Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Can Dads Dance?

Photo:  Becky & Todd before Prom, 1978.

A few days ago it hit me:  I'm going to have to dance with my daughter at her wedding on Saturday.

Of course, I'm no stranger to the dance floor.  I was boogie-ing with the best of 'em back in the late 1970s and I had Saturday Night Fever long before the movie premiered. My voice was also a falsetto, like Barry Gibbs, and I loved the idea of Becky being more than a woman to me.  Becky knows this.  She went to the prom with me our junior year of high school (spring of 1978) and I ripped up the floor.  I also ripped out my white pants (which had taken on a yellowed tinge from so much nervous sweat).  This is why I spent most of my time at the prom watching a Don Knotts film, thinking my friends would make fun of me, assuming I had peed my pants when, in fact, I simply had over-active glands.

Naturally, the first thing my mother wanted to know when I got home was:  "Did you dance with Becky?"  Her second question was:  "Why did you pee your pants?"

This is something, however, that a seventeen-year-old male cannot explain to a mother's satisfaction.

I reminded my mother that, in addition to being president of the high school letterman's club and a solid "C-minus" student, I knew how to treat a girl to a really good time.  "There's more to the prom than dancing," I reminded my mother as I reached for a jug of Ajax and began scrubbing the crotch on my rental.  "There are also the intangibles: such as friendship, respect, athletics, honor, C-minus academics, and a really good lime punch with those little strawberries floating on top."

"You should marry that girl," mom told me.  "I like that Becky.  She's a good cheerleader, probably a virgin, and I don't think she'd let you get fresh with her.  In fact, I don't think she'd let you touch her . . . even after twenty years of marriage.  You have to respect a girl with such high standards for herself and such low expectations in men."

From that moment on I took mom's advice to heart and knew Becky was the girl for me.  If mom liked her, there must be something wrong with Becky, and I was certain that, if I worked hard enough, I would discover Becky's trashy side.

Naturally, I married Becky in order to find out.  (But this occurred after years of rejection from hundreds of other women who were not afraid to dance cheek-to-cheek with a pee stain.)

Now here we are--two old people on the cusp of our daughter's wedding--and my wife is once again giving me dancing tips.  She refuses to allow the showing of a Don Knotts film at the wedding reception.  I am not allowed to have a good time.  I cannot wear a white tux.  And she insists I double up on absorbent underwear.

"Is Dad a good dancer?" my daughter keeps asking my wife.  "Has he ever, even once, given you a good dipping?"

"Sweetheart," Becky tells her, "he's going to embarrass the stuffing out of you."

My wife may be correct.  But then again, I'll be wearing a dark tux.  That alone should make me look good on the dance floor.  And I've been practicing my dips.  God knows, I haven't dropped a girl yet.

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