Hello Hive! It has been a hot minute since my last post. Let’s just blame it on a severe allergy to free time, a total lack of writing inspiration, and the crushing weight of real-world adult responsibilities. Not a whole lot has actually happened in the week since my last update, but work has been an absolute pressure cooker. Deadlines are screaming toward me at Mach 3, and when you casually throw a midweek football match into the mix, it completely destroys whatever fragile remnants of an evening schedule I had left. So, radio silence was my only survival mechanism.
But I'm back, functioning almost entirely on caffeine and sheer parental stubbornness, ready to regale you with the absolute logistical chaos that has been my life lately.
The Saturday Logistics Nightmare
Let me paint you a picture of this past Saturday. It wasn't a "weekend day off"; it was an extreme endurance event. I fired up the dad-taxi and left the house at a completely unreasonable 9:15 AM, and I didn't drag my lifeless body back through the front door until 11:30 PM.
In that entire 14-hour window, I was home exactly twice. Both times were for exactly thirty minutes, functioning entirely as a human vacuum cleaner, inhaling my food before sprinting back to the car.
The day kicked off with dragging the youngest to the hairdresser so he could look socially acceptable and me too. Bam, back home, inhale some lunch, back in the car to drive him to his away football game. We got back around 4:10 PM. Boom, second pit stop. Inhale dinner number one, grab the oldest kid, and depart by 5:00 PM for his football match. Lost 7-3 :(
We arrived at the pitch at 6:00 PM, which is great, except we then had to sit around twiddling our thumbs for an hour and a half before the referee even decided to blow the whistle. And did the game go smoothly? Of course not. Because nothing screams "amateur weekend sportsmanship" quite like the home supporters losing their collective minds, resulting in the match being suspended for 15 minutes. Pure drama. Also because we did loose 3-0.
By the time the final whistle actually blew, I had aged a decade. My reward for this patience? Playing Uber driver to drop the oldest off at a discotheque via a scenic, totally-out-of-the-way detour, before finally crawling into bed. Those are the days that make you wonder if you should have just bought a minivan with a built-in mattress.
Friday Night Lights, Belgian Style
Ironically, the calmest, most enjoyable part of the weekend happened the night before, in the wild world of the Challenger Pro League. The local club was playing a do-or-die, all-or-nothing match to secure a spot in the promotion playoffs. Knowing it could potentially be the last game of the season, and remembering the youngest had mentioned he wanted to see the club's "star" play in the flesh, I secured us some tickets.
Now, when I say star, I mean a proper, undisputed icon of the pitch: Radja Nainggolan. Sure, he's grinding it out in the Challenger Pro League now, but the man is a former Red Devil, scored an absolute banger at the European Championship, and tore up the midfield in Serie A for years. He might have a reputation for enjoying the finer, smokier, more chaotic things in life, but on the pitch? The guy gives absolutely everything.
And the nostalgia didn't stop there! It was like a reunion tour for former Red Devils. We had Stijn Stijnen—the former Club Brugge wall—pacing the sidelines as the local coach, squaring off against Yves Vanderhaeghe, the Anderlecht legend, managing the opposition.
The game was an absolute masterpiece. We battered them 4-0 to secure that playoff spot. But the best part wasn't the scoreline; it was the vibe. We didn't bother with seats. We just stood by the pitch, leaning against the railing, soaking in the crisp evening air, and watching a tactical masterclass. It was pure, unadulterated father-son quality time.
Sunday: Couch Lock & Remote Control Gymnastics
Sunday, naturally, was declared a mandatory Lazy Day. The only marathon I participated in was clicking the television remote.
The absolute highlight was watching Remco Evenepoel cross the line to take the Amstel Gold Race. A phenomenal victory to cap off a Sunday afternoon. From there, it was a blur of channel surfing. I watched some more football, checked in on the golf to see how many zeroes Thomas Detry and Thomas Pieters were adding to their season prize money, and caught the first round of the WEC endurance race in Imola. There is something deeply therapeutic about watching extremely fast cars drive in circles for hours while you slowly merge with the fabric of your sofa.
The Upcoming Week & Dark Family Comedy
And now, we stare down the barrel of a very weird week. Tonight, I’m dropping my wife off at the airport. She’s jetting off to a conference in Toulouse for the week. I’m going to miss her terribly, not least because the household survival now rests entirely on my shoulders. I give it about 48 hours before the kids and I resort to eating cereal out of pots and pans.
Her departure did create a bit of a scheduling conflict, though. I had to choose between driving her to the airport tonight and attending the evening greeting for my uncle who recently passed away. I chose the airport duty, which means I had to take tomorrow off work to attend the actual funeral. I simply couldn't skip the whole thing and not show my face at all.
Funerals are always sad, but they also bring out that classic, darkly comedic family dynamic. It is, unfortunately, the only time I ever get to see my cousins, nieces, nephews, and the surviving aunts and uncles. We will all stand around in dark clothing, sipping awful coffee, and saying the exact same thing we said last time: "We really shouldn't wait for a funeral to get together! We should do a family BBQ this summer!"
Spoiler alert: We won't. The next time we see each other, we’ll be wearing the exact same dark clothes, sipping the exact same awful coffee, saying goodbye to someone else. It's the circle of life, typical family style.
Meanwhile, work remains an absolute madhouse, completely indifferent to my emotional well-being or my solo-parenting schedule. So, wish me luck, send good vibes (and coffee), and if I don't post again for a while, just assume I'm either buried under a mountain of laundry or chauffeuring a teenager to a distant football pitch. Until next time!
Cheers,
Peter