You know how it is when the weather gets cool. The leaves change colors. The birds start to migrate. And out of the clear blue sky, your family drops a bomb on you.
Not a literal bomb. We fight like every other family, but none of us use lethal weapons. Yet.
During a perfectly nice dinner where everyone at the table was peacefully staring at their phones, the female wing of the family launched a barrage.
“We’re not spending enough time together as a family,” announced my sister.
I didn’t see what the problem was. We’d done lots of family stuff.
Once, I’d gone hiking while Dad sat in the car. Another time, my sister and Mom read books in the same room.
And I fondly look back on the day when we all gathered around the television and thought about work.
All right, so we weren’t all sitting together watching TV. But at least we were on the same floor.
Or in the same house. Or on the same continent… maybe? Dad might’ve been traveling that week.
A second after my sister’s announcement, Mom took a newspaper clipping off the fridge and waved it at us. It advertised a corn maze. Or maize maze. Or something.
My eyes slid from parent to sibling. They’d been collaborating.
Neither Dad nor I could come up with a counterattack. And that’s how at 7 p.m. that evening, we found ourselves, as a family, plunging into a corn maze.
You know that scene in “The Shining” where a madman chases a kid with an ax through a maze?
The madman has the ax, not the kid. Either way, it’s not a comforting picture.
Copyright 2024 Alexandra Paskhaver, distributed exclusively by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate.