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Funny parenting test asks: Are you really ready for kids?

Think you are ready to have children? This parenting test taking mommy blogs by a storm, MIGHT just put you off.

The Parenting Test
© Igor Mojzes

‘The Test For Future Parents’ by author Colin Falconer urges broody parents-to-be to follow a 14 step test before plunging into parenthood. The test was originally printed in Colin’s 1992 release, ‘A beginners guide to fatherhood’, before gaining popularity amongst parenting blogs this year.

Test 1: Preparation

Women: To prepare for pregnancy

  1. Put on a dressing gown and stick a beanbag down the front.
  2. Leave it there.
  3. After nine months, remove 5% of the beans.

Men: To prepare for children

  1. Go to a local chemist, tip the contents of your wallet onto the counter and tell the pharmacist to help himself
  2. Go to the supermarket. Arrange to have your salary paid directly to their head office.
  3. Go home. Pick up the newspaper and read it for the last time.

Test 2: Knowledge

Find a couple who are already parents and berate them about their methods of discipline, lack of patience, appallingly low tolerance levels and how they have allowed their children to run wild.

Suggest ways in which they might improve their child’s sleeping habits, toilet training, table manners and overall behaviour.

Enjoy it. It will be the last time in your life that you will have all the answers.

Test 3: Nights

To discover how the nights will feel…

Walk around the living room from 5pm to 10pm carrying a wet bag weighing approximately four to six kilograms, with a radio turned to static (or some other obnoxious sound) playing loudly.

  1. At 10pm, put the bag down, set the alarm for midnight and go to sleep.
  2. Get up at 11pm and walk the bag around the living room until 1am.
  3. Set the alarm for 3am.
  4. As you can’t get back to sleep, get up at 2am and make a cup of tea.
  5. Go to bed at 2.45am.
  6. Get up again at 3am when the alarm goes off.
  7. Sing songs in the dark until 4am.
  8. Put the alarm on for 5am. Get up when it goes off.
  9. Make breakfast.

Keep this up for five years. LOOK CHEERFUL.

Test 4: Dressing small children

  1. Buy a live octopus and a string bag.
  2. Attempt to put the octopus into the string bag so that no arms hangout.

Time allowed: Five minutes.

Test 5: Cars

  1. Forget the BMW. Buy a practical five-door wagon.
  2. Buy a chocolate ice cream cone and put it in the glove compartment. Leave it there.
  3. Get a coin. Insert it into the CD player.
  4. Take a box of chocolate biscuits; mash them into the back seat.
  5. Run a garden rake along both sides of the car.

Test 6: Going for a walk

  1. Go out the front door.
  2. Come back in again.
  3. Go out.
  4. Come back in again.
  5. Go out again.
  6. Walk down the front path.
  7. Walk back up it.
  8. Walk down it again.
  9. Walk very slowly down the road for five minutes.
  10. Stop, inspect minutely and ask at least six questions about every piece of used chewing gum, dirty tissue and dead insect along the way.
  11. Retrace your steps.
  12. Scream that you have had as much as you can stand until the neighbours come out and stare at you.
  13. Give up and go back into the house.

You are now just about ready to try taking a small child for a walk.

Test 7: Conversations with children

Repeat everything you say at least five times.

Test 8: Grocery shopping

  1. Go to the local supermarket. Take with you the nearest thing you can find to a pre-school child – a fully grown goat is excellent. If you intend to have more than one child, take more than one goat.
  2. Buy your weekly groceries without letting the goat(s) out of your sight.
  3. Pay for everything the goat eats or destroys.

Until you can easily accomplish this, do not even contemplate having children.

Test 9: Feeding a one-year-old

  1. Hollow out a melon
  2. Make a small hole in the side
  3. Suspend the melon from the ceiling and swing it side to side
  4. Now get a bowl of soggy cornflakes and attempt to spoon them into the swaying melon while pretending to be an aeroplane.
  5. Continue until half the cornflakes are gone.
  6. Tip the rest into your lap, making sure that a lot of it falls on the floor.

Test 10: TV

  1. Learn the names of every character from the Wiggles, Barney, Teletubbies and Disney.
  2. Watch nothing else on television for at least five years.

Test 11:  Mess

Can you stand the mess children make? To find out:

  1. Smear peanut butter onto the sofa and jam onto the curtains
  2. Hide a fish behind the stereo and leave it there all summer.
  3. Stick your fingers in the flowerbeds and then rub them on clean walls. Cover the stains with crayon. How does that look?
  4. Empty every drawer/cupboard/storage box in your house onto the floor and proceed with step five.
  5. Drag randomly items from one room to another room and leave them there.

Test 12: Long trips with toddlers

  1. Make a recording of someone shouting ‘Mummy’ repeatedly. Important Notes: No more than a four second delay between each Mummy. Include occasional crescendo to the level of a supersonic jet.
  2. Play this tape in your car, everywhere you go for the next four years.
  3. You are now ready to take a long trip with a toddler.

Test 13: Conversations

  1. Start talking to an adult of your choice.
  2. Have someone else continually tug on your shirt hem or shirt sleeve while playing the Mummy tape listed above.
  3. You are now ready to have a conversation with an adult while there is a child in the room.

Test 14: Getting ready for work

  1. Pick a day on which you have an important meeting.
  2. Put on your finest work attire.
  3. Take a cup of cream and put one cup of lemon juice in it.
  4. Stir…
  5. Dump half of it on your nice silk shirt.
  6. Saturate a towel with the other half of the mixture.
  7. Attempt to clean your shirt with the same saturated towel.
  8. Do not change (you have no time).
  9. Go directly to work!

You are now ready to have children. ENJOY

About the author: This post originally appeared on Colin’s personal blog, and in the book from which this extract was taken, The Beginner’s Guide to Fatherhood, which was written under the name “Colin Bowles.” To purchase The Beginner’s Guide to Fatherhood, click here. Follow Colin Falconer on Twitter: www.twitter.com/colin_falconerhgh

 

 

 

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