As cool as my parents were, I did not want to have sex under their roof. |
Suddenly I was living at home at twenty-two, mortified by the thought of bringing a boy home. Grownups aren't supposed to negotiate parents on the first date; they wait until the relationship is really serious, or on thin ice, or somebody's pregnant or something. My folks also had the endearing habit of calling my cellphone if I did go out for beers with a girlfriend from work — as if I hadn't just spent four years off their leash, drunk off my ass a good portion of it. In their defense, these meetings were usually a good twenty miles from my house, and they didn't want me driving home drunk, so they'd just call and ask if I was cool or if they needed to pick me up.
Still, cool as my parents were, I did not want to have sex under their roof, and I hated thinking about all the lies I would have to tell about why I didn't come home if I snuck off to have it somewhere else.
Once, while I was living at home, and Mom and I were watching Say Anything for the millionth time, she said she thought Ione Skye's character had a weird relationship with her father. Until Lloyd comes along, Diane's father is her only friend, and that is weird. But like her, I didn't know how to lie to my parents. If I'd lost my virginity when I was in high school, I probably would have come home and spilled my guts about it, just like Diane did.
The journalist-shrinks all seemed to think we boomerang kids favored our parents' homes over the bright and terrifying world of adult responsibility. They made us sound like Dustin Hoffman in The Graduate, whimpering, when anyone asked what we were doing, "I'm just sort of drifting... here ... in the pool." But, like most of my friends who lived at home, and like none of the boomerangers profiled in the blitz of articles, I worked full-time. I didn't pay rent, but I helped out with other bills. It infuriated me that this trend was attributed to some soft-headed psychological bullshit and not to pure economics.