Raised by Google

There are vital rites of passage fathers and sons must go through together, the most important milestones of a father’s journey. I have experienced exactly none of them.

One was stolen by my wife, a titanic disaster on her part and all I’m going to tell you is he was 3 and it involved aiming.

All other benchmarks of tradition were ripped from my clawed, grasping fingers by my arch-rival, the un-father, a sinister, soulless substitute. My son was raised by Google.

It’s my fault. I gave him unrestricted access to the internet.

There are parents tearing this article out of the magazine in pediatric offices all over Chicago to provide the state’s Department of Children and Family Services evidence of my madness and neglect, but I tell you, the worst thing to come out of it is an affinity for high brow knock-knock jokes, Zen Buddhism, the ability to trounce me in the recollection of arcane ’70s-era rock trivia — and that Google is his real father.

Google does everything better than me.

Take fishing. Classic dad. I took him out to the middle of a lake to teach him how to tie his hook with a secret fisherman’s knot handed down through my family, an heirloom knot. I reach for his rod, employing my raspiest McQueen.

“Let me show you how to tie that hoo…”

He whips his lure out into the lake like he’s on Bass Pros.

“I tied it on with an eight-fold Japanese blood knot.”

“Who taught you that?”

“Googled it.”

Later on, I take a long look at the darkening sky, note the stumpy quality of the waves and see all the locals packing it in. Years of experience have taught me these are sure signs an NFL game is on in five minutes. Awesome, I’d like to see Google teach him…

“Dad, you see how the swans are tucking their heads into their wings?”

“Birds are stupid, son.”

“Aaaaactually, they know it’s about to rain so hard they won’t have time to make it to shore.”

“That’s idioti…[THUNDEROUS DOWNPOUR]. How’d you know that!?”

My son pauses as if he’s taking a moment to compose a response, to level his tone so as not to insult me. Quietly, he says “I Googled it, Dad,” squinting into the distance. “I Googled it.”

Google is like a greedy stepfather stealing all my thunder. Meaningful moments are shot down before I can get the words out of my mouth with, “Googled it, Dad! I DON’T NEED YOU, I HAVE GOOGLE!”

Google tells him stories, it shows him cool Zippo lighter tricks, it can teach him anything through a series of simple step-by-step videos, it’s never wrong, and it never sleeps. Google’s a better father than I’ll ever be.

But I’m not going down without a fight. I’m not entirely useless. I’d like to see Google give him a hundred bucks and a ride to Six Flags.

Christopher Garlington lives in a standard two kids, wife, dog, corner-lot, two-car dream package. He drives a 2003 Camry, sports a considerable notebook fetish, and smokes Arturo Fuente Partaga Maduros at the Cigar King as often as possible. His stories have appeared in Florida, Orlando, Orlando Weekly, Catholic Digest, Retort, Another Realm, The Dead Mule School of Southern Literature, South Lit, and other magazines. His short story collection, “King of the Road,” is available on Amazon. His column “My Funny Life,” was nominated for a national humor award. He is the author of the infamous anti-parenting blog, Death By Children; the anti-writing blog, Creative Writer Pro; and co-author of “The Beat Cop’s Guide to Chicago Eats.”

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