Reservoir Dad thought he was doing a good job at raising his kids. He plays with them, rolls around on the floor with them and pretends there are sharks chasing them all over their lounge room. But, shockingly, this isn’t helping them with their education. Apparently he needs to do more!
‘Draw a picture of Daddy on the blackboard,’ I say, to Tyson and Maki as I flick the newspaper open to an article I’d started reading earlier titled Send Mum And Dad Back To School which suggests – according to Executive Director of the Australian Parent’s Council, Mr Ian Dalton – that parents of primary school kids should go back to school to relearn certain subjects, to take on more of a role in their kids learning, to stop overburdening our teachers.
‘Yeah right, Mr Dalton. Like parents don’t have enough to do already,’ I say out loud, as I take a break in the reading to get a kabana stick from the fridge and to crack open a tub of tzatziki.
‘Dad, look!’ Tyson yells. ‘It’s you!’
Tyson’s drawn a smile and a pair of eyes in the middle of a large wobbly oval with several pairs of arms and legs which makes me look like a potato that’s been left in its bag so long that it’s sprouting those squiggly little white things, which is kind of spooky because that’s exactly how I’ve been feeling these past few weeks.
I’ve been taking on extracurricular activities in the form of several writing projects, which means I’ve been spending many nightly hours in front of the computer screen, sleeping less than ever before, working out in the gym a lot less, eating terribly and feeling the housework pressure leaning in on me like a horny mounting stallion that’s biting at my neck and snorting snot in my ear.