My kids were watching Cyberchase the other day and my daughter announced, "I like Hacker!"
Hacker is the show's villain, he is also green. When she was looking at her brother's Spiderman picture book, she pointed to the Green Goblin and asked, "Who's this?"
"Green Goblin," I told her.
"Is he nice?"
"Not really. He has issues."
"I like him," she announced. I thought nothing of it, she likes green.
But then, she announced her favorite Dora character is Swiper, and on Lazytown she likes Robby Rotten (I admit I was sort of pleased about that - I can't stand Sportacus.)
I noticed a certain trend was forming. When her brother discusses Star Wars (which is constantly) she chimes in, "I like Darth Vader! I like the bad guys!"
I guess I am better off learning this now, rather than when she turns 15.
Friday, April 27, 2007
Monday, April 23, 2007
Swim Lessons
My son’s swim class the other day ended with the instructor asking each student to show her their favorite thing to do in the water. Most kids blew bubbles, floated, or put their heads under. My son just stood their, grinning.
“Aren’t you going to show me your favorite swim move?” the instructor queried.
“I’m doing it!"
"Doing what?" the instructor asked.
"When we go to the beach, my daddy says going pee-pee in the ocean is the best thing.”
Usually the indoor pool where my son takes lessons reverberates with the sonic booms of children shrieking and splashing. But suddenly the entire place fell silent, and everyone stared at me.
“Ha ha. OK buddy, let’s go now,” I said.
“Right daddy, come in and we’ll swim to international waters – then no one can tell us what to do! You can go pee-pee too.”
More stares. Parents pull their children out of the pool. The instructor moves away.
“No, I think you are getting cold. Why don’t we just go… RIGHT NOW!” I added through clenched teeth.
“No, daddy, come in! The water is really warm!”
“Aren’t you going to show me your favorite swim move?” the instructor queried.
“I’m doing it!"
"Doing what?" the instructor asked.
"When we go to the beach, my daddy says going pee-pee in the ocean is the best thing.”
Usually the indoor pool where my son takes lessons reverberates with the sonic booms of children shrieking and splashing. But suddenly the entire place fell silent, and everyone stared at me.
“Ha ha. OK buddy, let’s go now,” I said.
“Right daddy, come in and we’ll swim to international waters – then no one can tell us what to do! You can go pee-pee too.”
More stares. Parents pull their children out of the pool. The instructor moves away.
“No, I think you are getting cold. Why don’t we just go… RIGHT NOW!” I added through clenched teeth.
“No, daddy, come in! The water is really warm!”
Sunday, April 01, 2007
Passover Preparations
Traditional Passover preparations at my house have usually my son and I huddled together watching the Charlton Heston version of The Ten Commandments while my wife does the last minute cleaning (it is essential that every bit of chametz - bread product – be removed from the home.) My wife, understandably, hates this tradition for many reasons. However, my son has now been doing it for most of his life (this will be his fourth year of it) so she is stuck with it. I was doubly excited because my daughter just turned three and would have been ready to join us. Naturally the networks have decided not to air it – further evidence of the moral and spiritual decay of our society.
Fortunately, my family has other, even deeper Pesach traditions. Many families at their seder (traditional Passover feast) sing a song called “Who knows one” (usually sung in Hebrew “Echad mi yode’ah”). It goes:
In my family we sing this song in Yiddish. Very occasionally, we run into others who also know the Yiddish version (although never with the same tune). I decided that my son is old enough to learn it as well. Like all things Yiddish, this had to start with a story:
So, without further ado, here is “Who knows one” in Yiddish. It should be sung with great fervor. Because Yiddish was the Ebonics of its day, there are few hard rules about pronunciation and you can make up any tune that suits you. (I will spare the world my own rendition.)
Chorus:
Mah ah noymair
Mah ah debair
Oy vey ny ny na ny ny
Vair ken raidin
Vair ken tsailin
Vos is ____ bah dye
Vos is ____ bah dye
1. Ainer is gutt un gutt is ainer un veiter is kainer
2. Zvei zenen dee luchus
3. Drei zenen dee footers
4. Fear zenen dee mooters
5. Finif zenen dee chumushin
6. Zex zenen dee mishnayes
7. Zeben zenen dee taic frum vuch
8. Acht zenen dee brit meilah
9. Nine zenen dee moonaten
10. Tzen zenen dee dibrayes
11. Elef zenen dee shtairen
12. Zvelf zenen dee shevawteem
13. Dreitzen zenen dee ashawreem
Fortunately, my family has other, even deeper Pesach traditions. Many families at their seder (traditional Passover feast) sing a song called “Who knows one” (usually sung in Hebrew “Echad mi yode’ah”). It goes:
Who knows one? I know one. One is our God, in heaven and on earth.And so forth to 13. You want more, Google it.
Who knows two? I know two. Two are the tablets of the covenant; One is our God in heaven and on earth.
In my family we sing this song in Yiddish. Very occasionally, we run into others who also know the Yiddish version (although never with the same tune). I decided that my son is old enough to learn it as well. Like all things Yiddish, this had to start with a story:
My grandfather, your great-grandfather, your bubbe’s daddy, was named Bernie. When you were born, all of your great-great aunts said you looked just like Bernie. When your sister was born, the same great-great aunts agreed that she looked like Bernie. The truth is, most babies look like Bernie - Bernie was fat and bald.So I sang him a little bit of it, and my son burst out laughing (an appropriate reaction to Yiddish – a language with a disproportionate amount of onomatopoeia.) It also threw him a little; he thought Hebrew was the Jewish language. I explained:
When he was a little kid he went to Hebrew school, but it wasn’t nice like your school. It was grubby and the one thing he learned that really stayed with him was this song. You told me you are learning “Who knows one” in Hebrew. At his Hebrew school, Bernie learned the song in a language called Yiddish.
You know about Hebrew, the holy language, the language of Israel and Torah. Yiddish is different. For centuries lots of Jewish people lived in the great Northern Plains of Europe. It wasn’t a happy time. It was cold, boring, and the people around us didn’t like us very much. The governments there liked us even less. Many terrible things happened to us there. You should be grateful everyday that your great-great grandparents left.This is a kid who is ready for Yiddish.
But, as a tiny gift to make up for it, God gave us the funniest language ever spoken – Yiddish. That funniest thing about Yiddish is that it is so close to German. But German is a serious language – a language where, “Good morning” is a direct order. In Yiddish, even though a lot of the words are the same and if you know one you can understand the other, everything sounds like a joke. They are the Bert and Ernie of languages. There’s Bert, wound too tight, worrying about his bottle-cap collection. And then there’s happy-go-lucky Ernie getting the bottle-caps out of order, scaring off the pigeons and just generally driving Bert nuts.
”Like I do to you daddy?”
So, without further ado, here is “Who knows one” in Yiddish. It should be sung with great fervor. Because Yiddish was the Ebonics of its day, there are few hard rules about pronunciation and you can make up any tune that suits you. (I will spare the world my own rendition.)
Chorus:
Mah ah noymair
Mah ah debair
Oy vey ny ny na ny ny
Vair ken raidin
Vair ken tsailin
Vos is ____ bah dye
Vos is ____ bah dye
1. Ainer is gutt un gutt is ainer un veiter is kainer
2. Zvei zenen dee luchus
3. Drei zenen dee footers
4. Fear zenen dee mooters
5. Finif zenen dee chumushin
6. Zex zenen dee mishnayes
7. Zeben zenen dee taic frum vuch
8. Acht zenen dee brit meilah
9. Nine zenen dee moonaten
10. Tzen zenen dee dibrayes
11. Elef zenen dee shtairen
12. Zvelf zenen dee shevawteem
13. Dreitzen zenen dee ashawreem