Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Running With Scissors

On a warm Saturday morning, this past October, my husband decided it would be a good time to go out into the backyard and clear away some dying tomato plants from our vegetable garden. After breakfast, he selected a pair of garden shears from the garage and immediately began the task.
I’m not a morning person and wasn’t feeling nearly as energetic as he was, but I poured myself a second cup of hot tea and went outside to sit in a nearby hammock  and watch him work. It was a quick job, and in a matter of minutes he was done and ready to leave the garden. As he began to walk away, somehow his feet got tangled up in the mesh fence he had put up to keep wild animals out,  causing him to trip.
I should probably point out that we have a raised garden bed, and that my husband was still holding the shears, which were the kind with long, pointy blades. To be perfectly clear, he was falling headfirst with a sharp object aimed directly at the main artery in his neck—a trip to the emergency room trifecta.
Now on my feet, across the yard, I was watching the whole thing, helplessly. As he hit the ground, he instinctively jerked his head back just as the shears made contact with his neck. I ran to his side, expecting the worst, and discovered that he had, in fact, jabbed the shears into himself.
The good news is there was no squirting blood. By the grace of God the shears missed his jugular vein. When he jerked his head back he prevented the blade from penetrating deep into his neck. He was cut, though, and there was some blood, but the wound was superficial. Nothing that a tetanus shot and a butterfly band-aid wouldn’t fix. The worst of his injuries was a bad sprain in his neck, for which the doctor prescribed steroids, and physical therapy.
Later on that night, he found himself in quite a bit of pain, and as with most men who’ve been injured, he needed babying. As for me, I was pleased with the minor wounds he sustained and happy to have him alive and in one piece. If you ask me, all in all, it was a pretty good trade-off—a little whiplash for a life-threatening stab wound. I told him he should’ve bought a lottery ticket on the way home.
His accident got me to thinking about when I was a kid and my grandmother told me not to run with scissors. Or a pencil. She used to say, “Stop running with that pencil or you’ll fall and put your eye out!”  Why couldn’t she have simply said, “Stop running with that pencil” ? Why? Because that alone wouldn’t have been enough to get my attention, but by adding the part about poking my eye out, she conjured a gory mental image that I could not ignore.
Grandma also used to tell me if I crossed my eyes they would stick that way, and if I played with fire I would wet the bed. I’m pretty sure neither of these things have actually ever happened, at least not in the said sequence, and even then, I doubted the validity behind her statements, but at the time I wasn’t willing to take the chance.  
She used the word “death” a lot when she wanted to get me to stop doing something of which she didn’t approve. Some of her favorites were “Don’t eat so fast or you’ll choke to death!” and “Get in out of the cold or you’ll freeze to death!” But the one that scared me most of all was “Zip your coat and pull up your hood, or you’ll cough your head off tonight!”  That really made for a grizzly nightmare for a kid with an overactive imagination. I pictured myself in bed hacking away, face red, eyes bulging, unable to catch my breath to scream for help, hacking, hacking, hacking, until my head is thrust from my neck with a spurt of blood and rolls across my bed, onto the floor, disappearing into the darkness.   
When I grew up and had kids of my own, I used the very same tried and true phrases on them that my grandmother used on me—for their own good, of course.  Do you know of any more such phrases used to manipulate a kid’s behavior? If so, I’d love to hear them!

5 comments:

  1. My mom's favorite and most used: Stop crying or I'll give you something to cry about! Funny thing tho she never did spank or hit me. :-)

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  2. My mom always tried to get me to stop letting the dog(s) lick me on my face and around my mouth by saying "Don't let him do that, you'll get the heebie jeebies." To this day I don't know what heebie jeebies are but I am sure that I don't want them.

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  3. when i was unable to find an item that my father sent me to find, he would then easily spot it and say "if it were a snake it would have bit you". of course i now use the same line on my children :)

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  4. the best line for a latina mother Go get the belt and smell it cause I'm going to whip u hard. I always asked myself why I have to smell the belt. Still confused but never used it on my own two kids

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  5. I'm trying to think if I ever had any clever or interesting phrases to, as you put it, manipulate my kids' behavior, but I can't think of any that hasn't already been mentioned here. The only thing that comes to my mind right now is something my granddaughter said when she was three, in an attempt to manipulate her mother's behavior. Using the most scathing put down she had heard in her animated movie collection, the little rascal said: "Mama! I would not marry you if you were the last penguin on earth!"

    Then, as my daughter sent her little darling to her room for a time out, the tiny tot had one parting shot, also a line from a cartoon movie. "You pompous old windbag!" she threw over her shoulder as she left the room.

    My granddaughter lived through that experience, thankfully. She is twenty-four years old now, and attending Harvard University. Which just goes to show you that precocious goes far!

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