Daddy Don't Hit Me
Daddy Don't Hit Me

Cousin of the Bride - June 15, 2007

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by bc woods
To understand my uncle Mike's cough, all one has to do is visualize squeezing a tube of toothpaste. In the same way a person squeezes the tube at the bottom and moves to the top, my uncle Mike begins coughing in the tips of his toes. The muscles in his shins and thighs quiver as a wave of spasms makes its way from his feet, across his barreled chest, and up to his throat. Finally, when every last bit of phlegm and grit in his entire body has been brought into his mouth to be ejected, my uncle Mike promptly swallows it back down and lights another cigarette. I watched this while holding a piece of drywall over my head with two quivering arms and said, "Uncle Mike... you know, you really ought to quit smoking." The room was hazy with sheetrock dust and cigarette smoke. I sneezed harshly, and left two v-shaped streaks on the front of my shirt, like jet contrails.

Slapping me solidly on the back instead of using his screw gun to secure the piece of drywall over my head into the wall, my uncle Mike coughed again. "Don't worry, BC. I've been coughing like that for years." He swallowed at the end of the sentence, and I winced at the mental horror of the blackish-green thing that must now be making its way into his esophagus.

Instead of complaining about the weight over my head that had reduced my biceps to limp strands of spaghetti, I coughed through the dust and smoke asking, "Isn't that just all the more reason to quit?" My uncle Mike laughed in response to my foolish query and, just as one of my arms seized in a painful cramp, secured the drywall slab over my head into the ceiling with a loud electric whir of his screw gun. It was all I could do to keep it secure with the other arm.

"Watch it, BC. Gotta hold onto them till the very end." Massaging my arm, I complained under my breath and glared at my friend Dale. Dale Trevin was captain of the high school football team and generally a hell of a nice guy. I had on occasion tutored him through subjects in school that he was having trouble with. In payment for my friendship, he had been watching me hang drywall for half an hour with folded arms, a grin, and a barely repressed chuckle. He claimed his arms were for throwing footballs, not doing construction.

I moved my shoulder in a slow circle, massaging my bicep. Dale trembled with laughter. "Oh, just laugh now, fucker. Wait till the Hamlet test comes up. See who's laughing then." Dale's chuckles slowed then stopped like a motor that had run out of gas. The humor ran out of his face, until his mouth resembled the inverted umbrella of a basset hound's jowls. I raised my eyebrows in truculent success. "That's what I thought, asshole."

"Whoa there, BC. Don't get so cocky. Next thing you know, you'll turn into your father," my uncle Mike warned.

Not particularly pleased with my father for sending me over to my uncle's to hang sheetrock, I quipped, "I'll need to get married three times before I can start doing the job justice."

Uncle Mike laughed loudly, which for several minutes I confused with one of his colossal coughs, until I realized his nostrils were flaring. "Hell, BC you better marry your second wife's cousin too." Overtaken at the cleverness of this, my uncle Mike laughed so hard speech became impossible.

I paused in the action of grabbing another piece of drywall. "Wait... what did you say?"

I had to wait for his laughter to stop before he could continue. Wiping tears out of his eyes, he explained, "I said you should marry your second wife's cousin too. Might as well go all the way, BC."

"When the hell was my dad married to my mom's cousin?" It had only been three years prior that I had learned my father had even had multiple marriages.

Laughing even harder at the sudden realization no one had ever let me in on this bit of my ancestry, my Uncle Mike bent in half and wheezed with his cigarette in his hand for a full minute. His nostrils flared and relaxed with the frequency of a turning jet engine. "You mean NO one has ever told you? NO one?" When my uncle Mike's laughter took him to the floor, his face was so red and he was shaking so badly that I thought the heart attack his body had been threatening for so long had finally happened. Dale, taking my uncle's sudden laughter attack as a signal that it was okay to resume his own laugher, joined in. "Jesus BC, your family is so fucked up."

With two burly men to either side of me, and a Caspar white layer of gypsum dust on my skin, I shouted, "Will someone please explain what the hell is going on here?" In response my uncle Mike rolled on the floor, pounding it beneath him.

"He doesn't know!" Hot tears rolled from his eyes, running down his cheeks through the craters of his mirthfully contorted cheeks. Some five minutes later, when I thought he had ran all out of laughter, he crawled to his hands and knees, took one look in my face, and fell back down to the ground. Finally, more from the abdominal pain of having laughed so hard for so long than from not finding the situation funny any longer, my uncle Mike leaned against the wall and mouth breathed for a long while. He looked like a man trying to prevent hyperventilation.

Dale's laughter had also taken him down, and he was crawling around on the floor like an African lion recovering from heat stroke. "Fuck BC... this is fucking unreal." I kicked some dust at him in annoyance, which caused his laughter to transform into choked, gasping coughs.

"Uncle Mike, can you please explain what the hell is going on here?"

Holding a stitch in his side with both of his hands, he panted, "Okay... just... hold on."

I waited. Uncle Mike panted. Dale crawled around on the floor, too weak to do anything. Finally, my uncle Mike told me the final family secret I had not been privy too. Or so I solemnly hope.

"Her name was Regina, and she loved your father madly. Even though they had been together for years, she would have done anything for him. Well one day, Regina's dad comes around, all fire and brimstone and tells her and your dad that 'cohabitation is a sin.' So your dad, Einstein that he is says, 'We'd get married if we wanted to get married. Want me to prove it? Hey Regina! Want to get married?'

"Since God hates your father, she said, 'Yes Gary, yes I do.' "

Temporarily ignoring that it appeared my father had gotten married on what basically amounted to a dare, I interjected "Wait... Aunt Regina?"

"Yeah, you got it," Uncle Mike wheezed.

A mystery of years suddenly became clear to me. "No wonder she always gives me the stink-eye at family reunions!" My uncle Mike made a sound in his throat that wasn't quite laughter, but a sound which could have very easily blossomed into laughter had he not been so exhausted. He had to close his eyes until it went away.

"Anyhow, so your dad's hanging out at the wedding, when he looks over at the bridesmaid, and decides, 'Hell, she's a looker,' and figures he'll take off with her.

"Well, your dad being your dad, he can't have sex with someone without ending up falling madly in love with them.

"So six days after he married Regina, your dad got the marriage annulled and hooked up full-time with the bridesmaid: your mother." If I were to sit down with a panel of world experts, bent on creating a situation that would result in the most social awkwardness for the most people, I could not have come up with a more devastatingly awful scenario.

Dale let out a single toned note that held the place of laughter and pounded his fist against the floor. My uncle Mike's whole body flexed with mirth.

I looked at my Uncle Mike. I looked at Dale. "I need to go home," I announced and walked away.

When I entered the kitchen, I found my father, and asked him why. Why had he divorced a woman who loved him so obviously for a woman who was so obviously out of her mind? He looked at me somberly from across the kitchen counter. His words had the haunted quality of a war veteran recalling a horrific battle. "She used to pack my lunches for me. She used to give me oranges all the time, so I told her to stop because I didn't want to peel them. Do you know what I saw in my lunch box the next day?" His eyes flashed ominously.

"An orange?" I asked, perplexed.

My father nodded gravely, looked from side to side as though afraid someone else might hear, and whispered, "And she had peeled it for me."

I saw my father in a whole new light. "You're fucking crazy."

He nodded in complacent agreement.

Posted by BC Woods at 12:00 AM

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Comments

You really couldn't just make this up.

BC: You have no idea how much I wish this wasn't true. I know it's not technically incest, but just... goddamn Mom and Dad, can't you swim outside the family water park?

Posted by: Richard at June 15, 2007 01:57 AM

Hence the fear of oranges passed on down.

Posted by: Marisa at June 15, 2007 02:25 AM

Wow.
He really is fucking crazy.

Posted by: Boaz at June 15, 2007 02:54 AM

Poor Aunt Regina.
Hey, at least your dad wasn't a pussy.

Posted by: Cameron at June 15, 2007 05:38 AM

lol, something very similar happened to me. sometime after my step brother/sister were born their parents and another couple literally switched spouses with eachother, completly even trade, and one half ended up birthing me.

Posted by: Pseudo Jew at June 15, 2007 06:25 AM

She peeled the for him... she loved him... he asked her to stop because he didn't want to...

I'm having a hard tie processing just how insane your father is. This is unreal.

Posted by: PBrain at June 15, 2007 08:49 AM

I am the boring person in the world, with the most normal upbringing. In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if Norman Rockwell had visited my town and family for inspiration.

This, of course, is why I love this site.

Awesomely visual story as usual.

Posted by: _tom at June 15, 2007 10:42 AM

You must have been ADOPTED.

Posted by: Christi Lee at June 15, 2007 11:00 AM

You must have been ADOPTED.

Posted by: Christi Lee at June 15, 2007 11:00 AM

He wasn't adopted. He just got lucky and seemingly got a bit of his grandfather's genes. It'll only take you so far with a fucked up family like his though, haha.

BC, I love how ashamed you make your father sound in the last few sentences. He knows he's crazy and he knows he screwed up by getting with your mom. Fucking hilarious.

Posted by: Matt at June 15, 2007 11:58 AM

BC, you write these fantastic true tales, you're going to be an engineer? I guess good luck in all aspects of life. I am an avid reader, haven't tried the writing all that much, but the stuff you put out holds my attention hella. I HAVE TO SAY, I FUCKING LOVE YOU DUDE, SERIOUS, as fucked as your family is, you sound like you got the best of everything (atleast now). I'd love to meet you, not in a stalker way by any means, we'd definately have some laughs.I'm not a superficial cunt so no worries if you're no Brad Pitt hun. xo

BC: Sure. Any one else who wants to meet me just needs to head on up to Aberdeen, WA.

Posted by: Syd at June 15, 2007 01:57 PM

Wow man. You and your Aunt should be pretty tight. Too bad she looks at you like you're ya know, something that reminds her of a bad time in her life. Anywho, I'd enjoy coming up to Aberdeen to hang out but I don't see that happening anytime soon. If it does then I'll do whatever I have to do to get in touch with you. Later bro.

Posted by: Wayland at June 15, 2007 10:48 PM

Another fantastic post BC, your talent amazes me more with each post I read. I look forward to your next column.

Posted by: putter at June 16, 2007 06:05 AM

Wait, so he married your mom because she peeled them? Or he broke up with Regina because she peeled them.

BC: He broke up with Regina because she peeled his orange. He can't stand it when people are nice to him or concerned for his well-being.

Posted by: Sod at June 16, 2007 02:48 PM

Wow. I just found this place a few days ago and just got done reading all these stories. Fantastic read! Little bits and pieces remind me of my own childhood. Though I guess it should considering I also grew up in the Aberdeen/Hoquiam/Copalis Beach area.

Keep them coming BC. They are fun to read.

BC: Really? Are you an evil Hoquiamite, or a noble Aberdeenian?

Posted by: Goose at June 17, 2007 07:08 AM

I would like to again point out that the awesome ending sentence(s) were hugely important to this being such a cool story. It is amazing how powerful and important the last little bit can be.

Posted by: Former Roommate Kevin at June 17, 2007 04:48 PM

A little from column A, a little from column B I suppose. I went to school in Hoquiam, but I've lived in Abdereen for the last 3 years or so(and off and on at different times throughout my life).

Posted by: Goose at June 17, 2007 09:10 PM

love the stories bro...must have been a fuckin crazy time growin up in your house
little off topic but....
im goin to school for engineering this fall..wat type of engineering u doin BC? im doin EE at NJIT

Posted by: Chris at June 17, 2007 11:22 PM

Holy crap... that explains a lot about your brother's fear of oranges. I guess I really can't complain about having the blood of an absent-minded statistician (the kind who can do all the theory but can't apply anything) running through my veins and manifesting itself!

Great read, I freaked out my office-mates from intense laughter =)

Posted by: RecurveHawk at June 18, 2007 10:54 AM

"You must have been ADOPTED."

no, no, if he was adopted then how would there be confushon about wether he was realy his fathers.

great story. i'm glad i found you. gaijin smash in getting borring.

Posted by: celestial-salamander at June 18, 2007 02:11 PM

When my father (I like to refer to him as my donor) and mom divorced, he married my mom's first cousin.
Very confusing for a four year old to have your great aunt become your step grandmother. Thankfully, it didn't last.
I think he is still with wife #4, but who knows?

Posted by: C at June 19, 2007 10:26 AM

So, Washington it is. Wish I would have inquired earlier seeing as I was just a few hours from there a few weeks ago. I didn't check to see actually how far but regardless I would have traveled more to chat and shake your glorious hand. You definately have a way with words, I guess I'll just have to imagine how an actual spoken conversation goes until then. I love the site, w/o Tucker Max I would have nothing to look at while at work. B.C I sure hope you're keeping the more juicy famly tales for a book of short stories. Hope you have a fabulous summer.

BC: Thanks man, but I'd like to say this up front. The reason I'm a good writer is probalby because I'm socially awkward. I can tell a story in person, and I can make you laugh but I'm not good at regular conversation. Don't get mad if I seem weird.

Posted by: Syd at June 26, 2007 04:23 PM

I can already tell that a conversation between you and I will go smooth. Also, I'd like to add that I am a recently turned 24 yr old female. I can handle all sorts of awkwardness and just by reading these stories I know we will hit it off. No worries and take care. You make my shitty days a bit better when I read this stuff. You're a talented mutha and I love every second of it. Keep up with the writing when possible or I may start punching old people who fuck with me @ work. B.C, you are soooo tha JAM!!!! kill'n it every time! xo

BC: Umm... okay? Just kidding, thanks for the compliments.

Posted by: Syd at June 27, 2007 02:24 PM

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