Friday, May 22, 2009

My Name is [NAME]; I'll Be Your Lunchroom Mom Today


Today was my first day as lunchroom mom for my son's 6th grade class. I am proud to say that I managed to secretly flip him off seven times without detection and he got me twice.

I was up past the witching hour last night writing so I was groggy as all get out this morning and showed up late with Monkey Boy's half-assed bag lunch, wearing a Cabela's hat, and one day's beard which on lesser men looks a lot like a nine day beard.

I was all about the irony of being a lunchroom mom and swore I'd wear a t-shirt with the sleeves cut off and "LUNCH ROOM MOM" written across the back with a sharpie but I manned out and forgot. I wasn't even funny. I didn't speak. I stood near the door like a disgruntled janitor waiting for some kick to cack on the floor. I'm sure some kid asked Monkey, "Dude, is your dad retarded?"

By the time the end of lunch had rolled around, they were stacking desks and had one kid duct taped to the ceiling. The class geek was using the teacher's laptop to hack into the grading queue. Some other kid was making prank phone calls to the class next door. Someone was hung out the window by their ankles. Mayhem. Depravity. I think. Maybe. I don't know. I know that I wasn't counting all the kids leaving for the head and when the teacher showed up I finally shook off my fugue, looked up, and realized half the class was missing.

"Where's my class?"
"Bathroom?"
"All of them?"
"Uh . . . . maybe I should count next time?"

At the sound of her voice the building tipped sideways and the bathrooms spilled children into the hallways, all of which walked past me as if I were some kind of exhibit.

I believe I have mentioned the malicious nature of children. You can't give them an inch, not a millimeter. Today one of the girls walked up to me carrying a bag of skittles and asked if she could go to another class to give it to someone. Dazed, barely awake, I looked at her for a split second then, mustering all the wisdom 8 minutes of sleep can provide, I asked her: "Are you allowed?" then watched the subtle contraction of her irises as she calculated, rechecked, and filed away the precise level of gullibility I had just exhibited and responded "Yes. Yes I am." then disappeared. Unable to properly focus my narcotic gaze as she left my field of vision, I noticed the girl in the desk in front of me, blocked by the Calculatora's head just a moment prior, was staring at me with hr mouth open.

I will never recover. I know how it works. If my daughter's school is Super Hero High, the Monkey's school is Hogwarts for The Holy and every kid in there is a certified genetic malaprop destined to be aggressively wealthy IP lawyers and moguls of various species and already, in sixth grade, I have shown weakness in front of them. They've got my number. I am doomed.

I can see already my lunchroom mom excursions will become increasingly militant as a cold war simmers between me and the students, with them imagining ever more complex and improbable permissions and goading each other to ask me if they can engage them. I'm tempted to just say "No," to every request. But, as I type this, I can feel the ropey sluice of my morning coffee finally jolting my brainpan and I realize that the best tactic for me is not to deny them anything at all, but to allow everything they request. These are honor students we're dealing with here. If I say "Are you normally allowed to superglue the bunsen burner on?" and they say yes, it's them that's gonna git the divil, not I.

6 comments:

  1. Way to show the power there "lunchroom mom". I say pull out an IPhone (or an old fashioned piano) and dazzle them with your knowledge of hip tunes... Maybe even start the next disney classic "lunchroom musical".

    *giggles*

    ReplyDelete
  2. Garlington, you are the Barney Fife of lunchroom moms. Hitch up your pants, straighten your back and say the word "no." For God's sake, they are wee little children and you are of generous proportion. God made you bigger so you could scare the crap out of them. Now do it.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I had an experience about 25 years ago that was like being a lunch room mom. I was running a bible study at a maximum security prison. One night the prison was short staffed and could not provide a guard for the visiting room we would be using.

    The shift supervisor told me this and I figured that the bible study would be cancelled for that week.

    Instead of cancelling the bible study he HANDED THE KEYS TO THE PRISON TO ME and let me control access to the visiting room.

    Remember this palce is full of murderers, druggies, rapists and all sort of other really wonderful folks you don't want to meet in a dark place.

    I had the POWER that night and people asked my persmisison for all kinds of things. I took the positon of saying no to everybody.

    Upon reflection I think your Lunchroom Mom job is much harder because you cannot lock them up.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous;

    You are correct, I do have the body of a God. Buddha.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Faded;

    It's really hard to continue on your comment after reading I was running a Bible Study at a Maximum Security Prison."

    You should write about that.

    ReplyDelete