Thursday 27 February 2014

Nappy Rash - Friday Flash

They say every body has at least one book inside them.

Or maybe I just read that somewhere. Not in a book mind, more likely in my baby daughter’s entrails, or rather what issues from them. I snappily browse the latest output from her digestive tract and pronounce myself satisfied with this particular edition; as well as being reapprised with what I had for dinner, now since plagiarised and offered back as part of her own developing opus.     

Unfunnily enough, none of the literature on parenting delves much into the subject of the chromatics of your offspring’s off-loadings. Whether, their off colouring, denotes that she may be off key. The topic crops out barely a pothole, in what is otherwise a mountain of exalted agglomerations of evolutionary know-how. A repository teeming with the species’ collected works on rearing. A clearing house of formative sagacity. With its ante-room periodicals and primers of anticipation; its delivery suite of digests and catalogued consultation; its study of referenced providence. All in all, an abundant library to lend us the abstruse familiarity of our foundlings. But as you pile-drive through the textbooks, the guidebooks, the TV-advertised partworks with free-ring binder, the cribs, monographs and how-to handbooks, clambering towards the pinnacle of human apprehension, the view emerges of the speciousness of this species wisdom. For, despite all the incunabula, you are simply left holding the baby, probably at half-arm length out in front of you, much like you might hold a book. 

So much for the manual. There isn’t a solitary one worthy of the misnomer, throughout the entire damn voluminous paper trail. Me, I’m shivering up to my elbows in droppings back in the pothole. A single little kick amidst the full-of-the-joys-of-being-alive salvo, and my daughter’s nappy pregnant with discharge has slithered across the changing mat and positioned itself perfectly, to catch the down thrust of my elbow as I swipe her legs up in the air to dab at her bottom. Baby shit on my fingers, baby shit on my ulna. Forewarned is not forearmed. 


Once we’ve unerringly pulped all the trees, which might you consider be worse; to have toilet paper but sacrifice books; or to retain the publication of books at the cost of wiping your arse without any intercessional medium? That’s assuming the whole world hasn’t infarcted and collapsed in on itself, under the weight of impermeable, non-degradable, disposable nappies plugging all our landfill refuse sites.

9 comments:

Icy Sedgwick said...

And people wonder why I don't have kids...

Deanna Schrayer said...

YUCK! But a perfectly described yuck. :)
Love Icy's comment too.

John Wiswell said...

If only it was that easy to get kids to read...

Steve Green said...

Love the story.

It's better not to think too much about it, hold your breath, and just get it done. You'll still have it all over you some times though, regardless of how careful you try to be. :)

Larry Kollar said...

I've been there a few times. The "best" ones are when they weren't… quite… done. At least it washes off.

Casey said...

I really liked this, grim and thoughtful. I'd retain books and find something else for toilet paper! lol.

Helen A. Howell said...

Hmm memories are made of this! - we could always go back to the sponge of the stick like the Romans used to wipe their arse and books can live forever ^_^

Cindy Vaskova said...

I have no idea what's going on *sigh*, but suppose so can relate in the frustration and realism part of having-the-slightest-of-ideas. Something like it.

Katherine Hajer said...

Having learned to change nappies on my kid brother when I was nine, shit doesn't scare me as much as it's "supposed" to. I found this intriguing! I like the idea of reading the unprinted. The importance of being able to read one's work comes up in textile crafts, too -- the ability to re-learn the history from how the stitches have been dropped into place.