‘The Meatball: Not a Funny Rhyme’ says Peter Jerz, age 5-3/4; or, Child Traumatized by ‘On Top of Spaghetti’

I went into the office for about an hour and a half tonight. When I came back, my wife was writing busily at the kitchen table. “I’ve got a blog entry for you,” she said. This is rather momentous — she has very little interest in cyberculture. But here’s what she wrote. (Let this be a warning to other couples who start a family when they are both English Ph.D. students.)

It is dangerous to sing children’s songs at dinnertime.
Carolyn, at 20 months, satisfied with any song, happily repeats the last word of any line like a sweet echo. Peter, on the other hand…

First I try “Found a Peanut,” but Peter asks too many theological questions (“Why did he kick the angel?”) so I say nevermind, here’s a better song, and sing “On Top of Spaghetti.”

CC photo by inazakira

On top of Spaghetti
All covered with cheese
I lost my poor meatball
When I had to sneeze.
It rolled off the table
And onto the floor
And then my poor meatball
Rolled out of the door.
It rolled off the front porch
And under a bush
And then my poor meatball
Was nothing but mush.

Peter has been growing red in the face and teary-eyed. I stop singing. “Are you crying about that meatball?” I ask. He nods.

I try to explain that the song is supposed to amuse children, not to make them sad.

“I just can’t stop thinking and thinking about that poor meatball,” he says, tears rolling from his pinched, squinting eyes. “I’ve been thinking about it for an hour. Is an hour 60 minutes?”

“Yes.”

“For who would want to eat it when it’s mush under a bush?”

“Ants?” I suggest. “Or maybe a dog will find it.”

“And another thing… they should close the front door. Then the meatball would just bounce on it and roll back to him.”

“Good point.”

“Or maybe he should remember to cover his mouth when he sneezes.”

Peter seems to be regaining his composure, but a few minutes later, he bursts into full crying. I kiss his red face and try to think of other ways to soften his horror at the meatball’s hard fate. [Mushy fate. — DGJ] Maybe the boy was dawdling, and the meatball sat on his plate too long, and wouldn’t taste good anymore anyway. He doesn’t seem convinced. I encourage Peter to finish his pizza (he’s been dawdling for over an hour), because pizza is Italian food, just like meatballs & spaghetti, and the meatball might be glad he ate Italian food.

Finally I tell him we’ll write down how he feels and put it on the Internet, so that everyone knows it’s not a good song to sing. This is all that will console Peter, and help him feel he’s set things right.

“But you’ll never be able to distract me from that meatball.”

Indeed, a few minutes later, he again bursts into full crying, wailing, “Oh! If only that boy dived on the floor and saved the meatball!”

I put on The Wiggles to distract Peter, who still asks, “Are you writing yet?” while I try to clear the table. “You write down the words and put it on the Internet!”

As I write, he comments that it should have been a cancer cell, not a meatball.

“What would a cancer cell have been doing on top of spaghetti?” I ask.

He shrugs. “Probably putting germs on it.”

A little while later, he supplies the title (“The Meatball: Not a Funny Rhyme”) and composes the following song for parents to sing instead:

“Lucky Meatball”

There was a meatball all covered in cheese.
His father went to close the front door
And said if you sneeze, please sneeze at the floor.
The meatball was poked on a fork
The cheese fell onto the spaghetti
When the ball went up, it went into a mouth and got chewed by teeth.
The cheese was on the first noodle that the boy scooped up.
The meatball got digested into crumbs.
And the boy brushed his teeth.
He said his prayers and went to bed.

Peter is in bed now while I am typing this. “The song about the meatball… do you think it’s funny?” he just called out.

“I don’t know,” I said. “What do you think?”

“I don’t think it’s funny,” he said, his voice trembling. “I think it’s sad. The meatball had nourishment for him.”

Here you go, Internet… make things right for a little boy.

Post was last modified on 11 Oct 2019 2:32 pm

View Comments

  • Alicia, my son was five when I wrote this. I'm guessing you don't know many five-year-olds.

  • I don't mean to blow anyones spot up or anything, but really if a childs song bothers you that much you need to get put on some meds. Thats crazy, go get seen by a Dr. . Come on now, it is a song sang by children across the country. Get over it, really. I can't believe you had the nerve to make a site up about a child being scared of a song....

  • :)

    I do the same for my kids sometimes, but vice versa. Listening to English music is quite usual for us, but listening to dad's attempts in speaking English is always a hit. :)

    I have placed a link to this page on my homepage.

    By the way: Dein Deutsch ist gar nicht so schlecht -- ich hatte jedenfalls keine Probleme, es zu verstehen.

  • Peter, meine Deutsch ist sehr schleht -- ich habe es nicht gesprochen (order gescrieben? gescreiben? ich can nicht mich erenneren) vor viele yahren. Aber, danke schoen fur das... uh.... vie sacht man "Link"?

    Gestern morgen, amusierte ich meinen Peter wann ich nur Deutsch zu ihm gesprochen.

  • Hello again!

    (quote) Nice to hear from you, Peter. What's the origin of your name?(quote end)

    Thank you!

    My father's family came from Czechoslovakia. Out family name is pronounced like the German "Herz", but starting with a "j" that sounds like the "y" in "year". "hairtz" works quite good as an example.

    By the way: I'd like to place a link to this page on my homepage (see URL, but it's under construction again). If you don't like it, please send me an email, then i'll remove the link, if I find the time to place it at all.

    Best wishes for all of you,

    from YAPJ
    (yet another Peter Jerz! ;) )

    PS: I hope little Peter Jerz is fine! Best wishes to him of course!

  • I don't think the original blog entry or any commenters made the point that you're arguing against, but thanks for your opinion, JIM.

  • Yes lets make sure children never have to learn lessons about loss or any other lessons of life. There is nothing wrong with letting your child be upset about something and have him work through it. It is part of the growing process. But if you try to protect him from everything and teach him that the world is a place that should never hurt and always be just then you are going to end up with a disfunctional idiot for a son.

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Dennis G. Jerz

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