The one where Elly uses a phrase a four year old doesn't understand to justify being an insecure idiot.
Synopsis: When April tries to remind Elly that lying about her age is wrong, she's responded to with bad wordplay that she doesn't understand.
Summary: April just learned that adults are into Do As I Say, Not As I Don't Care If YOU Find Out I Do
(
Read more... )
( ... )
Reply
April has learned something that her parents don't want to admit teaching her: they get to ignore rules that she cannot. Next, comes the realization that their opinion of who she is and what she wants outranks objective reality.
Reply
April has learned something that her parents don't want to admit teaching her: they get to ignore rules that she cannot.
Right. Usually with this kind of comic strip, the parents admit that and you have a feel-good moment. Not this time.
Reply
This is because John and Elly aren't really honest with themselves. After all, they are Lynn.
Reply
They are Lynn, but Lynn usually likes those "clip out and put it on the refrigerator" comic strips. I am a little surprised she did not go for the "feel-good" answer this time.
Reply
To her way of thinking, telling a nosy child to keep quiet about Mommy's vanity, self-loathing and stupidity is a feel-good response. There is a sequence in the title to the television series in which we are asked to identify with Elly when she says something horrible to Mike. Then again, the upbeat opening includes a veiled threat to people who point out that Elly and John are bound by the same rules as everyone else.
Reply
Also, Elly is into revisionist history. According to her, she just suddenly saw an ugly old lady staring back her in the mirror for the first time ever when she got back from helping John ruin road trips for everyone. Saying that this is manifestly not the case will mean dodging coffee cups at worst and months of passive-aggressive huffing that is never explained at best. Still, though, one must press on with why Elly can shove her everyone does it nonsense up her nether end.
This Sunday strip is from eleven years ago:
( ... )
Reply
1. Twice, we see Elly attempt to speak for all 40-year olds. I did not feel this way when I was forty years old, Elly, and I was less healthy then than I am today at 61. Your issues are not universal. You are not the standard by which everyone else is measured. When you say "one" does this and "one" does that, you mean "I." Just say "I."
2. You do not live in a bubble. You are passing your ridiculous insecurities and body issues on to your daughter(s.) Stop that. Now.
3. You are fantasizing getting revenge on your 10-year old. Get therapy.
4. John, instead of giving your daughter empty reassurances that you find her "perfect," how about just discussing with her how especially young people like her have a habit of articulating snap judgements, testing sensitivity levels in others, and how important it is to have a realistic view of "oneself" and not adopt the view of others. You know, be helpful and educational for once.
Reply
Reply
So it turns out, the answer to "something on your mind, El?" (a question you'd think John would have long-since stopped asking, but these people seem unwilling to live with quiet when they have it despite constantly demanding it when they don't) is "I'm worried that SocietyTM is warping my daughter's body image before I get a chance to do it."
Reply
Thus, her inability to quite see that April is motivated by the subconscious dread that everyone wishes that Elly had had Becky instead of her.
Reply
This is the typical "I'm pretending to be busy, stop talking to me, I even stuck needles in my mouth to show you how unavailable I am, go away now" strip that is so depressingly common.
This summer, I spent most of my time mowing lawns and landscaping around my mother's house. When I wasn't doing that I was doing school prep work. But whenever my mother wanted to play cards, it was time to do that. Whenever my godchildren showed up, everything else got set aside to be with them. With John and Elly, literally ANYTHING ELSE is a priority over spending time or even just talking to their children. They'll FIND SOMETHING to do to distract them from being with their kids rather than just BE WITH THEIR KIDS. In modern times, this is the parent at the playground who is playing Candy Crush on their phone or randomly texting people because they see that as better than watching their kids or joining in on their play. It's just so gross.
Reply
Reply
The father of my godchildren spent 90 percent of his time with them at the beach staring at his phone. He's in his forties and has a wife and children, but in my opinion was acting exactly like a teenager with zero responsibilities or distractions more worthy of his stupid phone. Pathetic.
Reply
Well, that's the thing, isn't it? The only person who'd think that children have nothing to say are children.
Reply
Or in the recent comic strips, these are the parents who drive their kids constantly but when they talk to them, it's just complaints about how loud their music is or to point out things on the road that they are not going to stop and see.
Reply
Leave a comment