On Bingo nights, bad attitudes, and the memories they didn’t know we were making
We keep going back to Bingo.
Not because it’s easy. Not because it’s peaceful. Definitely not because anyone wants to go.
Because I signed them up.
It started as a wholesome idea. Community center. Monthly event. Cheap entry, guaranteed prizes, the kind of thing that sounds like a memory before it even happens. The kind of thing you imagine your kids loving.
I loved Bingo once. Not this version. The real kind. Loud halls, dabbers in hand, cards spread out like strategy maps. My friends and I used to go in high school, dead serious about it. Competitive. Focused. Occasionally walking out with actual money like we’d just pulled off something impressive.
This was supposed to be the softer version of that. An introduction.
Instead, from the very first night, it turned into something else entirely.
Caleb doesn’t do well with losing. Not quietly, anyway. He knows everyone gets a prize. He understands the structure. It doesn’t matter. If someone else wins first, you can feel the shift immediately. The huff. The tension. The slow unraveling until it’s his turn.
Holden is the opposite. Blissfully unconcerned. He’s there for snacks, vibes, and whatever chaos presents itself. He’ll miss half the numbers because he’s watching someone open a bag of chips across the room. My mom and I end up covering his board like unpaid assistants.
And still, we go.
Every month, they complain in advance. Weeks ahead. Like they’ve been sentenced to something.
So for March, I told myself it was the last one. One final round. Pizza night. I had already paid. We were going, and we were going to have fun. No negotiations left on the table.
They protested anyway.
Especially Caleb. He told me, very clearly, that I needed to stop signing him up.
I told him, very clearly, that we were going.
And then something strange happened.
He won in the first round.
Just like that, the entire night shifted. No buildup. No slow burn frustration. No meltdown waiting in the wings. Just immediate victory, like the universe decided to throw him a bone for once.
It changed everything.
Holden, meanwhile, launched himself toward the food table the second it opened like he’d been released from captivity. Pizza, chips, dessert. A full tour of options in under a minute. I had to physically stop him from going back up for more before everyone else even got through the line.
Caleb hovered, calculating. Asked for seconds. Was told to wait. Suggested, casually, that it would be really nice if someone offered him theirs. My mom handed over her half-eaten slice without hesitation. Later, both boys got seconds anyway.
At some point, between the pizza negotiations and drink spills, the game actually kept going.
This version of Bingo has rules, but not the ones I grew up with. No one yells “Bingo.” Instead, each round comes with a question. You win, you answer.
When Holden won, the question for the round was “What’s your favorite song?”
“Tom Petty!” he shouted, like he’d been waiting his whole life to say it.
Which song? Unclear. Didn’t matter. The room loved it.
Then they offered double prizes if he’d sing.
And he did. A quick, confident piece of “American Girl,” like this was all part of the plan.
At the end of the night, they do a raffle. Two Squishmallows. Two winners. We’ve never won.
Until this time.
Holden’s number got called, and he lost his mind. Full sprint to the front. Yelling, “I’ve never won! I’ve never won!” like this was a defining moment in his personal history.
The Bingo woman laughed. Told him she knew. Said he was there every month.
Which honestly caught me off guard a little.
Because they hate going. They argue. They resist. They drag their feet all the way there. And then they show up like regulars.
By the end of the night, jellyfish Squishmallow in hand, pizza eaten, moods completely reset, they looked at me and asked if I could sign them up again next month. Like none of the arguing ever happened. Like this wasn’t the same thing they fought me on every single time.
Like maybe, just maybe, they don’t hate it as much as they think they do.
I think I expected family traditions to feel sweeter while they were happening. Instead, ours apparently involve arguments in the parking lot, food negotiations, and Holden treating Bingo night like a live performance opportunity.
But I have a feeling they’ll remember it anyway.