Saturday, July 14, 2007

pestilence and paints

Graham and I have been struck down from some pestilence that, no doubt, sat brewing in Pewaukee Lake just waiting for fresh prey. And what excellent prey we are. The virus, one of the many that cause the medical disease entitled Herpangina -- a vile term that is not a form of herpes, has had a hey day in us causing everything from entire body aches, high fevers, and a wicked sore throat that makes one think that they should give up sword swallowing for good, until she remembers that, in fact, she hasn't swallowed a sword, just some murky lake water.

To be fair, I'm not sure that the Lake is what made us ill at all; it just adds to the romance of being ill to imagine catching in a Lake. I like imagining it creeping up from the sludge and slime rather than flying across a room on someone's spittle, or worse, entering my son in the "oral-fecal" route. I saw that on a website. Does that mean that it's possible that he ate poop, or just tiny poop fragments? And, did I get sick because I didn't wash my hands well enough after changing him? Oh dear, not romantic at all. That paints us as dim-witted slobs for whom vile diseases were created to further along natural selection.

We've been sick for a week. The low point, what will quite possibly be remembered in the future as the high point, came yesterday during a nap hour. It was not time for Ms. Greta to sleep, but Graham was asking for a nap, so I got him to fall asleep in my bed. Then, I crept out to read Greta a story. Even sitting to read made my body hurt, so I told her that I needed to lay down with Graham. I knew that I needed to think fast to find a great activity for her that would occupy her time. I'm sick, remember? I wasn't thinking so clearly. I chose water color paints to tempt her into silence so that I could get some needed rest. I set her up on a towel in her room with a mug of water, a full set of of paints and some coloring books. It seemed innocuous enough. What could a three-yer-old do with paint? (Stop laughing at me. Stop shaking your head.) Of course, she chose this half hour to paint every visible part of her body within arm's reach. Yes, her entire face. She even had used the brush as a backscratcher to paint the harder-to-reach areas of her back. When I looked up from my bed, my little angel looked like the woman in Wicked. Even after a 45 minute bath, a chartreuse tint continued to linger on her face. A day later and she's still got brown around and under every nail. The hardest part was not photographing her. I knew that if I rewarded it with any attention, anything remotely like laughter, that it would surely happen again. She will do anything for a laugh.

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