Stay-
at-Home
Dads
 

I need some help


Anyone who knows me would agree with that statement in general, but this is a particular problem. I have a terrible time stopping in the middle of one task in order to deal with another. If the interruption is planned, that’s different. I can start a load of laundry, then get the kettle on to boil for the kids’ oatmeal. While waiting for the water to boil (without watching it, of course) I can take out everything I need to make their lunches. Water boils, I make the oatmeal and serve it, then return to making lunch. That is just multi-tasking.

While I’m occasionally guilty of it, this problem is not hyper-tasking when I do too many things at once and everything gets messed up (see “Words, Yogurt, and Smoke”). This is an incessant need to finish a project before I do anything else.

“Just let me finish writing this column, Sweeties, and I will make your lunch.”

I can’t count how many times I have said that. The only thing the twins understand is that their needs are not being met and they are not happy—or patient. It’s hard to concentrate when they are like that.

“No, I need to completely fold this basket of laundry before I start making dinner. Why? Because if I didn’t I would be making dinner while a half-folded basket of laundry sits in my room, that’s why!” (There are times I worry about what this job has done to me.)

I was cleaning and re-packing the camper to prepare for our penultimate camping trip of the year and the time to collect the big kids from school was approaching. I wanted to surprise them by riding my bike to pick them up. They would get a bike ride home and I would get some exercise. I strapped their two bikes to the back of the stroller/trailer that hauls the twins around, so I would get a lot of exercise. I told myself again and again that if I didn’t finish the camper with enough time, I would just drive the minivan and pick them up like every other day. No big deal.

But I really wanted to ride my bike.

I left twelve minutes late, the trailer with two girls inside and two bikes outside rolling behind me. Using incredible concentration, divine intervention, and great timing at the lights, I made the trip in record time and arrived just as the kids were let out.

I let them play on the playground for a while because they asked so nice and I couldn’t say “No.” Literally. I couldn’t talk. I couldn’t breathe.

After a long ride home (with a break at the ice cream shop) we pulled into the driveway. It was not until that point that it even occurred to me that, had I left the trailer project half finished, I could have left on time and had enough time for a leisurely ride.

So here is where I need help: I want to invent a word for this problem. Any suggestions?

©2008, Mark Phillips

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 Women, it's true, make human beings, but only men can make men. - Margaret Mead

Mark Phillips is a Stay-At-Home-Dad and freelance writer. Along with raising his four children, he is developing a franchise called “The Vacuum IS a Power Tool.” It is designed to help SAHDs maintain that which makes us men, instead of hairy Mom-substitutes. He earned a B.S. in Communication/Theatre Arts and teaching certificates in English, public speaking, and psychology from Eastern Michigan University. After six years as a high school English teacher and Director of Dramatic Arts at Powers Catholic High School in Flint, Michigan, he changed careers and became a Stay-At-Home-Dad. www.TheVacuumIsAPowerTool.com or E-Mail



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