“Are you
certain you want to do the 1:00 party?
There’ll be 20 toddlers – and their adults.”
“Sure,
boss; I need a challenge away from the register! It’ll be nice and orderly, don’t you sweat.”
The store
employee set up the tables, chairs, confetti, balloons, and supplies well in
advance of the party attendees’ arrivals, which naturally were late and
staggered. The guest of honor arrived
with his parents seven minutes after the top of the hour, delaying the start time because
they had trouble finding a parking spot.
“All
right, let’s get this party started, `cause we’re already behind schedule!” The employee tried to get things back on
track. “Here are some toys – go play!”
There was
unstructured play for 13 minutes in an attempt to right the itinerary –
wanderers were herded back into the room and over to the general vicinity of
their oblivious guardians. The employee
checked her watch, set in alignment with Greenwich Mean Time: it was time for
Phase 2.
“Listen
up, everybody – craft! Put the toys down
and come to the tables!”
“Can my
daughter still play with – ”
“NO!”
The craft
was drawing self-portraits, all of which came out abysmally. They would be the ones to suffer with the
unsightly works hanging on their walls, the employee thought.
“All
right, craft time is over, go back and play!”
“Can we
have another piece of paper? This one
ripped.”
“Craft
time is over! Time to play, play, play!” What was with all the insubordination? Did she have “PUSHOVER” stamped on her
forehead?
Play time
lasted for the allotted 10 minutes – next up was pizza and soda. “Time for your sugar, salt, and fat,
children!” Why weren’t they all sitting
in their seats properly? “Doesn’t anyone
want a salad?”
“Not at a
birthday party.”
Thanks,
Mom. Napkins and tomato sauce everywhere
– do they make this mess at their own homes?
She thought maybe.
“OK, let
me take a picture of all of you!” Only the
Birthday Boy and three children came to the marker she had placed on the floor
for this. “Come on, this moment needs to
be immortalized! Why is no one following
directions?!”
“They’re
still playing.”
“But it’s
picture time!” Four subjects were better
than none, so she took the photo with the glaring negative space drawing all the
attention. “Thank you – disperse until
dessert.” That would be in 10 minutes,
during which time a few adults and children drifted off to different parts of
the store: this could not be tolerated.
The
employee went on the overhead speaker: “Attention, party guests: if you do not
return to the designated area in… 37 seconds, cake and cookies will be withheld
from you, even if you are the guest of honor, good day to you!”
The
pitter-patter of sneakered feet raced over to the party room, and they all sat
down at the tables. Dessert was served
in an orderly fashion and peace reigned for exactly one minute and 23 seconds.
The
manager stuck his head into the room: “Is everything all – ”
“Yes!”
“OK – don’t
go on the overhead again.”
“Yes,
sir.”
Dessert
was ingested and smeared on faces, hands, clothing, and walls. “Not the walls! It’ll take me ages to clean them! Never mind – children! Get into a circle!” Six of them got into a diagonal. “I said ‘a circle’! We’re going to play ‘Duck, Duck, Goose’!” They moved to form a rhombus. “Close enough! Birthday Boy: go!”
The
Birthday Boy left the room because he had to go potty; Dad followed to assist
if needed.
“All
right – someone else!”
Three of
the remaining children stood and each went “Duck, Duck, Duck, Duck…”
“Forget
it! You ruined it! Go back to the tables and think about what
you did!”
The
manager poked his head in again.
“What – ”
“I will
have order here!”
The
employee spent the rest of the party back at the cash register, ringing up
customers in order to calm herself down.
The children were very confused, the adults were a bit miffed, and the
Birthday Boy returned from his break looking for his presents. Presents make everything all better.