One of the weirdest things about me is my ability to remember stuff from when I was an itty bitty kid. I even remember not understanding language. I mean, I knew my name and I knew a few babytalk words (awa meant kiss) I knew my mother was Mummy and my father was Dadda, but not much beyond. And yet, I remember...
Being one (or less) and planning to climb into the bathtub. We used a dipper and scooped water out of the tub, and bathed that way. It was a great privilege to be allowed into the tub and I wanted to have a bath one day, without anyone bothering me.
I noted that everyday at about four, my grandmother, who was looking after me by herself while my parents were at work, was distracted. She would be making sweets for tea. I remember watching over a few days and deciding that was the best time to put my nefarious plans into operation.
So one day, at about four (I think it was four, all I know is it was evening and about an hour or so before my parents got home), I slipped into the bathroom, locked the door and climbed into the bathtub. Now these tubs are not long but high. They were not meant for bathing in, but for holding water to scoop out and pour over oneself. I splashed happily for a while and then grandma discovered I was missing. She wandered through the house looking for me and discovered the locked bathroom door. She pounded on it, screeching my name, terrified.
I, for my part, had finished playing and wanted to get out. I tried to lift myself out of the tub, but found that my arms were not strong enough. I was mildly irritated at my grandma screeching, but didn't trouble myself to answer her (I was a spoilt little only child at the time). Finally, convinced I had drowned, she got the neighbour to come and break down our very solid wooden bathroom door (it has never been the same since). She remembers the door flinging back and little me standing in the tub naked, regarding them with large eyes, a little frightened, a little pruney, but singularly unhurt. (I don't remember this part, the last I remember is trying to get out of the bathtub and not being able to and wondering if I would have to live there for the rest of my short, short life).
My mother told me later that when she got back from school, my grandma said: "Go and thank the man next door. He saved your daughter's life."
Surprisingly (or maybe, unsurprisingly, since I was then an only child, spoilt, precious and princess-like) I was not punished. I remember watching a man come to fix a new door and wondering what it was all about. Years later, I was reminded of myself when our naughty kitten who had made the corner of the hall her latrine, watched with interest, as I moved the furniture aside to scoop up her reeking doo doo and then wash the floor.
Ahh, the halcyon days of childhood. I wonder why I never lived up to my potential. I would have made a swell master criminal.
Lol, very funny! I'm sure you were an adorable little child. Who is to say you did not live up to your potential--this whole bit about you being a journalist may be a clever ruse for all we know! Maybe you live in a secret vaulted chamber beneath the city, curled up in a big leather chair with your smoking jacket and slippers, sipping cognac and plotting your next big move... :-)
ReplyDeleteLet's put it this way: you wouldn't have offered to babysit me. :-)
ReplyDeleteThe sipping cognac idea though is appealing...I'm just back from the Backyard 2 (which is near my office) having sipped red wine and dined on mutton fried rice...
ReplyDeleteI dunno, I used to babysit the neighbor's three- and five-year-old boys, and they were quite a handful. Mutton fried rice sounds so good right now, I love lamb... =)
ReplyDeleteYou would love it...but it's a little spicy..you OK with spicy?
ReplyDeleteMost definitely! ;-)
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