A few nights ago, we curled up on the couch together and started. Things were pretty much as I'd remembered them in the Big Woods, except that by page three, there was talk of wolves eating little girls. Ten pages in, someone had been attacked by a panther, Pa had shot a deer, butchered a pig and rigged its carcass up in the yard, Ma was making entrail stew, Laura and Mary were tossing the pig's inflated bladder around the yard, and my rainbows and unicorns reading voice had morphed into an apologetic whisper.
All this Blood and Guts on the Prairie took me quite by surprise - I didn't rememer any of it from back in the day. And so I took to muffling and sometimes flat out dropping words like "dead", "killed," and "carcass," but the ever vigilant V-meister was reading along and consistently calling my bluff. So like any good mother concerned with preserving the rose tinted facade of modern life in the 'burbs, I skipped to the chapter about Christmas. I told myself it was because I wasn't in the mood to explain entrail stew just then, when the ulterior motive was essentially to shield the V-meister from unpleasantness of any kind and faciliate her current belief that chicken nuggets come pre-fabbed and batter dipped straight from the heavens. Oh, sure, we've talked about death: I accidentally rented the story of Babar and his mother when V-meister was two. And when my grandmother passed away, I explained my beliefs about the afterlife in the most benign and pleasant way I could, making it sound like the awesome passage I'd like to convince myself it is. But one day V-meister will have to learn that not everyone dies peacefully in their sleep, that awful things can happen to good people, that there is pain and suffering, that the meat we eat for dinner was butchered.
Ours is a whitewashed, Photoshopped, and airbrushed world. And it's not that I really believe in protecting my babies from all of its harsh realities, but rather that I don't know how far to peel back the glossy veneer, how much of the gritty core to expose, or when.
I remembered how upset I was with a friend some time ago when she relayed to me a story about being at a museum with her young daughter at the same time as a pair of conjoined twins. To my horror, she explained that she wasn't able to herd Mary out of the exhibit in time to prevent her from glimpsing the twins, but proudly recounted how she'd explained, post facto, that they were "kind of like Zack and Weezie on Dragon Tails" and therefore nothing to be afraid of. How dare she keep her daughter away from those little girls as though they were some kind of monstrosity? How could she compare them to a cartoon character, rather than providing an honest explanation?
But judging from the cold sweat that Little House in the Big Woods provoked in me, I see that I'm no better. I'll admit I initially insisted that Babar's mother was "just sleeping" (I later had to renege because, even at age two and a half, V-meister wasn't buying it.) I couldn't bring myself to tell her what was inside her great-grandmother's casket. I make it a point to flip the news channel when war footage is being shown, and I regularly omit the word "chicken" in front of "nugget" just so my kids would eat.
The funny thing is, I actually learned a lot about life from watching Little House on the Prairie reruns. And - wonder of wonders - witnessing countless unmedicated labors, amputations, fires, and gruesome illnesses through Michael Landon's deft lens didn't actually make me any worse for the wear. If anything, I was pleasantly surprised to learn as an adult that my chances of contracting smallpox or dying in a covered wagon accident ware actually quite slim.
As luck would have it, the V-meister wasn't too impressed with Little House in the Big Woods, anyway (too many words, not enough pictures), so for the moment, I've been spared the ole' "How to Avoid Being Eaten Alive by a Panther" speech. I think I'll put Little House in the Big Woods back in the chest with the Catholic Guide to Sex until she's . . . about thirty. But I will make a conscious effort to answer her questions about the harsher realities of existence honestly and in an appropriate context for her age, whatever that may be.
I guess it's time to start calling a spade a spade. (Or a chicken a chicken.)
And now if you'll excuse me, I have to get my rabbit stew on.



3 comments:
I don't remember that either! I wonder if that is a testament to the resilience of young kids. Neither of us remembers how gruesome it was, so it couldn't have been that traumatic.
We had an interesting experience this summer when we ate lobster, then pet a lobster in the tank at the aquarium, then learned about how lobsters were caught alive in traps, and then ate lobster again. I was so worried about Charlie's reaction, but he took it all in stride.
I am quite certain that once my child puts two and two together on the whole chicken nugget thing, I am going to have a vegetarian on my hands. I'm keeping my mouth shut until she asks me point blank where nuggets come from.
I hope she asks about babies first.
would you please read me the Catholic Guide to Sex as my bedtime story?
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