-
Search
-
Recent Posts
- Kryptowährungen Handeln Test – Wo sind kryptowährungen verboten?
- Sichere Krypto Börse – Kryptowährung wovon abhängig?
- Kryptologie Uni Ulm | Welche kryptowährungen haben potenzial?
- Scalping Kryptowährung – Wie viele kryptowährungen gibt es bei coinbase?
- Margin Trading Kryptowährungen Yahoo Finance – Warum steigen kryptowährungen so stark?
Blog Archive
Categories
- Activities With Kids
- Adolescence
- Adulthood
- Aging
- Anger Management
- Apps
- Arts Education
- Babies
- Blog
- Books
- Boys to Men
- Breastfeeding
- Camp
- Cars
- Celebrity Dads
- Charity
- Child Development
- Children's Music Reviews
- Columns by Family Man
- Contests
- Creativity
- Dating Dad
- Death
- Divorced Dads
- Education
- Ethics
- Family Communication
- Family Man in the News
- Family Man Recommends
- Family Music
- Family Music Reviews
- Father's Day
- Featured Moms & Dads
- Film
- Food
- Free Stuff
- Friendship
- Gender
- Graduation
- Grandparents
- Halloween
- Health
- Helping Kids Understand Loss
- Holidays
- Humor
- Internet Safety
- LifeofDad.com
- Love and Courtship
- Marriage
- Morals
- Mother's Day
- Movies
- Music
- Newborns
- Over-parenting
- Parenting Stress
- Perspective
- Pets
- Politics
- Protecting Children
- Safety
- School
- Sex Ed
- Siblings
- Single Fathers
- Social Action
- Special Needs
- Sports
- Sweepstakes & Promotions
- Talking About Disasters
- Teens
- Top Ten Lists
- Travel
- Traveling With Kids
- TV
- Tweens
- Uncategorized
- Values
- Vasectomy
- Video
- What Dads Need to Know
- Work-Family Balance
Recent Comments
- Beth on The One That Ends With Hope
- Judi Feldman on The Brass Tacks of Music Education
- Fran Keer on A Road Well Traveled
- norman edelson on A Road Well Traveled
- Justin Rogan on The Gift of Boredom
- © 2026 - Gregory Keer. All rights reserved.
Monthly Archives: October 2013
Evil Dad
By Gregory Keer
Following is a Halloween column that scared up some laughs a few years back. It’s back to haunt you intrepid readers, once again.
I don’t enjoy seeing car wrecks, reading about celebrity break-ups, or learning of the latest politician caught doing something illegal. But I do like witnessing other children behaving badly. I know it’s sinful, a little evil, even. That doesn’t stop the twisted inflation of my ego resulting from other parents having a similar or worse time than I usually have. Honestly, I do not wish misfortune on any parent — I just want to be there when it happens.
I didn’t always know I had this character flaw. For most of my fatherhood tenure, I’ve been too preoccupied to notice it while my own kids went through phases of throwing breakable items in grocery stores and telling friends that Santa Claus doesn’t really exist. My youngest boy, Ari, may be my biggest troublemaker. At an amusement park, the other day, he thought it was hilarious to randomly swat other grown-ups while I carried him through the crowd. I’m pretty sure he would have laughed harder should I have been punched in the nose by one of his surprised victims.
Although I know that all children misbehave at times – and that pushing boundaries can be healthy, especially when the stakes are low at the younger ages — I worry about the judgments of others who might see me as an ineffective parent. I sometimes fantasize about turning into a Dickens character, pulling my kids by the collar, and growling at them in a cockney accent, “Mind your manners, my urchins. It’s not wise to make your father look poorly.” (Actually, I did that once and my kids laughed at me).
But a recent conversation has allowed me to embrace my vampire-like desire to feed off other parents’ misery. During a basketball game for my oldest son, I watched a father on the sidelines, trying to give advice to his eight-year-old kid, who responded with, “Why should I listen to you, Daddy? You stink at shooting!”
Then, my friend Adam, a master of the witty aside, leaned toward me and said, “There’s a column for you. Write about how much fun it is to see other parents suffer.” We spent the rest of the game recounting tales from the parenting dark side. When once, as younger men, we might have shot the breeze about girlfriends, pro sports, and bad job experiences, we were now reduced to cackling gossips.
I told the story of the panicked mom who scoured a zoo in search of her missing son. When she finally found him in the dimly lit reptile center, in which she had looked twice before, she screamed, “Why did you go in here alone?” The child responded with the classic, “I don’t know.” As Mom launched the rest of her tirade, I tried to conceal my grin as other people escaped the house of snakes and the nearby baboons screamed along with the poor mother.
We talked about the father who leaped out of the stands to accuse the opposing coach of letting his players hit baseballs at his son on the pitcher’s mound. The agitated dad was just trying to be protective, but the tantrum stood out during a tee-ball game among five-year-olds who could barely tap a stationary ball. We took glee in the pain of the dad who, after overhearing his child refuse to share any of his toys, announced, “We’re really nice people. Please don’t judge us by our son.” And, in one of the more ugly examples, I noted the wicked thrill of seeing another parent get chewed out because his son bit my son, and not the other way around.
I am not proud of my primal need to feel better about my own failures by recalling the difficulties of others, but it does remind me of how absurd it is to try living up to the expectations of calm and wisdom most of us place upon ourselves. As this Halloween approaches, I won’t need a costume or candy. I’ll be the Evil Dad, feasting on the treats supplied by parents trying in vain to keep their kids in line in the dark of the night.
Family Man Recommends: Children’s Music Reviews – October 2013
Reviewed by Gregory Keer
Just because October is one of those months where time has been short for me doesn’t mean that I don’t have a few moments to tell you about some of the new music well worth your listening hours. Lucky Diaz and the Family Jam Band continue their dazzling run of releases with the retro variety-show styled Lishy Lou and Lucky Too. With their second album of the year, Recess Monkey’s 10th studio project is the laid-back Desert Island Disc. New Jersey-based musician Erik Simonsen’s new disc is E is for Erik, a family-music debut that comes with a coloring book inspired by songs such as “Dr. Seuss We Love You” and “If You Miss Me at the Back of the Bus.” Two other noteworthy CDs are Mister G’s bilingual ABC Fiesta and Josh & the Jamtones eclectic Bear Hunt!
Fids and Kamily Award Winners for 2013
Now in its 8th year, the Fids and Kamily poll has announced its award winners for 2013. Justin Roberts and his Recess album took the top prize, followed by the latest work by Frances England and Alastair Moock. Once again, I was honored to join the group of children’s music reviewers whose votes were counted to make the list. One of the cool additions to this year’s poll is a rundown of first-time family music makers, including Cat Doorman Thank you, Stefan Shepherd of Zooglobble for having me along for this musical ride.


