One of the most endearing traits of children
is their utter trust that their parents will provide them with all
of life's necessities, meaning food, shelter, and a weekend at
a theme park.
A theme park is a sort of ARTIFICIAL vacation,
a place where you can enjoy all your favorite pastimes at once,
such as motion sickness and heat exhaustion.
Adult tolerance for theme parks peaks at about
an hour, which is how long it takes to walk from the parking lot to
the front gate. You fork over an obscene amount of money to gain entrance
to a theme park, though it costs nothing to leave (which is odd, because
once you've been inside the walls for a while, you'd pay anything
to escape).
The two main activities in a theme park are
(a) standing in line, and (b) sweating. The sun reflects off
the concrete with a fiendish lack of mercy--you're about to learn
the boiling point of tennis shoes. Your hair is sunburned, and when
a small child in front of you gestures with her hand she smacks you
in the face with her cotton candy; now it feels like your cheeks are
covered with carnivorous sand.
The ride your children have selected for you
is a corkscrewing, stomach-compressing roller coaster built by the
same folks who manufactured the baggage delivery system at the Denver
International Airport. Apparently the theme of this particular park
is "Nausea." You sit down and are strapped in so tightly
you can feel your shoulders grinding against your pelvis.
Once the ride begins you are thrown about with
such violence it reminds you of your teenager's driving. When the
ride is over your children want to get something to eat, but first
the ride attendants have to pry your fingers off of the safety bar.
"Open your eyes, please, sir," they keep shouting.
They finally convince you to let go, though it
seems a bit discourteous of them to have used pepper spray. Staggering,
you follow your children to the Hot Dog Palace for some breakfast.
Food at a theme park is so expensive it would
be cheaper to just eat your own money. Your son's meal costs a
day's pay and consists of items manufactured of corn syrup, which
is sugar, sucrose, which is sugar, fructose, which is sugar, and sugar,
which is sugar. He also consumes large quantities of what in dog
food would be called "meat by-products." When, after another
couple of rides, he announces that he feels like he is going to throw
up, you're very alarmed--having seen his meal once, you're in no mood
to see it again.
With the exception of that first pummeling, you
manage to stay off the rides all day, explaining to your children
that it isn't good for you when your internal organs are forcibly
rearranged. Now, though, they coax you back in line, promising a ride
that doesn't twist, doesn't hang you upside down like a bat, doesn't
cause your brain to flop around inside your skull--it just goes up
and then comes back down. That's it, Dad, no big deal.
What they don't tell you is HOW it comes back
down. You're strapped into a seat and pulled gently up into acrophobia,
the city falling away from you. Okay, not so bad, and in the conversation
you're having with God you explain that you're thankful for the wonderful
view but you really would like to get down now.
And that's just how you descend: NOW.
Without warning, you plummet to the ground in an uncontrolled free
fall. You must be moving faster than the speed of sound because
when you open your mouth, nothing comes out. Your life passes before
your eyes, and your one regret is that you will not have an opportunity
to punish your children for bringing you to this hellish place.
Brakes cut in and you slam to a stop. You gingerly
touch your face to confirm it has fallen off. "Wasn't that fun,
dad?" your kids ask. "Why are you kissing the ground?"
At the end of the day, you let your teenager
drive home. (After the theme park, you are impervious to fear.)