Posted September 27th, 2008 by Vicky H in Communication, Guests, Parenting
Featured Guest Article
by Ann Handley
Greetings all staff and stakeholders of Coddled Teenage Boy Enterprises:
It has come to my attention that there has been some confusion about your roles and responsibilities within the organization, which has led to infighting, yelling, and name-calling—this happened just yesterday, prior to 7 AM.
Such behavior is both unprofessional and unwarranted, and it is my job as the CEO and central “brand” of this enterprise to address this situation before it begins to negatively affect morale as well as my performance in the marketplace, also known as “school and social life.”
The Memo
First, a word about the incident that prompted this memo and took place at headquarters yesterday. Many of you, I know, heard it—or heard of it—and I need to clarify actual events to dispel any notion that the CEO of Coddled Teenage Boy Enterprises was at fault.
Because, as you know, it’s never my fault.
The Incident
The incident took place in the early morning. It concerned the crazy idea that two individuals traveling to the same school campus should to be liveried in the same vehicle, and therefore ought to be ready to depart at approximately the same time, even if one of us requires more careful and meticulous currying of my excellent hair and a careful consideration of which band T-shirt looks most awesome with my jeans.
There was yelling about did I know the price of a gallon of gas, and the driver’s own needs (not sure what that means), and something was said in a rather overwrought tone about how It’s all about you, isn’t it?
All of this made the second and final shuttling to school tense and unpleasant, and left me grounded this weekend, which is a wholly unacceptable result of what I see as a giant misunderstanding.
Sister Subsidiary. The Easy Child Enterprise
The bottom line is that the sister involved in this situation is… well, clearly a Sister Subsidiary. Known officially as The Easy Child Enterprise, the Sister Subsidiary should be staffed and run as a separate operation, independent of the needs of Coddled Teenage Boy LLC. Especially since a tenet of that aforementioned subsidiary enterprise is Hates to Be Late, whereas at Coddled we take a much more interpretive view of the clock.
Roles
Now that we have that out of the way, I’d like to get back to the business of this memo, which is to redefine and, in some cases, reassign the various roles each of you play in keeping this enterprise running.
As you know, we have grown in leaps and bounds over the past decade, growing literally from a Mom-and-Pop entity to a conglomerate with endless, gaping needs and demands. While it once took only one or two people to feed, diaper and bathe me, it now requires an entire staff to manage the complex operation that is my life.
Complexity of Operation
You might think that my ability to actually use my limbs purposefully and my mastery of other basic life-skills (like the ability to read signs, or jot down a note, or climb bus stairs, or use the toilet) might allow me to exploit my own abilities and increase self-reliance. But, sadly, the answer is no. In ways that even I don’t really understand, it seems that the operation is more complicated than ever, and it requires additional resources and more staff than ever to maintain.
Last year in Math, we studied Inverse Functions, in which the sign f “acts on” a number and transforms it. Essentially, you can define the inverse of f as the function that “undoes” what f did.
New Growth
My understanding is some enterprises grow precisely like that: As new products are brought to market, or new services introduced, others are mysteriously negated. In other words, it’s not my fault that company operations have gotten multifarious and increasingly unwieldy. You can argue the application of this point, but not with me. Take it up with a mathematician.
Reorganization Plan
So without further ado, herewith the new Job Titles as reflected in this most current Reorg of Coddled Teenage Boy Enterprises:
Manager of Livery Services—Dad (AM Manager), Mom (PM Manager)
Director of English Essays, Proofing and Editing Division—Mom
Laundry Services—Mom, Dad, Sister-When-I-Have-Something-to-Bribe-Her-With
Bag Lunch Boss—Mom, Dad
Homework Helpers—Mom, Dad, the Friends-Who-Actually-Take-Notes-in-Class Squad
Personal Belonging Tracker—Mom, Dad, various friends (Gordon, Zach, Janey, Chris, etc.) in various classes who run after me when I leave my various crap behind
Shower Timer—Mom, Dad, Sister-When-She-Needs-to-Use-the-Bathroom
Forms and Paperwork, Small Details Division—Mom
Dispenser of Petty Cash—Whichever parent drives us to the movies
Emotional Support Team—Pretty much everyone, all the time (note on-call hours)
The two remaining jobs still available at this time are:
Minister of Wiping My Own Butt
Director of I’d-Forget-My-Head-If-It-Wasn’t-Attached
Referrals welcome.
It is my dearest hope that this will help you accept and relish the critical job you have as part of Coddled Teenage Boy Enterprises, and see yourself for what you are: Part of my team, because we are all in this together.
As they say, there’s no “I” in “team.” And there’s no “Boy” in there, either. God knows I can’t do this on my own.
Regards,
Coddled Teenage Boy
p.s. Have you seen my soccer shorts?
Ann Handley is Chief Content Officer of MarketingProfs as well as a writer and editor. Read more by Ann Handley at A n n a r c h y, her blog on parenting, technology, personal history, pop culture, and an occasional shot of humor:
In Case of Emergency
I Suspect Everyone Else Is Smarter, Better-Looking, Taller, Cooler, Cuter, Has Newer and Shinier Objects than I Do (and Is More Modest)
Looking for Eddie Field
Do you ever feel the way this author felt? Did you feel taken for granted and unappreciated? Did you try to change things in your home? If yes, what did you do?
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Comments (10)
Adding to the list of positions:
Whistleblowing, fact checking, and other such bias slandering – coddled teenage boy
One cannot forget that although “it’s not CEO’s fault”, CEO will be blamed for ALL failures of enterprise.
As the mom of an increasingly unpleasant middle school boy, I find this vision of the future profoundly alarming.
Hilarious! Took me a minute to catch on as to point of view. (can you say slow)
I totally get this and should forward it onto my youngest. Ha.
I think this article is so fun because it’s from the teenagers point of view.
@melissa Funny
CEO will be blamed for ALL future failures, they are so oblivious to anything during these years. The bright side is, that when their 21 or 22 they do come back and realize all we did for them. Maybe this is our payback for what we did to our parents
@KatFrench I am also alarmed and had a flashback when I saw your comment, my son just started middle school also. Although I have some experience with his sister who is now in college, boys are so different. They say girls are harder than boys, but that has not been my experience so far. lol
@Tojosan I’m going to have my daughter read it and find out what she thinks. Reminds me of that saying that goes something like “Teenager move out now, while you still know everything…” I forget the exact saying. If anyone finds it can you put it in the comments.
Holy crap, this post is made of cinnamon awesomesauce! This post is why I love you! I am so happy to have been there as a fan of yours from the very beginning! I repeat, LOVE you.
M
You are being featured on Five Star Friday:
http://www.fivestarfriday.com/2008/10/five-star-friday-edition-26-which.html
[...] Notice to Staff and Stakeholders: Reorg Coddled Teengage Boy Enterprises [...]
Oh, you’re good! I just stumbled you.
Julie
p.s. sent by Liz at successful-blog.com
Thank you everyone for stopping by.
@Schmutzie Our first Five Star Friday is very cool, we’re honored.
@Julie I love this article too.
I believe it was Mark Twain who said something along the lines of “when I was 14, my father was a profound idiot … just a few years later when I turned 21, I was downright surprised at how much the old man had learned” Dad of 7 .. one of whom must have actually written this post!