San Francisco has at least one "writer, editor, and dad" too many. The Bay Area is famous for its assortment of self-centered, self-righteous, self-pitying, well-educated, enlightened boorish parents, but Simon is special. Evidently he is having a difficult time confronting the ordinary ambivalence of being a new parent. Evidently it hadn't occurred to him before becoming a parent that a newborn, perfectly naturally, can be an "8-pound bundle of pee and puke." Evidently he complains of "thankless" weeks spent feeding his son because he truly expected somebody to have thanked him expressly for doing so. Here's Simon worrying about the vicissitudes of love, freaked out by the possibility that somebody might have anticipated and explained what he now must endure:
Of course I loved my baby. All parents love their children. You see
genetic connections instantly: He's got your eyes, she's got your nose.
When [son] Sam choked on his fingers, [wife and mother of Sam] Fitzsimmons said, "Look, he's just like
you." I'd heard a theory that all babies look like their dads in the
first few months, evolution's trick to make you love your child.
No, Simon, not all parents love their children. And the ones who do love them are probably not, like you, so supremely objective as to recognize "genetic connections" as the primary, if not exclusive motivator of filial affection, nor so supremely neurotic as to fret in the same breath about its being a deception. Yet the purple prose flows gushingly in tribute to "the early morning mist that hung on the slopes of Russian Hill. San Francisco was beautiful. Pale wood-framed buildings lit by the
pinkening sun, Fort Mason a limpid green, the bay an icy blue." Now I smell vomit on my collar.
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