Monday, November 12, 2007

Man's best friend--children, not so much.

I had just pulled into my driveway last night, having met my husband at O'Hare, when my phone rang. My grandson had been bitten by the family dalmatian, and wanted me to meet them at the ER. Again. I yelled something about putting the dog to sleep, crashed about as I took my husband's dinner out of the oven, and cursed the dog. My husband, ever rational, pointed out that a dog is an animal, and therefore will sometimes revert to type, and that a muzzle should perhaps have been used. I stuck to the position that if my dog bit my child, its next outing would be to the vet.
I threw crayons and colored pencils in my purse, grabbed a handful of computer paper, and drove to the emergency room. The image in my head was of last time, six months ago, which involved stitches to the lip, and much screaming. I was glad to see that the latest wound was a single triangular puncture to the cheek, but even that required painful cleaning and dressing. The injured grandson behaved pretty well, but I noticed that as his twin was coloring, the pictures changed from being beautifully colored to being done entirely in black crayon. I don't think he was simply being sloppy.
So what now? There is a one-year-old dog whose fate is in the balance. Leaving the ER, my daughter explained: "It's as if I've just discovered that a loved family member is, in fact, an abuser." This story has no way of ending happily.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

Book Group

I just finished reading "The Road" by Cormac McCarthy for our staff book group. It's a post-apocalyptic account of the journey of a Father and Son (we never know their names) south, in hope of finding any other 'good guys' who may have survived. It was hard to read at first, not for content, but because I've become used to editing everything I read--that's part of my job as a teacher. McCarthy uses unconventional sentence structure and puncutation (no apostrophe when an 'o' is the contraction) and doesn't divide the book into chapters. Once I got over that, I marveled at his amazing use of language. Reading the book was almost as physical as eating, and I wanted to stop and savor phrases and passages. It was depressing, of course, unless you like the idea of the human race approaching extinction, but the writing was incredibly rich. I'm looking forward to hearing what our leader has to say about the novel on Tuesday. Meanwhile, it's stuck fast in my head, and I'm trying to make sense of what McCarthy is saying to me.

Friday, November 2, 2007

Remember, remember the fifth of November....

Halloween has come and gone, but the photos live on. The grandchildren looked adorable, and were perfectly willing to share category II candy. I didn't celebrate Halloween growing up in Scotland in the 50's. There, we had 'guisers' on November 5th, commemorating Guy Fawkes who tried to blow up Parliament. Read about him here.
Pumpkins are far too easy--in my day, we ended up with bleeding hands after carving our turnip lanterns--rutabagas to my American friends. Yes, RUTABAGAS! Now THAT'S carving. And the smell of warm cardboard still brings back memories of the suffocating little masks we wore as our principle form of disguise. Life was simpler then.