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Father of the Year

Sex Seems to Find Me

I swear I try my best to be a good parent and shield my kids from the non-age-appropriate, but for some reason sex seems to find me.  My six-year-old is Pokemon obsessed (and Bakugon and Ben 10) so when the Takashi Murakami exhibit came to the Brooklyn Museum I knew I had to take him.  

 

 

 

Chet was in Heaven. Ava wasn't complaining too much.  A and I bribed her with the promise of pizza and ice cream later at the foot of the Brooklyn Bridge.  

I often drag them to museums and they often caterwaul about it but this time Chet, as he wheedled his way onto the crowded floor of a video screening room full of twenty-something hipsters all  transfixed by a Murakami cartoon he  whispered, "I love it, daddy."  I swelled with pride.  I was ready for my medal from the Cultural Affairs Commissioner for the City of New York. 

Unlike the brilliant Kara Walker  retrospective at the Whitney where friends had warned me not to take the kids unless I wanted some tricky and lengthy explaining to do, my friends who'd seen Murakami hadn't given me a parental heads up.  So we just wandered into a room with several cartoonishly buxom  topless blondes/motorcycles chasis (?) spears (?).  Chet ran to them giggling.  Then we entered a room and saw her:

 

bigger than lifesize on a pedestal.  The kids were, understandably, fascinated.  And across from her was her boyfriend?, lover? a blonde guy, also a bit larger than life with that same white stuff coming out of his erect, shaved penis.  It's all so cartoonish and bright and plastic that the effect of the room is unsettling and funny at the same time.  Chet and Ava were doubled over giggling.  The older museum ladies in the room with us had eyes as wide as saucers. Everyone in the room, it seemed, wanted to hear what my kids thought of this art.

 

"What's that coming out of the boy's penis, daddy?" asked Chet.  Ava too busy giggling to talk. 

 

"What do you think it is?" his cowardly dad asked him.

 

"I think it's sperm," said my young genius.

 

"I think you're right."

 

The rest of the exhibit was mainly happy and light like this:

 

 and the pizza at Grimaldi's was some of the best I've ever had.

 

 

 


Published Apr 16 2008, 09:04 AM by Trey
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Comments

 

KaritaG said:

I lurk here sometimes, but finally had to comment...my husband and I went to a modern art installation at the Denver Art Museum a few months ago and saw that same female sculpture!  We were fascinated too!  Although we did not see the guy with the penis...maybe that is a good thing...

April 16, 2008 10:53 AM
 

Melissa said:

Well, with all that giggling, at least you know it didn't scar them for life!

April 16, 2008 12:45 PM
 

leahsmom said:

Great answer - from both you and Chet! But yeah, sounds like Grimaldi's was needed. :)

April 16, 2008 12:55 PM
 

Single Mom Seeking said:

Sex keeps finding you Trey. I just "used" you on my blog again. You are quite the expert, after all. Thanks!

singlemomseeking.com/.../help-how-do-you-have-a-sleepover-when-your-kid-is-in-the-other-room

April 16, 2008 3:25 PM
 

Chris. said:

HILARIOUS!

April 16, 2008 5:58 PM
 

cathy Burke said:

Too funny! Sometimes there is no right answer and other times no wrong answer.  We recently had to deal with my five year old finding my husband's Playboy magazine and hiding it in his room!  I am stillnot sure how to explain why mommy's "nickels" don't look like the ones on the "hot girls".

April 17, 2008 12:10 PM
 

Tracey said:

Dude, I remember finding my mother's vibrator. Ahem.

That aside, I guess living in a place like New York presents opportunities and challenges that living somewhere less interesting couldn't possibly. How cool to have access to so much though. I live in the deep south and that exhibit would never even darken the doorway of any museum in these parts. It's a shame.

Sounds like your kids are handling it well and you're navigating this tricky territory with much aplomb! I'd be so shocked I'd probably laugh until was safely out the door with them.  

April 17, 2008 9:14 PM
 

Jessica said:

Tracey -- I can top you on the "finding my parents' sex toys" front. My brother and I got ahold of my mom's very lifelike vibrator and decided it would be hilarious to let the dog play with the um ... bone, so to speak. So our family dog goes prancing out into the living room vibrator in mouth, to find my mother, who is, of course, livid, but also secretly a bit amused. I was probably about 12 at the time and my brother probably 9 or so, so we were certainly old enough to know that was not an appropriate chew toy for the pooch!

Chet, that's a great story. Wonderful ammunition for first date embarrassment too!

April 19, 2008 1:29 AM
 

Jill et al said:

We are four museum educators in a day-long retreat looking at some good websites.  It is great to see a parent dealing head-on with contemporary art and kids. We will use your example in our museum.

May 9, 2008 3:06 PM

in

About the Blogger

Arthur Bradford

Trey Ellis in Manhattan

The author of Bedtimes Stories: Adventures in the Land of Single-Fatherhood, Trey is busy raising his school-aged girl and boy in New York City. When he’s not shuttling them to public school, he is a novelist, screenwriter, political blogger on the HuffingtonPost and film professor. Visit his website here.

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