Read Desperate Husbands Online
Authors: Richard Glover
Madonna, the American singer, has revealed she’s a different mother with her second child than with her first—less paranoid and more relaxed. She’s not the first parent to notice how attitudes shift with each additional child.
First child:
‘We’ve decided to play Beethoven sonatas to him while he’s in the womb and read him passages from the great poets.’
Second child:
‘Whenever there’s classical music on a TV ad I turn it up.’
Third child:
‘I’m sick of the little bugger kicking me. It’s not my fault
Big Brother
is over.’
First child:
‘He’s only two days old and he just gave me a smile. I think he’s advanced.’
Second child
: ‘When he burps it almost looks like a smile—so cute.’
Third child:
‘He’s the farting champion of the Western World. At least there’s now no doubt who the father is.’
First child:
‘We’ve repainted the room and I’ve hand-stencilled some animal pictures onto the ceiling.’
Second child:
‘There’s a room off the back that’s not too bad, and when he’s older we’ll move all the boxes.’
Third child:
‘Kick the dog out and there’s a perfectly good spot there by the back door.’
First child:
‘He’s got fourteen different hand-knitted cardigans and ten pairs of OshKosh pilchers.’
Second child:
‘Target had twenty per cent off, so we bought a job lot.’
Third child
: ‘If we soak the jumpsuits long enough, you’ll hardly notice the stains and silverfish holes.’
First child:
‘We’ve booked him into four different schools, started an investment scheme and put him on the waiting list for the Melbourne Club.’
Second child:
‘Nana’s opened an account at the Commonwealth Bank and whacked in the first five dollars.’
Third child:
‘I just wish someone could come up with a name. When he starts high school he’s going to hate being called Bub.’
First child:
‘I don’t think he knows what a lolly is. I don’t allow them in the house.’
Second child:
‘We’re trying to keep a limit on it, especially on weekdays.’
Third child:
‘Quick, your Dad’s in the shower. Let’s split the pack of Tim Tams and scoff the lot before he even knows they’re on offer.’
First child:
‘I don’t believe in discipline, or even saying anything critical, as it may crush his little spirit.’
Second child:
‘We’ve adopted a time-out system, especially after the problem with the cigarette lighter.’
Third child:
‘Come on, son, make my day. One more step and I use the capsicum spray.’
First child:
‘We only allow him to watch BBC nature programs.’
Second child:
‘We only allow him to watch nature programs and the odd episode of
Blue Heelers
.’
Third child:
‘Hurry up, Trent, and bring the beer and nachos, you’re missing the start of
The Sopranos
.’
First child:
‘Each evening, we’re going to read—as a family—for an hour.’
Second child:
‘Sit and read where I can see you while I cook the dinner.’
Third child:
‘You can tell those bloody teachers he reads the TV program
every bloody night
, so what’s their problem?’
First child:
‘Only when everybody is finished eating may you leave the table.’
Second child:
‘You can jump up now but put your plate in the sink.’
Third child:
‘Darren, stop wiping you hands on the couch. Use your T-shirt like your father.’
First child:
‘I’m going to teach my child the value of money.’
Second child:
‘I’ll give you some pocket money if you stop crying.’
Third child:
‘Fifty bucks and you don’t tell Dad it was me who backed into his Commodore.’
First child:
‘We try to limit it to nine or ten photographs each day, plus the odd bit of video filming.’
Second child:
‘Those disposable cameras are great for capturing the really significant birthday parties.’
Third child:
‘Of course we took photographs of you. Look at this photo of the dog—I’d swear that’s your foot in the background.’
Batboy starts the car, puts it into gear and then tries to move off. It’s our fifth driving lesson and things are not going well. The car does a couple of kangaroo hops and then shudders to a stop. He repeats the process another ten or twenty times. As his passenger, I’m developing the world’s slowest case of whiplash. He tries again. The key. The gear. The clutch. The shuddering stop. Our bodies are thrown forward into our seatbelts and then thumped back into our seats. Would it affect the boy’s confidence if I kitted myself out with a motorcycle helmet before our next driving lesson?
Slowly we stall our way along a little-used dirt road in the bush. Every time we shudder to a stop all the cows stop grazing and look up, their big moon eyes staring at us. ‘Jeez Louise,’ they seem to be saying, ‘what is that boy doing to that car?’ They give a baffled shake of their large heads and, with what looks like a sigh, return to their grazing. In all
their years chewing cud by this roadside, they’ve never seen anything like it.
Maybe it’s genetics. I took the best part of a year to learn to drive, taught by a series of kindly stepmothers. Luckily, my father ran through wives with such speed I could exhaust the patience of at least a couple.
Each stepmother would sit there in the passenger seat as I kangarooed down the driveway. Each time we’d stop, the relevant stepmother would turn and use her hands to describe what my feet should be doing. ‘This foot goes down as this one comes up,’ she would say, rotating her hands in opposite directions, like the wings of a dying seagull.
‘How can that be?’ I’d ask the stepmother. ‘Why can’t they make the car so that both pedals go in the same direction at the same time? It’s like trying to pat your head at the same time as you rub your tummy. It’s like they are
trying
to make it difficult.’
And so I’d start the engine and try to split my mind in two—the right brain focusing on the right foot, easing it down; the left brain focusing on the left, easing it up; before finally, in my confusion, pulling both feet off both pedals and shuddering to a halt in a blaze of bad language. I’d then exit the car, slam the door and start screaming at the vehicle, much in the manner of Basil Fawlty in
Fawlty Towers
.
In retrospect, it may not have been entirely my father’s fault that he went through
quite
so many wives.
Finally I learnt to start the thing, only to find that this led inevitably to a series of fresh horrors. Such as learning to reverse—a kind of driving in which one turns the steering wheel in whatever direction seems most unlikely. Or reverse parking—a technique designed to ensure constant work for
the panel beating industry.
Back on the bush track, Batboy finally triumphs over both the dodgy clutch and his dodgy genetics and gets the thing into first. We motor along for some metres and our mood lifts. It is then the road starts to wind upwards and I am forced to break the news about hill starts.
‘So,’ I say, repeating the speech of the stepmothers, ‘you’ve got your right foot going down, the left foot coming up, and then at the same time you reach out with your hand and let the handbrake off.’
Batboy stares at me aghast. ‘You’ve got to be joking. That’s three completely separate things at the same time. That’s just impossible.’
We give it a couple of goes but get nowhere. The car shudders backwards and forwards like a dying hippopotamus. Even the cows turn away their huge heads in a moment of embarrassment and contempt. We sit in the stalled car, both of us staring ahead into the gathering dusk.
It occurs to me that it would be less threatening if I went over the real road rules: not the ones taught in driving school but the road rules as practised by the appalling drivers you find in most Australian cities.
Rules like:
I weigh up whether to tell him these real rules and decide against. He seems to have enough problems right now without facing up to the fact that his fellow road users are quite insane.
After a few minutes’ more silence, contemplating the hill ahead, Batboy mentions our friend Locky. He’s a rice farmer down in the Riverina: the whole farm is completely flat, to the extent that he never has to use the handbrake. Locky simply pulls the ute to a stop, opens the door and gets out.
‘Maybe I could get a job down there,’ says Batboy, suddenly jettisoning all his complex career plans in favour of working somewhere
flat
.
I ask him to imagine the conversations he’ll have in twenty years’ time. ‘So,’ friends will ask, ‘exactly why did you choose a career in the Australian rice industry? Was it through a desire to help the nation’s exports or a passion to feed the world’s hungry?’
‘No,’ he’ll be forced to admit. ‘The thing I really loved about the industry was the complete absence of hill starts.’
Here at Bloke, we either
solve problems or we deny
their existence. We
certainly never ‘sit with’
them; that’s for girls.
Everyone knows that men and women argue in different ways but can they be catalogued? Using a notebook, a tape recorder and a mirror, I’ve made a start cataloguing the male side of things. The list that follows is scarifyingly honest and personally embarrassing. Care should be taken that it doesn’t fall into enemy hands. For example: Jocasta’s.
Sad to say, but it looks like your bloke has won yet another argument.