Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Spring Break Trip & The Caravan

Spring is not in the air. However, it’s on our minds. It’s almost time for our annual spring break trip to Gulf Shores. For six years we’ve made the trip south with sisters, kids and dad in tow. And the caravan there has taught us a thing or two about business. Three cars all traveling a perfect 72 mph in unison for 1,200 miles? Impossible. Yet it’s the aim every year. Kind of like topping last year’s sales numbers; we hope we can make it around the first bend before the proverbial wheel comes off.

The Boss
Whoever is leading the caravan is in a precarious position. As in business, he/she must foresee all problems and navigate all arguments. The first shake-up comes at noon. What to have for lunch? When? Where? And the dreaded: Stopping Already?

Here, the boss must take in all sides, consider each option, and declare a clear path, all without letting on that the decision was made 50 miles ago.
The trick is to appease all (mostly himself) just enough to keep this train on the tracks.

This is why it’s usually Dad’s job. He’s armed with a Garmin GPS (named “Wilma”) and the four decades of authority necessary to cow his three daughters. He will navigate the Southern states with a steady hand at a speed that produces the best gas mileage. And nary a word shall be said about when or where we have lunch.

The Pink Slip

We make it through Michigan, sometimes as far as Tennessee, before someone snaps. Usually it’s a son-in-law hell-bent on burning an extra tank of gas just to see the ocean and his own free will a few hours sooner. When the ex-pat makes his move, the boss becomes concerned. There is a phone call from one car to the next. Later, a text, a brief inquiry on what mile marker they are at. Finally, a concession. We will see you there. A small ripple goes through the caravan. A wheel has come off. As in business, you’ve gotta let some people go.

The Entrepreneur

This freed family car is now a heady mix of exhilaration and teen-age daring. For the first 100 miles. About then, the guilt sets in. Perhaps it’s time to pull over and meet up for dinner? Get a hotel for the night together?

Texts and calls start. The wayward son-in-law sees that The Corporation is a force to be reckoned with. His small start-up is floundering.

The Arrival
Come Day 2, one way or another everyone in the company arrives in Gulf Shores. There is a small reunion, a scuffle for the best bedroom and a staff meeting... over what’s for dinner. No one wants to cook. Everyone is sick of take out. The boss announces (and is craving) brats and hot dogs on the grill. The crew bonds over a small barely controlled cooking fire. It’s a good team-building exercise to keep the fire alarms from going off. It’s just another day of business.

Here’s to one more year of the caravan and the company...

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Kids & iPods - FaceTime, Texting and Other Problems

My boys now have iPods. I held them off as long as I could. Then Grandma and Christmas coincided in a glorious gifting in December and our world was forever changed.

First problem: I had to create a fake identity for each child on each iPod so they could open an iTunes account. There are now two more Chapples born in 1974. Both of my children are about a month older than I am.

Next up, texting. I think this is adorable for the first 24 hours. I save every text. This is going in their baby books! That one too! And this one! OMG, an emoticon, they are brilliant, how did they figure that out! A smiley face! A heart!

Wait. A…smiling turd? I get 56 emoticons in less than a minute. In 56 separate texts. My phone goes crazy.

I am not smiley-facing anymore. I scream at the other room, “QUIT. TEXTING. ME.” (Three screams/SEND.)

Silence. My phone stops vibrating. A long silence.

“You’re mean,” comes the next text.

I switch to video mode. I am in my oldest bathrobe. My hair is half in a ponytail, mostly not. The backwards camera makes one eye look bigger than the other. The yellow of the kitchen is a nice contrast to the storm in my eyes.

I get it on the first take in my calmest voice, I don't want them to ever forget: “I am always mean.”

It's so good it scares me. It’s a masterpiece. SEND.

Ground rules, I need them. I ask (text) my friends. What are their rules? We are all on the edge of iPod puberty. No one knows the rules. We finally find one mother who has experience: No texts after 7:30 at night. No texts in the morning. No texts after school until homework is done. I set up the “Do Not Disturb” settings as she advised. Life is good.

The following day, prior to 7:30 p.m. and post-homework, I’m getting out of the shower. I hear a girl laughing in my house. I think it’s the TV.

“Turn that down!” I bellow (remember, mean).
When they don’t reply, I grab a towel and go on the hunt. “Are you deaf????”

Only to discover that Kendall is on FaceTime with a friend from his class. Forget Big Brother, I am felled by nothing more than the view from a tween girl’s iPod. I dive to the floor.

“Oh my God,” I hiss. “Can she see me?!”

I crawl by my elbows into the bedroom. I am in horrors. I dress, fix my hair like it’s a night on the town and approach my lovely son in my lovely home in a lovely manner.

“Excuse me, darling, could you possibly wrap things up so we may share this homemade meal as a perfect family?”

When he ignores me, I get on the other side of the iPod and start making threats, lots of hand movements, swats, countdowns, bone-breakings, you know the drill. Finally, he relents and hits END. I pounce on the iPod.

“Give me that. Did she hear me? Did she see me? What if her mother saw me? Her father? And this house, our house is a pit!”

He is unconcerned. He is 10; all he knows is that his mother is always mean but that her hair’s looking pretty good for a Wednesday afternoon.