“Mom, is
there a…”
I was
microwaving chili and hacking jagged hunks out of a pan of leftover cornbread
in a hurried attempt to get a decent meal packed up.
…logical reason for…
We needed to
dash out the door – like, NOW – if the twins were to be even vaguely on time
for another evening performing in Cat on
a Hot Tin Roof at the university.
…life?”
Um, what?
Is
there a logical reason for LIFE? Seriously,
what the hell, Lizzy.
This child,
my child -- small, pigtailed, scruffy, and deceptively quiet -- sometimes brings
to mind Shakespeare’s Cassius, who “has a lean and hungry look. He thinks too much. Such men are dangerous.” Such little girls, likewise.
Okay, no, I
don’t really think that one of my nine-year-old daughters is hazardous -- or
destined to stab Caesar, for that matter – but Lizzy’s ruminations often drop
like flaming zeppelins from a cloudless sky. This is a child who, when stymied
in her desire to cover all windowsills in the house with plant seedlings,
chides, “Daddy, sometimes I think you are not very good at delaying
gratification.” This is a kid who
glances around the living room and says, apropos nothing, “There would be so
many right angles in the house, if you tried to count them all.” She is not
merely making conversation; she is searching for logical patterns within the
dizzying fractal landscape of existence. Such observations might seem delightfully
precocious -- until you are forced to attempt to address them in three minutes
while simultaneously wrestling mini carrots into a Ziploc.
About a year
and a half ago, my children were subjected to a test to determine who would get
to be part of the euphemistically labeled “Extended Learning Program.” That afternoon, I asked the twins what they’d
thought of the experience. “Oh, it was
pretty easy,” said Molly, with casual confidence. “You just had to find the patterns. The last few, though,” she continued, blithely,
“didn’t have any pattern.”
Ha! I’d laughed indulgently at her childish
conceit. How funny to think that no
patterns exist, just because you aren’t bright enough to find them!
Um, ha.
Apophenia is the perception of
meaningful patterns within random data – our Rorschach-elephant cloud-locomotive
propensity to confabulate monsters under the bed and tin-foil hat conspiracies. Confirmation
bias is the equally human tendency to only look at evidence that supports
what we want to believe -- because my political candidate farts rose-petal
freshness. A false negative or a Type II error is denial that a pattern exists, even when it does. Even when it totally does, dammit, dammit, dam—uh,
yeah. Patterns. Ha ha…
Now, I
struggled to gather my thoughts and my cornbread. Could this Life-the-Universe-and-Everything-
level introspection be symptomatic of too many “adult themes” in my kids’
lives? Wallowing in Tennessee Williams’s
dark and cerebral play about death, fear, lust, and denial is an unlikely after-school
activity for fourth-graders. Kids, welcome to the tsunami of deception
that erodes our souls!
Lizzy was
being semi-patient with my density -- but insistent: “There’s the Big Bang,
galaxies form, the Earth, and evolution… but is there a LOGICAL REASON for
life?”
There are
lots of great books out there on parenting.
I probably should have read some of them. Instead, when the kids were
toddlers still struggling to master their fricatives and glottal stops, I
decided that I would not be the parent who snaps, “Because I said so”, or
“You’re too young to understand”, or “It was the stork”. I wanted to let them find the patterns – the messy,
confusing, terrible, real patterns. Jay
agreed with my strategy of dispensing Too Much Information, although he quickly
granted himself an egress in the form of, “How about you ask Mommy?”
Brick: What makes you think Big
Daddy has a lech for you, Maggie?
Margaret: Way he drops his eyes
down my body when I’m talkin’ to him, drops his eyes to my boobs an’ licks his
old chops! Ha ha!
Brick: That kind of talk is
disgusting.
Margaret: Did anyone ever tell
you you’re an ass-aching Puritan, Brick?
[Cue four children to run across the stage, shrieking.]
The twins were
cast as “no neck monsters” – two of the insufferable and over-abundant children
of manipulative, abrasive parents in a dysfunctional, unfulfilled, greedy,
Southern-polite but below-the-surface foul-hearted and foul-mouthed
family. After the first read-through,
decorously held in a meeting-room at the campus library, the actor playing the
family patriarch greeted me with anxious discomfort. “It’s not exactly an appropriate script for
children…”
A few days
later, Molly chirped up at me, “Mommy, what does ‘poontang’ mean?”
Snigger. “It’s a rude slang term for female genitalia,”
I told my kid. She nodded. She’d guessed as much. No harm, no foul.
Other questions
are harder.
A logical reason…
I took a
deep breath. I closed the fridge. “Lizzy, pretty much every aspect of
philosophy and religion, throughout all of human history, has been an attempt
to answer that question. Seriously. It’s a great
question. People have come up with a
ton of crazy possible answers.” I
mentioned a few topics the twins already vaguely comprehend – world religions,
pantheons, legends, holy doctrines, passionately held beliefs.
“No, but I
mean a LOGICAL reason.”
Yeah,
kid. Yeah, I know.
A few
rehearsals into Cat on a Hot Tin Roof,
Molly was enjoying herself. (Shout and
run around? Giggle backstage with
friends? Great!) Lizzy was not. She said she hated the play. Why, she wanted to know, does everyone seem
angry at everyone else? Why is there so
much yelling? Why would anyone want to
watch a play about such horrible people?
I felt
guilty. My urge was to try to shelter
the kids from the full force of the script.
Couldn’t the nine-year-olds just don their adorable costumes, zip out
for their cues, and let the rest wash over them? But no.
That wasn’t working for at least one nine-year-old. So I did the opposite. I encouraged the kids to examine, to
understand, to dig deeper.
Brick: You think so too? You think me and Skipper did, did, did! –
sodomy! – together?...
Big Daddy: … This disgust with
mendacity is disgust with yourself. You!
– dug the grave of your friend and kicked him in it – before you’d face truth
with him.
Brick: His truth, not mine.
Big Daddy: His truth, okay! But you wouldn’t face it with him!
Brick: Who can face truth? Can you?
Yeah. We talked this through. We talked through… a lot.
I asked the
kids how the character Maggie, might feel, married to a man who could not love
her. I asked them how Brick might feel,
trapped by a society that reviled his kind of love. I asked them why Mae might be avaricious
enough to use her kids as pawns, why Gooper might feel so bitter about his
father, and why Big Mama might prefer a constant cocktail of lies to the truth
in which she is drowning. I also asked
what might have been changed, to break these toxic patterns.
Slinging the
bag full of chili and scripts over my shoulder and hustling my kids out the
door, I told them, “Grownups don’t know the answer to this question. Not a full answer. Not a LOGICAL answer. In fact, our inability to answer this
question is so universal that a really funny author made a joke out of
it.” I summarized, from The Hitchhiker’s
Guide to the Galaxy series, the conundrum faced by the computer named Deep
Thought -- and its comically unfulfilling answer. Forty-two.
They got the
joke. I grinned.
As the
theatrical experienced progressed through dress rehearsals, Lizzy seemed to
find her groove and become more comfortable with the storming and raging. By the time we reached the final performance,
she was ready to wax philosophical about the nuances of each altercation, the
failings of each individual, and the drawbacks of the social mores to which
they adhered. In her tiny A-line dress, waist-length
blonde braids, ribbons, lacy white socks, and Mary Janes, she took to the stage
with greater confidence. “I hope I’m not
getting type-cast as a cute little girl,” she observed, her brow wrinkled.
Only, I
thought, through apophenia and confirmation bias. The frilliness of the socks does not fit into
an easy pattern with the personalities of the wearers. At the final curtain call, the no-neck
monsters took their bows earnestly, alongside the Real Actors.
A week after
the final performance of the show, my one-minute-older-twin was busy tending to
the seedlings that her father had declared to be an unmitigated
irritation. She looked up at me with a
perfectly-Lizzy abstracted gaze. “In
real life,” she announced, “there are no good guys and no bad guys.”
I asked her
to elaborate.
“Like, if I
told the story about Daddy and the plants, he might seem like the bad guy. But from a different point of view, if I told
the story about him taking me out to breakfast, he’d be the good guy.” Lest I harbor any over-inflated sense of my
own merits, she added, “You, too. There are downsides to a person -- and
upsides.”
Gosh, thanks, kid. But… yes.
You’re right.
The patterns
are not stark in black and white.
Sometimes – apophenia -- they are not there at all. Sometimes – confirmation bias -- finding them
will stretch your brain. Sometimes,
recognizing them will make your heart ache and twist and break with the pain of
truth. Sometimes, they will remain
forever beyond your grasp. Some answers,
perhaps, are better left at “forty-two”.
But … search on. Search on.
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