Sunday, February 7, 2016

Conversations With Kids (Vol. 1)

Conversations With Kids (Vol. 1)
By Dave Woehrle
Hands
            “Look at your hands, Mr. Dave.”
            “What about them?”
            “You have hands like Shrek hands.”

What’s Inside
            “I feel like the Earth is inside something.”
            “The Earth is inside something: a solar system and a galaxy and a universe.”
            “I know. But it’s different. It’s like the Earth is so small and so fast.”
            “Okay.”
            “I just really want to go sledding, Mr. Dave.”
           
Eating
            “Mr. Dave, what are you eating?”
            “Pistachios.”
            “Do pistachios have a lot of fat in them?”
            “Yes, but they’re the good kind of fat.”
            “What’s the good kind of fat?”
            “Unsaturated fats.”
            “Un-Saturday fats?”
            “No, I said – ”
            “It’s Wednesday, Mr. Dave. And you need to be careful at your age. You could be eating something fatty, and then, boom, hospital.”
            “How old do you think I am?”
            “48.”
            “I’m not 48.”
            “But you’re always coughing.”

Throwing
            I ask, “Why did you throw a stick at his head?”
            “Because I wanted to see him duck.”

Disco Snowflake
            “Mr. Dave, you’re such a disco snowflake.”
            “What’s a disco snowflake?”
            “It’s what you are.”
            “But why?”
            “You love the snow and you love to dance.”
            “Fair enough.”

Food and Continents
            Child 1: “Continents are so cool.”
            Child 2: “Yeah. But not all of them. I like cheese sticks more than I like Antarctica.”
            Child 1: “Well, I like broccoli more than I like North America.”

Fathers
            “You remind me of my dad, Mr. Dave.”
            “How so?”
            “You’re really nice and you’re really fat.”

                                                                        Housing
            “Mr. Dave, can you take a picture of your house and show it to us?”
            “Why?”
            “I want to see what your house looks like.”
            “I don’t have a house. I have an apartment.”
            “An apartment? But you’re so big.”

Eyes
            “My cousin got a dog. They will have him for several years. Until he dies, I guess.”
            “Cool.”
            “He’s great. He has beautiful eyes. His eyes are like bunny’s eyes.”
            “Are bunny eyes beautiful?”
            “Oh yes. They’re terribly beautiful.”

Love and Soup
            “Mr. Dave, is there a Mrs. Dave?’
            “No. And her name wouldn’t be Mrs. Dave.”
            “Are you married?”
            “No.”
            “Do you have a girlfriend?”
            “No.”
            “So what’s wrong?”
            “Geez. You cut to the chase. I don’t know. It just hasn’t happened.”
            “Do you live alone?”
            “I do.”
            “Is it lonely?”
            “No, it’s not so bad.”
            “Do people bring you soup?”
            “Why would people bring me soup?”
            “My grandma lives alone. Sometimes we bring her soup.”
            “No one brings me soup.”
            “Do you like soup?”
            “Yeah, soup’s all right.”
            “I can bring you soup, Mr. Dave.”
            “You don’t need to bring me soup.”

Fighting
Two children wrestle recess. One yells to the other, “I’m gonna punch your face until it’s a butt!”
            As an educator, I have to break up the fight, of course. I have to engage in a sit-down with both students and get to the heart of the problem and make amends. I have to encourage kind words and actions.
            As the person that I actually am, I’m wondering, How would that work exactly? How do you suppose his face would turn into a butt? Would the nose, lips, mouth, eyes, eyebrows, ears, and hair just fall off after a good uppercut? How would the crack appear? I need a diagram.