Rules for Dating
By Greg Morris
When
I was in high school, I used to be terrified of my girlfriend’s father who, I
believe, suspected me of wanting to place my hands on his daughter’s breasts.
He would open the door and immediately affect a good-naturedly murderous expression,
holding out a handshake that, when gripped, felt like it could squeeze carbon
into diamonds. Now, years later, it is my turn to be the dad. Remembering how
unfairly persecuted I felt when I would pick up my dates, I do my best to make
my daughter’s suitors feel even worse. My motto: Wilt them in the living room
and they stay wilted all night.
“So,”
I call out jovially, “I see you have your nose pierced! Is that because you’re
stupid or did you merely want to appear stupid?”
As
a dad, I have some basic rules which I have carved into two stone tablets that
I have on display in my living room:
Rule
One: If you pull into my driveway and honk, you’d better be delivering a
package because you’re sure as heck not picking anything up.
Rule
Two: You do not touch my daughter in front of me. You may glance at her so long
as you do not peer at anything below her neck. If you cannot keep your eyes or
hands off my daughter’s body, I will remove them.
Rule
Three: I am aware that it is considered fashionable for boys of your age to
wear their trousers so loosely that they appear to be falling off their hips.
Please don’t take this as an insult but you and all your friends are complete
idiots. Still, I want to be fair and open-minded about this issue so I propose
this compromise: You may come to the door with your underwear showing and your
pants ten sizes too big and I will not object. However, to insure that your
clothes do not, in fact, come off during the course of your date with my
daughter, I will take my electric staple gun and fasten your trousers securely
in place around your waist.
Rule
Four: I’m sure you’ve been told that, in today’s world, sex without utilizing a
“barrier method” of some kind can kill you. Let me elaborate: when it comes to
sex, I am the barrier and I will kill
you.
Rule
Five: In order for us to get to know each other, we should talk about sports,
politics, and other issues of the day. Please do not do this. The only
information I require from you is an indication of when you expect to have my
daughter safely back at my house, and the only word I need from you on this
subject is “early”.
Rule
Six: I have no doubt you are a popular fellow with many opportunities to date
other girls. This is fine with me as long as it is fine with my daughter.
Otherwise, once you have gone out with my little girl, you will continue to
date no one but her until she is finished with you. If you make her cry, I will
make you cry.
Rule
Seven: As you stand in my front hallway waiting for my daughter to appear, and
more than an hour goes by, do not sigh and fidget. If you want to be on time
for the movie, you should not be dating. My daughter is putting on her make-up,
a process which can take longer than painting the Golden Gate Bridge. Instead
of standing there, why don’t you do something useful like changing the oil in
my car?
Rule
Eight: The following places are not appropriate for a date with my daughter:
Places where there are beds, sofas, or anything softer than a wooden stool.
Places where there are no parents, policemen, or nuns within eyesight. Places where
there is darkness. Places where there is dancing, holding hands, or happiness.
Places where the ambient temperature is warm enough to induce my daughter to
wear shorts, tank tops, midriff T-shirts, or anything other than overalls, a
sweater, and a goose-down parka zipped up to her Adam’s apple. Movies with a
strong romantic or sexual theme are to be avoided; movies which feature chainsaws
are okay. Hockey games are okay.
My
daughter claims it embarrasses her to come downstairs and find me attempting to
get her date to recite these eight simple rules from memory. I’d be embarrassed
too – there are only eight of them, for crying out loud!
And
for the record, I did not suggest to one of these cretins that I’d have these
rules tattooed on his arm if he couldn’t remember them. (I checked into it and
the cost is prohibitive.) I merely told him that I thought writing the rules on
his arm with a ball-point might be inadequate – ink washes off – and that my
wood-burning set was probably a better alternative.
One
time, when my wife caught me having one of my daughter’s would-be suitors
practice pulling into the driveway, get out of the car, and go up to knock on
the front door (he had violated rule number one so I figured he needed to run
through the drill a few dozen times), she asked me why I was being so hard on
the boy.
“Don’t
you remember being that age?” she challenged.
“Of
course I remember. Why do you think I came up with the eight simple rules?”
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