Editors note: This return to ranting was inspired by the superb piece of controlled blabbering by Mr. Sean Ely.
One of my favorite books is "Catcher In The Rye." Ignore for the moment the fact that I tried re-reading it this summer and didn't finish it. It's not the actual writing of the novel that's a treasure, but the story behind the story.
What I love about the book is that it's a story about an incredibly fascinating period of time that every young person goes through. It tells the tale of a young boy who is right in between the innocence of youth and the harsh reality of adulthood.
I bring this up because I'm fascinated by the innocence of children (in a completely non-pedophile way). When I look back on my early childhood (ages 0 to about 14 or 15), I had very few "adult" worries or experiences. My main concerns at the time were daily Sportscenter re-runs, making the middle school basketball team, and playing football with the neighborhood kids.
For that relatively short period of time, life was uncomplicated, easy, and blissful.
But that's not the case anymore. Take for example a five minute slice of my life this past Thursday.
I was sitting at work, just doing my job, when two young girls (I'd guess about 13 or 14) came into the store where I work. To make a short observation: they were dressed like $5 hookers on the corner of 8 Mile and Woodward. They had less clothes on than a swimsuit model. I repeat, they were still three years away from being able to drive a car.
After they came in, they proceeded to use their cell phone four times in five minutes, check each of their Facebook pages, and look at clothing that they could not afford on 10 weeks of allowance (though knowing their background, their allowance is a tiny bit heftier than mine was at that age).
They looked like they were ready to score with some dude down behind the tennis shack. At that age, the only thing I wanted to score was a touchdown on NCAA Football 2000.
In sum, they were sluts in the making.
Which brings me to this point: Our society (and primarily, parents) has morphed in such a way that the innocence of childhood is constantly shrinking. And that's a damn shame.
Young people have decades ahead of them to be adults with serious problems. In fact, I yearn for the days when my biggest problem was the handicapped kid making fun of me for wearing short shorts (true story) or the kid on the bus telling me that Santa Claus was an asshole (whoever you were, fuck you).
The moral of the story: I better never have a girl. If I do, the only skin I better see on her until she's 28 is the skin on her face (and if she has the porcelain skin and bubble gum lips enough for John Mayer to write a shitty song about her, I'm making her wear a ski mask. Even if I live in fucking Arizona.) And while she may hate me for that and go out and shack up with some dude behind the 7-11 the second she turns 18 (we won't be rich enough to belong to a country club on the path I'm on), I'll know that I'll have done enough to preserve her innocence, even for a little while.
Because innocence is like a case of the chicken pox: once you have it, and you get rid of it, you can never get it back.
Man, I wish I could get the chicken pox again. Those were the days.
Resume
12 years ago