Thoughts, April 4


My wife told me yesterday that she is losing interest in the Simpsons. “It is a little bit too realistic, and I don’t really like it.“ Well, that is fair enough. It is a depiction of a dysfunctional family, and it does become tiresome to watch it.

This got me thinking of shows that my dad would have liked. Of corse, he took great pride in banning all TV shows. However, he seemed to remember with fondness watching the Adams Family as a child.

I don’t think I’ve ever actually seen it. However, I can repeat the theme song by heart. I can vividly see my dad, a goofy, childish grin on his face, with his eyeballs rolling back and forth to the theme song (like on the the characters did). 

I wonder what it was about this show that attracted him? As I recall, the father was Frankenstein’s monster, (an unfeeling beast that is made of broken/dead bodies, sewn together), while his mother was a vampire.

He seemed especially drawn to the character, Wednesday, who was always gloomy, had no emotion, and seemed capable of murder with no remorse. 

It would be interesting to analyze this show.

***

Note: my brother also really liked the show "Beetle-Juice" as a kid. I never got into that. I wonder what it was about it that spoke to him?

** 
The sad finger puppet

It occurred to me at one point today that I had a dream as a child (or I can't remember when) that was so unspeakably sad, it has spoken to be to this day. There was a finger-puppet that was alive. A child had told the puppet he would be "right back" to play with it. The finger puppet waited and waited. As he did, (for some reason) he chopped away at a stick in front of him. The boy did not come back. It was years and years. Finally, the boy remembered the puppet, and came back. The stick in front of the puppet was worn down to a small nub, and the puppet was mostly buried in mud. 

The child felt such an overwhelming sense of sadness at this. That sadness has stuck with me for many years.

I do not have time to plumb the depths of this dream at this time. But it could tie into themes of loneliness as a child. Was I really the puppet, and nobody was coming to rescue me? Also, I realize that I attached emotionally to pets and inanimate objects for comfort, due to my extreme loneliness. The dark side of this was that I became consumed with guilt and negative emotions if I did not play with all of my toys "fairly," or if I lost or broke a toy. "Toy Story" would have been a devastating move for myself, if I had watched it as a younger child.

These are interesting thoughts, to look into more fully later.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Dream of my parents

A new counsellor

"What are you waiting for...?"

The toxic mother hen

The End