Time to quit listening to my inner child

April 15, 1998

 The irreverent, anti-establishment redneck in me  tried to warn me about marriage but, hard-headed and idealistic, I scoffed.
 "There is NO way," I responded confidently, "that I will allow being married to change me! Nosirree! My free spirit will NOT be shackled!"
 Alas, I was wrong. I'm becoming a respectable middle-class citizen faster than my hairline is receding. When I look into the mirror these days, I sometimes shudder.
 The only thing about it is, I'm enjoying it.
 For most of 39 years, see, I did my best to assume the guise of rumpled journalist — jeans and T-shirts here, thankyouverymuch. Haircuts happened on an irregular basis, usually when the forelock began to interfere with vision. (Male pattern baldness eventually eliminated that problem, but haircuts were still something of a once-per-quarter thing).
 Nossir, I confidently predicted, Peg will never, never change my bohemian lifestyle — which, of course, she did almost immediately. My closet is now a walking advertisement for the Men's Wearhouse, and the barbers ask me, "Same as last time?" when I drop in once every two weeks.
 I also predicted confidently that my abhorrence of the bourgeois middle class would stand fast when it came to general lifestyle. My petrified-sock collection, for example, would remain a hallmark of the apartment, which would also retain its rustic, "lived-in" look.
 I pondered that vow this weekend, in fact, as I carted out a trash-bag full of petrified socks following a very convincing argument from Peg: "Dave, if you don't get rid of these, I'm gonna throw up!"
 It also appears that my decades of apartment living and idealistic looking down my nose at homeowners may also be coming to an end; we made an offer on a house this weekend. Look out, Katyland.
 Granted, our reasons for wanting the house differed.
 I was sold on the fact that it has a chihuahua-compatible backyard, one spare bedroom which could be converted into a computer/writing room, adequate space for all my bookshelves, a second spare bedroom ideal for housing and displaying my collection of 3,000 fantasy miniatures, and a covered patio ideal for building the Great American Barbecue Pit.
 Peg looked at the house and saw spare bedrooms for guests and family (especially babysitting assorted nieces and nephews), an open dining/kitchen concept ideal for entertaining family gatherings, two bathrooms, a front yard which lends itself to growing roses, and a master bedroom with enough closet space to buy out the rest of the Men's Wearhouse.
 "We'll have to get a lawnmower, you know," she cooed to me as we signed the offer. I immediately broke out in a nervous sweat at the very thought of performing physical labor.
 Gone also are the wild weekends of the proverbial swinging-single lifestyle, dancing and partying until dawn. They've been replaced by weekends of visiting our far-flung families, shopping, and watching movies I'd normally wait to rent from the video store.
 After years of half-heartedly trying, I've finally written not one, but two, books — thanks in great part to Peg's "bullying." One's on the Internet now, the other is expected to hit the bookstores by early summer at the outside. I'm getting requests for TV and radio appearances (where again, of course, I get to model the new suits). When I go to the grocery store, people call me "Mister."
 The irreverent, anti-establishment redneck in me wants to resist all these changes. Fortunately, I'm too hard-headed to listen.

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