By Michael Stodola Special to OnMilwaukee.com Published Dec 20, 2008 at 11:40 AM

Last night, Janet needed to hit the grocery store and Target, so I stayed home and played with the kids. We hung some more stuff on the tree, made dinner together and watched a SpongeBob. After a rollicking bath, we read books and they went to bed. Now, when I lay in bed with each of my chilluns, I try to bond a little before shutting the light off and slipping out of the room. "What did you work on today at school?" or, "Who did you play with?" are just a couple of the FAQs.

But, I never get anything "juicy" during these moments -- until now.

I'm lying face-to-face with my 4-year-old daughter, and she's being her normal, tight-lipped self when asked questions about her day. "No, nothing" is her favorite response. God forbid she tells me what letters or numbers she worked on. And after I approach the subject several different ways, I give up. "Okay, give Daddy a kiss good night, and I'll go."

And then she drops the bomb: "Daddy, there's no kissing in the classroom."

"What? There's no kissing in class? Who told you that and why?" I inquired.

"Miss Shannon," she said.

"Why would Miss Shannon tell you that?"

I was afraid to ask.

"Daddy, Malakai is my boyfriend," she giggled.

Someone may as well have planted a steel-toed boot in my gut. I nearly puked.

"Malakai is your boyfriend?" I carefully continued, "Did he kiss you?"

"Yes," she sweetly said. (A second, much harder boot, slams my lower intestinal tract.)

"Did you kiss him?" I asked.

"No."

My head was spinning. I was poisoned and just needed to get up and out of the room or I was going to die in there. I gave her a quick peck on the forehead and said good night. Trying not to make a big deal out of it, I left the room with a smile.

Now, where the hell did I go wrong?

Although I can vividly remember kissing Lori Kleveeter when I was just 5years old, I do NOT remember giving my sweet daughter permission to have emotions, curiosity or hormones for that matter.

When Janet got home, I shared my experience, but she had already heard the news. She didn't exactly see it as dramatically as I had, which calmed my nerves a bit. We went on to discuss the "perp" and decided he IS a nice, little boy -- not to mention we like his parents.

No doubt this event only marks the grand opening to years of boys, relationships and "dirt." I suppose I should feel lucky she shared this with me. I also suppose that dirty dog, Malakai, is lucky I'm a peaceful man. Although I'm wondering: Does Consumer Reports have ratings on double-barrels?

Michael Stodola Special to OnMilwaukee.com
Michael Stodola is the Creative Director at Boelter + Lincoln – a Milwaukee advertising agency. He loves his job, but not as much as he loves scuba diving, crab cakes or playing with his kids. His favorite thing is sneaking off for dates with his hottie wife. Born and raised in Nebraska, he’s been calling Milwaukee home for well over 10 years. After Michael’s impending death, he’d like to return to this world as your next American Idol®.