August 2, 2000    Sunnyvale, California  Since 1994

The Sun
Classifieds Advertising Archives Search About us
Letters & Opinion



Speak Out





    Birthdays like mom used to do

    By Deborah Taylor-Hollis

    Being a child in the 1960s meant birthday parties out in the yard with streamers, flags, pin the tail on the donkey and baked birthday cakes--parties right out of that scene in The Birds just before Tippi Hedren had to usher all the little tykes inside.

    Modern parents in this valley don't make parties, we drive to them. With Petroglyph paint-a-bank, Chuck E. Cheese pizza feasts, "The Jungle" play parties and rented pools, we millennium moms tend to give parties for our offspring that do not involve decorating or small kids using our bathrooms. We also try to avoid having other moms evaluate our housecleaning skills too closely. We have people over in small, manageable groups.

    But, recently I had a case of temporary amnesia and forgot this truth of the valley.

    My son turned 7 last week. While still mourning my mother's passing, I also remembered how she baked, chauffeured, decorated and planned so many wonderful parties for me, and the wonderful memories I have from each of them.

    So, in a moment of idiocy not unlike the Russian sale of Alaska, I told my son yes, when he asked for a pirate party. It was a fluke after my recent discussions. He had happened to see a children's party book that a misguided friend of mine had given me. The next thing I knew I had actually volunteered to have ten 7-year-old boys (and one very sweet 9-year-old girl) come to my house, eat gooey chocolate food and drink flavored sugar water.

    My biggest mental lapse was when I armed them with swords, but what pirate party would be complete without sidearms?

    The first thing that told me I was in over my head were the invitations--handmade on the computer, printed backward (secret pirate writing) and accompanied with maps, raiding plans and a pirate food list.

    I spent the week prior to this event looking for pirate music. I eventually found the original Disney theme music to the ride Pirates of the Caribbean, along with a copy of Peter Pan. I also hunted down little treasures to use as "booty," and old pirate movies to watch.

    So there I was, walking around the house for a week saying things like "aye me bucko" and "avast ye hearties," while baking a "treasure chest cake" made of two chocolate funnel cakes, two cans of chocolate fudge frosting, two pounds of chocolate M&M's, a bag of jelly beans, a bag of hard candies and a bag of sugar jellies. It was an exploding artery disguised as a treasure chest. (I later had to take an oath that I was not in collusion with any dentist.)

    I spent all my time wandering the party stores looking at eye patches, matching up napkins, and weighing the merits of having a real "plank" for the kids to walk as they entered the pool (a decision that was made moot when the day became overcast and too cool for the pool). I know things turned strange when I decided to paint a pirate flag to hang up in the front yard.

    I tried to scrounge old white pillowcases from friends or neighbors, and had to give up when the closest I could come was a nice peach floral with eyelet-cut edges--definitely not the basic pirate white.

    I went shopping with 24 hours to go and found a huge piece of muslin that fit the bill. So I ended up outlining and painting a pirate skull and cross bones at 2 a.m. the night before the party and toddling off to bed around 3 a.m.

    Eleven happy kids later, with a painted treasure map on the garage for "Pin the X on the treasure" and crocodile brew in rum bottles, my left foot cramped up and I limped off to the bathtub while my spouse cleaned up the pirate banners, flags and chest of booty. What can't be cleaned up, however, is a great memory.



Cover Story
Local model railroaders gear up for the National Model Railroad Association's convention

News
News Briefs

Councilman Jim Roberts pleads no contest on public intoxication charge

Victoria Johnson joins the ranks of the Online Cooperative LIbrary Center

The city studies the feasibility of expanding its redevelopment areas

Public Safety

Letters & Opinions
Speak Out

Deborah Taylor-Hollis: Birthdays like mom used to do

Gardening
Plants' need for water depends on many factors

Seniors
Rita Baum: Sun worshippers discover that the sun is not their friend

Sports

Sports Briefs

South tops North in all-stars game

Calendar
Lectures, readings, auditions, sports & recreation,announcements, theater & arts, kids' stuff, clubs, public meetings...

Feedback
Something to say?


Copyright © Metro Publishing Inc. Maintained by Boulevards New Media.