After getting off the red-eye to Sydney this morning, arriving at my hotel, begging my way into an early check in (thank goodness for a platinum status with the hotel group, thanks to all the trips to Darwin), and a quick shower, I met up with an old friend for breakfast.
We've known each other for a while.
We're both middle-aged/
We talked about lots of things.
Trump - we both loathe.
His PhD candidature - interesting topic.
Working in the Territory - love it though the travel is a bit brutal.
The joys of middle-age. Men settle. Women don't. Women fight against disappearing. Men don't. Women expand. Men contract.
Then the topic meandered onto his sixteen-year-old daughter.
I should say, I've been having variations on this conversation over the last few months with various friends.
"How's Meg?" I asked.
"Hmph."
"I have a cat for a reason. Far easier than children." Well, it's a fair point.
"But kids don't shit in your shoes."
"True."
"So, what's the problem?"
"She has a boyfriend." I could hear the despair in his voice.
I will say, from what I've been told, Meg is a lovely, sensible girl, who has nice friends and does her homework, and stays out of trouble. She occasionally gets a bit lippy, but what sixteen-year-old doesn't bite back a bit? Sixteen is awful. If you don't mind spending time in their company and don't want to shoot them, you've done a good job of parenting them. Well that's my uniformed reasoning.
"So, is he nice?" I asked.
"He has a mullet." The disapproval was evident.
"So, what's up really? Your little girl has a boyfriend. She's growing up. You don't like him?"
"HE HAS A MULLET! My daughter has a boyfriend who has a mullet!"
Oh boy.
"But didn't you have a dodgy haircut when you were a teenager? A Flock of Seagulls flop? A James Spader combover. Or did your Mum still cut your hair?"
I shouldn't have goaded. He changed the subject after that. His bottom lip was still quivering.
Just to remind you.
Haircuts of the 80s.
And okay, when James Spader had hair in the 80s, it wasn't too bad. He's knicked a lot of his sister's hair mousse.
Then there's the Mum cuts.
He was unconsolable. Couldn't tell me if he was okay. His defining negative feature was that the bloke had a mullet.
Middle-aged men. They're such snowflakes. Today's song: