Sunday, April 4, 2010

The Year the Easter Bunny Died

Fear can help to cement every detail of a particular memory into a child's brain.

The memories I have of my fifth Easter are extremely vivid.

The day before Easter, I was bursting with anticipation.  I could recall that the year before had yielded a hefty amount of chocolate and jelly beans and that there were bright colored things and baskets and  a magic rabbit that somehow made all of the other stuff happen.   I was understandably completely out of my mind with excitement.


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It wasn't long before my little brain began concocting a scheme to squeeze every last bit of sugary goodness out of the opportunity before me.  


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I was going to trap the Easter bunny and make him my slave.   I was going to have an unlimited supply of chocolate forever!


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I went to bed that night with the plan firmly in place in my mind:  wake up early.  Go outside and hide in the bushes.  When the Easter bunny appears, trap him in a bag or under a blanket then put him in a hole or in my closet where he can't get away.  It was flawless.  

I fell asleep, content with my strategy.


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When I awoke, I was filled with rabid excitement about my almost certain future of unlimited chocolate. 


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I grabbed my blanket and raced down the hall:


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I threw open the back patio door. 

 

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I was shocked to see my poor, tired mother kneeling in the grass, a brightly colored egg in her hand; her head adorned with rabbit ears. 


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Imagine that you are five years old.  You have just exploded enthusiastically out of your house, expecting to find the Easter bunny, which you are hoping to trap and keep as your chocolate-making slave.  Instead, you find your mom.  There is no Easter bunny in sight even though he is supposed to be there.  Your mom is wearing rabbit ears.  

What does your brain do with this information?  Mine did this: 


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My mom killed the Easter bunny and harvested his ears to wear as a hat.   What.  The.  Fuck.   Grief-stricken and terrified, I fled to my room. 


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My mom, unaware of the correlation between her rabbit ears and my sudden terror, followed me to offer comfort. 


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I can only imagine her confusion.  I'm pretty sure she assumed that I was simply upset over the realization that the Easter bunny wasn't real.  But no.  It took me at least five more years to figure that out.  My mother sat on the bed with me, trying her hardest to convince me that she was just "helping" the Easter bunny because he was "sick."  The whole time I was inching away from her; wondering what other kinds of sickening crimes such a monster was capable of. 


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I don't remember how (or even if) the situation was resolved.  I don't remember whether I looked for eggs that year or just sat stunned in a corner of my room all day.  I DO remember worrying about the safety of Santa Clause the next Christmas.  I sat in the hallway closet and watched my stocking, prepared to jump out and surprise any would-be attackers.  No one was going to lay a finger on Santa if I had anything to say about it.  

24 comments:

  1. This. Is. Brilliant. Holy shit. I just found your blog and simply by reading the most recent entry, I'm totally hooked. I'm pretty sure this is the best concept for anything ever.

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  2. Veronica Marcetti DimickApril 6, 2010 at 12:27 AM

    Well, I believed in Santa way too long and was traumatized in multiple ways. Perhaps we need some research resulting in charts and graphs that investigate which causes more trauma.

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  3. This absolutely made my day!

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  4. Absolutely hilarious.I had a similar (maybe?) situation with the Tooth Fairy. Found all my freaking teeth in this bowl in my mom's room, so I approached her and she's all like "I made a deal with the Tooth Fairy that I could keep all your teeth." Cmon, mom.PS. You're so awesome Allie! I just discovered your blog about a week ago and I'm totally hooked. =]

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  5. publish your own Comics...its gonna be Hit :)...thoroughly enjoyed this story :)

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  6. One Christmas eve in elementary school I saw a huge shadow in the hallway from my bedroom where I should have been sleeping. The figure was so huge I was convinced it was a monster, and therefore held my breath. Because giant monsters can hear your breathing. I then started to panic, because what if that monster was coming to my bedroom to kidnap/eat me. Or what about my poor, defenseless parents in the room across the hall!? OH MY GOD, WHAT ABOUT SANTA. My brain was at war with itself - do I go out there and protect Santa from the monster, or do I stay in bed and hope that Santa is big and juicy enough for the giant flesh eating monster to be sated and leave me and my parents alone. While I was processing all of this, the monster's shadow reappeared in the hallway, carrying a stack of something. BOXES. It had boxes. Enraged, I realized that this bastard had stolen MY PRESENTS after eating Santa. I slipped out of bed and tiptoed to the door, only to freeze when I heard my FATHER telling the family dog to lay back down. What a way to ruin Christmas forever.

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  7. This made my day. And I'm sorry for your loss.

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  8. i was always one of those incredibly perverse kids who refused to believe in santa, the tooth fairy, and especially the easter bunny. so while my brother was a convert, i was the one smeared with chocolate after i'd eaten the choc bunny's ears, screaming "he's not reeeeal!" at my brother. i must have been the worst older sister, ever.however, my mom still brings me an easter basket, so i figure i win. if i'd tried to believe in the easter bunny, maybe the candy baskets would have stopped with the belief... one never knows....

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  9. I just started reading your blog and man, high fives all around. And normally when I read stuff I prefer to do it anonymously because it strangely makes me feel less creepy... but I thought: I bet following would make Allie happy. And I care about that now.

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  10. Great post. That was quite a diabolical plan you had to capture the Easter Bunny.

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  11. when I was like, two, I found the easter baskets in their hiding spot in the family linen closet. I promptly closed the door and binged on all the leftover black jeans. My mom found me three hours later, passed out, a ring of black around my mouth. The woman took me to the hospital where the diagnosis was 'glutton'. I believe there was talking of canceling Easter the following here. Truly, it is a holiday rife with shame and fear for us all.

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  12. I'm one of those kids who got pissed off and forever will be angry at her parents for lying to her about all these made up things. Life would have been better if they had explained it was pretend from the get go.But the vision of your poor mother waking up extra early to hide your easter eggs just breaks my heart. Especially in MS paint.

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  13. I have three small children. And if nothing else, I have just learned never to wear anything that looks like it might have been violently removed from a holiday icon. Those cute little reindeer antler headbands? They're going in the trash before any damage is done!

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  14. I have my little sister's ruined easter story to relay to you all:I'm 8 years older then my youngest sister. I was about 14 or so when I was being driven home from a friend's place on the Saturday night before easter. We live in a rural area, so roadkill is one of the facts of life. unfortunately that night, it happened to be a bunny. Mom and I were by ourselves, so no harm done... yet. Untill - I get home, and being a mean teenager announce to my 6 year old sister that "Mom ran over the Easter Bunny with the car". She cried and cried and cried - basically untill the next morning when easter gifts were still there!

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  15. Allie:Why most of your plans include holes in the ground?The fish plan... the Easter Bunny plan...

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  16. I have never laughed out loud for so long before! Your pictures are fantastic!

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  17. When I was like, 5, I totally told this chick at school the Easter Bunny, Santa Claus, and Tooth Fairy were all her mom. She bawled. I saw her years later in high school and she brought it up again, sounding quite drunk/angry. I guess I severely impacted on her life or something.

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  18. Just wondering if you did have a stuffed dinosaur as a kid. If so, where can I get one for my daughter?

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  19. Haven't laughed that hard in ages. Your drawings are pared to the quick and so perfect. Cartoon Allie reminds me of my daughter. :)

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  20. Story kills. Pictures = Perfection. Laughed so hard can no longer type pronouns or think in complete sentences...

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  21. So did you ever tell your mom this story?

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  22. I noticed that you slept with a dinosaur when you were little. I was reminded of when my daughter was about 4, and we were at church one Sunday Anna had packed her own toy bag and I glanced over at her to see that she was playing with her Jurassic Park velociraptor, which she'd requested for her birthday. Best of all, she'd dressed it in a pink Barbie ball gown. That would make a great drawing, by the way.Trish

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  23. The best part of this drawing is the stuffed green t-rex the little girl is snuggled up to. I had a stuffed green t-rex, also (Rexa), who was my BFF.

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