you to become a member. It's a "club," after all.
I'm trying not to write a bitter entry here. It's just that sports like soccer or basketball, which have low equipment costs and fewer social restrictions, are beginning to look far more attractive to me. If you play soccer as a kid, you'll get an unbelievable cardiovascular workout and you'll be able to play almost wherever you go and for many, many years. There are pickup games all over the place in most towns, there are leagues to join, and all it really takes is the willingness to put your spikes on and find the soccer nuts. They are out there.
I don't play soccer and I'm not particularly well built for it. I don't understand the rules that well. But if PC wants to play it, I'm going to buy him some Umbro shorts, drive him to the field, and probably yell my head off. And if he wants to golf, we'll try that, too, but it will not be our first choice.
Sunday, September 30, 2007
Tuesday, September 25, 2007
stranger danger
There's a first time for everything, and this past weekend was the first time that I left PC for a weekend. (a privilege of fatherhood, to be able to do this.) It was a long weekend spent very enjoyably with Athens, GA's finest, and a needed break from the work routine.
But you know what? The boy gave me a little stranger treatment when I got home. He fussed when I held him the first couple of times, and very obviously preferred others for about 24 hours. Awful! The kid can't speak, but he can already be angry with me? I know, I know, this is common......
Here's the other thing: in addition to being the topic of many bragging conversations I had with old friends, he also crept into a surprising number of my daydreams. I just missed him. I wanted to smell his stale milk breath, just once! Or touch some of that perfect skin. Even change a diaper. One night as I lay in bed I began to think about him, and worried that I might miss a major development like a tooth or rolling over. It was one of those thoughts that loops back repeatedly unless you consciously try to change the topic....a nagging, aching thought.
Of course, everything was fine when I returned. And now I can see a little better how completely smitten I am with him.
But you know what? The boy gave me a little stranger treatment when I got home. He fussed when I held him the first couple of times, and very obviously preferred others for about 24 hours. Awful! The kid can't speak, but he can already be angry with me? I know, I know, this is common......
Here's the other thing: in addition to being the topic of many bragging conversations I had with old friends, he also crept into a surprising number of my daydreams. I just missed him. I wanted to smell his stale milk breath, just once! Or touch some of that perfect skin. Even change a diaper. One night as I lay in bed I began to think about him, and worried that I might miss a major development like a tooth or rolling over. It was one of those thoughts that loops back repeatedly unless you consciously try to change the topic....a nagging, aching thought.
Of course, everything was fine when I returned. And now I can see a little better how completely smitten I am with him.
Saturday, September 15, 2007
hands, feet and mouth
One of our favorite websites this past year has been babycenter.com. Baby Center is an all-purpose website for new and expecting parents, a sort of doctor/nurse + mother/encyclopedia sort of thing that adds the many delights of the Internets, like being able to ignore it. It's hard to ignore actual people who have advice for you about your baby.
BC sends a weekly email, if you want it, that is specific to the age of the child--you enter in your due date, and from then on they send along an update about mom and baby's development. When the baby is born, you enter in the birthday, and then you receive a weekly update about mom, baby, and family developments general to that age.
Subscribing to weekly emails, in my experience, is usually not a good thing, but with babycenter you can control the dose. Another advantage of the Internet: read their headline/teaser and stop, or click for more, or head off to the margins for any number of related hyperlinks when you're feeling really curious. During the pregnancy, the updates were especially helpful at making tangible the fact that a baby was actually cooking (his mother did not need any extra evidence). For several months, they compared the size of the fetus to an everyday object--from a lime to a sack of sugar and a couple gourds in between. Niece Anna really enjoyed that.
This week BabyCenter is talking about things the Prince has already mastered--sleeping through the night and interacting with smiles and laughs, for example. Pssssshhhh! We're already onto bigger things. Namely our hands, feet and mouth--the mouth is the primary sense organ, apparently. The Pooh Bear, your shoulder, your chin, you name it, he will suck on your knuckle if you give it to him (stay clean people). This morning when we were still lying down in bed we took turns holding him at a 45 degree angle on our knees--a position he loves because he can look at us, suck on his hands, and catch a glimpse of the ceiling fan, all at the same time. But this morning, he didn't want to look around, he wanted to bend over far enough so that he could try to suck on his feet. I heard the baby next door already does that.
Thursday, September 13, 2007
backslash
C raises a good question related to the last post: if Fourth of July milk is Freedom, then what is 9/11 milk?
Shiver me timbers.
Shiver me timbers.
Saturday, September 1, 2007
the susu makes us free

This is freedom milk. It's been in our freezer with other lesser tubes of breast milk, labeled with the date it was pumped, and here it is sitting in a warm cup of water to prepare it for the Prince's consumption. Preparing breast milk like this is a more frequent ritual now that school has started. Going back was a little more traumatic this time, but we are happy to report a relatively smooth transition to day time at grandpa and lola's place, and his mom has a reasonable way to pump during her work day and keep the supply up. PC's awake time is a bounty to the senses: walks around the garden, flashcards, Tagalog Talk Time, and hugs. On the all-important milk-front, we've discovered that in this new arrangement he will eat from a bottle but has a definite preference for the susu, the real receptacle. Sometimes we think he holds off on finishing bottles because he knows his mommy will be home soon ... clever boy.
I'm sure the July 5 milk is good and all (it is John and Liddy's anniversary), and I've heard nice things about the early-August vintage in the freezer, but this Fourth of July milk is probably the reason the transition back to school is going so well. The whole setting was right that day: not only did we have the aforementioned Achters in town that weekend, which is always good karma, we also made a hike (with a dog) to the river for swimming and we ate hamburgers and hot dogs in a big barbecue cookout that was scrumptious. If memory serves, we even ended the day with a couple scoops of Stephen Colbert's Americone Dream. Folks, is this not the stuff of Family Fourths everywhere?!? All we're missing is some red, white and blue bunting on our windows.
If ever there are more McCarthy hearings, and they round up academics to grill them about being communists, I plan to testify next to a four-by-six foot print of this image to demonstrate my family's commitment to the American way.
Patriotism? Loyalty? My family drinks it with their milk, sir.
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