My son recently turned 13, and the last traces of that sweet little boy who thought I hung the moon seem to have vanished. In his place is a strange, slouching creature with a pencil-thin mustache and adolescent angst oozing from every pore.
This extraterrestrial I once called flesh and blood, whose mood swings dwarf the Grand Canyon, seems intent on bungee jumping from that rickety bridge connecting a child with adulthood. And I think he plans on dragging his rapidly aging mother along for the ride.
A drastic language change was the first indication of alien infestation in my once cherished offspring. The rosy-cheeked cherub who used to run to me, eyes shining with adoration and shouting "Mommy!" began to address me (and everyone else) as "Dude."
At 13 months, he was a sponge, joyfully soaking up new words, becoming more communicative every day. At 13 years, the hormones surging through his body have cut a swath through the speech center in his brain; his mouth, when it speaks at all, produces mere shrunken shreds of complete sentences apparently understood only by other members of his species.
"S'up" is a perfectly acceptable, all-purpose phrase in an adolescent's world.
"Mom, I love you," on the other hand, would burn his monosyllabic lips like acid and permanently corrupt his coolness.
Communication with this high-tech yet illiterate generation is fraught with frustration. My son, who can't seem to utter two intelligible sentences to me, airs his gripes through text messaging. Just the other day, a message flashed on my cell phone in fractured syntax designed to torture my English major soul.
"i no u h8 me. i try so hard 2 b good. y r u mad @ me?"
Cave men scribbling on walls were more eloquent.
Then there's the alteration in appearance. While I'm desperately trying to avoid bags and sags, this long-haired Neanderthal living in my house embraces them as fashion. Wearing gravity-defying pants slung low across his scrawny backside, he looks just like a baby with an overly full diaper. When I helpfully pointed this out, I got another overwrought, electronic missive that ended with the text message equivalent of a scream.
This modern means of communication does keep the house quiet.
Adolescent males seem to lose all capacity for living like civilized human beings. This means that my boy constantly raids the refrigerator but can't manage to close a door, that he can take 30-minute showers but never hang up a wet towel, that he stuffs freshly laundered clothes back into his hamper rather than putting them away. I find sticky cereal bowls in his closet because he was too lazy to return them to the kitchen, and the lunchbox he claimed he lost growing whole colonies of bacteria under his bed. I now understand why some animals eat their young.
The child who begged me to read to him daily now rolls his eyes in disgust when I suggest we turn off the video games and pick up a book. The angel who proudly showed me off to his kindergarten classmates now pretends not to know the deranged woman waving to him in the middle school hallway. My fall from grace, seemingly overnight, has left me depressed, bewildered and prone to emotional excess.
"You could cut the apron strings without slicing through my heart, you know," I whimper in one of my calmer moments.
"Mom," he mumbles in that teenage tone of voice, "why can't you just act normal?"
Normal is, of course, a relative term. In about 10 years, I will magically return to normalcy as my pubescent boy turns into an adult. At least I hope I do. In the meantime, I'm going to hang on to those severed apron strings. I may need them to strangle him.
© Jackie Papandrew, All Rights Reserved


Comments: 47
And don't worry, guys tend to get past adolescence by their twenties. Or thirties. Or fifties.
Unfortunately I chose to have two children back to back... I have two boys exactly a year and 14 days apart in age. Luckily the younger one still loves action figures and thinks that girls are "icky." Ahhh now THAT I love!
Yeah I got one too. And he is driving his mom nuts. Me less, since I have a good memory (I was worse). Great job.
u r gud
:0 (just kidding).
Gone is the little boy who received accolades in his professionism when answering the phone; today I am left with but a shadow of his former multi-syllable vocabulary. S'up and other cute "slang" is the norm! I am crossing my fingers for mid twenties! Here's to us!
I love the imagery like the "rickety bridge."
Thanks for posting to Humor Monday. A link to your article was included in Gather Writing Essentials: Humor Monday Update 4/14
My baby boy's about to be 22 and I think I'm beginning to see the light at the end of the tunnel, so don't lose hope.
I'm sure this proves that being featured on Writing Essentials: Humor Monday is a stepping stone to bigger things. :)
There is no doubt that the hormones will try to take over and your teenager will try to mock the ones that he hangs out with.
Please be careful who your teenager hangs out with.
I personally, have been out of my teens now for far longer than I was in them and I can tell you that that particular malady will subside but never entirely disappear. Best you can do is ride it out, and build up enough ammunition to use against him when he becomes sane again.
I suggest photos. Twenty-three-year-olds hate to be reminded what their thirteen-year-old selves looked like. The potential for blackmail when girlfriends come around his huge.
As for me, no kids but nephews, and though I like to consider myself adept at the English language, I'm at a loss when I have to talk to them. Apparently the new word is "scutz". It is a term of approval, apparently, except when it's not.
In any case, the best way to kill off a teenager's new terminology is to use it liberally around his friends. They'll drop it like a scutz potato...
well written. veryy well written:)
And yes, it does pass in the end... and they become very bearable again - though never like before :-)
Myspace Comments @ DazzleJunction.com
David -- thanks -- self-meds may be the route!
Cristina -- thanks for reading and for the reassurance!
Necee -- 25 is a long time away! :) Thanks for reading....