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Blog Entry 328 of 343 Father Knows... Something. Let's figure out what.
This is my outlet to share with the world all the things I've learned - and continue to learn - about being the Father to 3 young children. But I should warn you that my experience is probably NOT yours: my wife and I adopted a sibling set of 3 - all 6 years old and younger - while in our 40's. We've heard that, "it keeps you young," but so far, it has mostly kept us tired... But like any parent, our kids teach us something new every day and I hope to share at least something here with you as I can. The entries will be short - time constraints will probably keep it at or around a mere 200-400 words - but as they say, brevity is the soul of wit. Let's hope I can create some brevity here. So if you read something you like, please leave a comment. If you read something you don't, please just leave. (Just kidding - I'd love to hear from critics as well.)

Brothers who couldn't be more different
Contributed by: Chris Stone   on 7/8/2008

Someone once said of marriage that if you marry someone just like you, one of you would be redundant. I'm starting to believe that the same theory applies to siblings. After all, even identical twins usually have a "tell" that allows you to at least have some clue as to whom you're dealing with; even identical twins aren't identical.

I know that this is true in my own sibling group: I'm the oldest of three brothers and a youngest sister and none of us even look alike, much less think/act alike. One of us excels at book-learning, one of us has street-smarts, another has a 'creative quotient' that's off the charts and the other embraces a philosophy of rational pragmatism. Worse yet, we all object to overly-simple generalities -- especially when we're not sure which category applies to us specifically...

But the simple fact of a child's nature is really being driven home to me as I watch my own children grow; we always imagined that since The Knuckleheads shared DNA and astrological signs and were so close in age (1 year and 1 day apart), that they would always be very close in behavior and temperment. No such luck.

D-Man seems to be our "jock." He's almost ambidextrous in that he can hit anyone in the face with a ball thrown from either hand. He shows an unusual talent and interest in golf, even if he's forced to do so exclusively right-handed, (they don't make Junior-Junior clubs in left-handed models). He can hit a basket from any mid-range distance and enjoys all the trappings of sports except speed. He HATES going too fast.

The Binkster, on the other hand, seems to be a mathematician in the making; he enjoys reading books and playing with numbers. He seems to follow a logical order to things and takes great pleasure in putting stuff exactly where he believes it should go. And unlike his brother, he's VERY concerned about such things.

I often say that he has "CDO." it's like OCD, except the letters are in the correct order...

Chris Stone is a slightly different - hopefully better - Father and man than he was yesterday...



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Showing 1-2 of 2 comments
Submitted By: Chris Stone
posted on 7/15/2008 @ 9:22:22 PM
(Not Rated)
...and then maybe he can teach me to do so! I failed an entire semester of math in elementary school because I couldn't be bothered with baseball stats. Guess that's going to change. Thanks for the insight!
Submitted By: Michael Rule
posted on 7/11/2008 @ 2:36:23 PM
Rated Blog Entry
One can play baseball, the other can figure out batting averages....
Showing 1-2 of 2 comments
CONTRIBUTOR INFORMATION

Chris Stone

Arvada , CO

Chris Stone has posted 343 blog entries and 154 comments since joining on 7/6/2006. Chris Stone 's average blog rating is 5.
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