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The Middle Class Circle of Life
>>> Primal Urges
By staff writer
Nathan DeGraaf
August 29, 2007
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Nathan: Man, I don’t know about my parents’ house
anymore. After they remodeled, it just doesn’t feel like home. I
guess it’s true what they say: you can never go home again.
Chip: I think that’s wrong, dude.
Nathan: Why?
Chip: Because dude, here you are. |

More Snippets |
The secret to being appreciated by friends and family is to move very far
away from them and only visit a few days a year. This way, people actually miss
you and you can almost never stay long enough before they realize what an
insensitive prick you are (unless you are one
seriously insensitive prick, in which case, I’m pretty sure you’ll be
treated badly wherever you go).
As I write this column in a feverish, coffee-induced attempt to meet my
deadline (my flight leaves in an hour or so), I am sitting in my parents’ house,
the house in which I grew up, and well, due to retirement fund availability and
basic middle class need (which isn’t actually a “need” by lower class standards
but whatever), the place doesn’t look anything like it used to (they remodeled).
Worse yet, nothing is where it used to be. Which means even getting a glass of
milk while half-drunk is an adventure in orientation.
And the same can be said for my hometown, St. Louis (motto: ridiculous
humidity brings everyone together). The stadium I grew up watching the Cardinals
in has been torn down and replaced with a more comfortable (and more profitable)
ballpark. All of my old high school hangouts have been destroyed, replaced,
remodeled or put under new ownership.
"I can't see why anyone would want to add the burden of
familial obligation." (Side note: I can’t wait ‘till I have kids so I can
take them back to St. Louis and show them where all the places I
enjoyed used to be. I’ll be all like, “And see that bridge [insert
Random Fuck Trophy’s name here], that used to be where my favorite
record store was, right next to the sandwich shop that ain’t there
anymore and across from an old bar that you now know as a Chinese
Buffet.” It’ll be a grand experience, I’m sure.)
Furthermore, my
old friends from high school have all changed. Weddings are a weekly
occurrence up here, as are baby showers, dinner parties and property evaluation.
Most of my old friends are fatter, more conservative and more focused on staying
out of trouble than they used to be. And I guess that’s all for the best. I
mean, I guess that’s the natural progression of growing up, but it got me
thinking.
If growing up basically just means sacrificing your youth and your good times
in the name of family and mortgage payments, then what’s the point of even
having your youth and good times to begin with? According to most of my friends,
the sacrifices are all worth it because, as parents and husbands, they are now
providers of youth and good times for their next generation, for all the little
rugrats up here getting pushed around in strollers and pushed into youth sports
in the name of their parents’ shattered hopes and dreams. According to them,
that’s it. That’s the
middle class circle of life.
Now, maybe I’m just a selfish bastard who fears commitment and
responsibility, but I just can’t see why anyone would want to hinder their life
by adding the burden of familial obligation.
Maybe it’s like reader and friend Kevin once told me a while back. Maybe I’ll
never understand it until I hold a little kid in my arms and realize that said
child is dependent on me, not only for food, clothes and shelter, but also for
the kind of person the little snot factory turns into. And maybe one day I’ll
get to a point in my life where the need for responsibility kicks in and I’ll
sacrifice all the wild good times for conservative, old-fashioned, domestic good
times.
But so far, thank God, Allah, Buddha and anyone else who had a hand in it,
that hasn’t happened.
And maybe if
family life never happens to me, well, maybe, just possibly, not having a
family will be my contribution to society at large. (I am, as some have put it,
a little messed up.)
And if that is truly the case, well let me be the first to say: y’all
welcome.
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| Nathan DeGraaf
graduated fucking years ago with a BA in Creative Writing from the
University of South Florida, which he still lives near because college
chicks are the best. On weekday evenings, he can typically be found at any one of a number of North Tampa bars. On weekends, he typically cannot be found. When not drinking, fishing, watching sports, or having sex, Nathan likes to read, play the harmonica, and show up for work. Throughout the course of his life, he has been arrested six times because, as his father has often said, "the kid is fucking stupid." |
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