So, about that picnic ...
ROBERT GARDNER
My great-grandsons just had their tonsils removed, which brought back
one of the more sensitive episodes in our family history.
My daughter was about 7 when she had her tonsils and adenoids
removed. According to her, she was told she was going on a picnic and
then was taken to the hospital, etherized and woke up to find she had
a throat so sore that even ice cream hurt. I will stipulate to the
hospital, the ether and the sore throat. However, I question the
picnic part. Granted, one might be interested in smoothing the way to
the hospital, but an outright lie?
When, over the next decades, the story came up, my wife always
insisted that a picnic was never promised. “I may have told you it
wouldn’t hurt” was as much as she would cop to.
Like so many of those who appeared in my courtroom over the years,
I have no recollection of the matter. I have scoured my memory, and
it is a blank. However, in the interest of truth, I have done what so
many parties did in court. I have attempted a reconstruction,
although mine is done without any highly paid experts. In fact, it is
done without any experts at all.
In my reconstruction of the case, I have come up with a couple of
plausible scenarios. In the first, I say something like, “It’s no
picnic to have your tonsils out.” In this instance, it is a case of
simple misunderstanding. In the second, I could have said, “Well, it
won’t be as much fun as a picnic,” which she interpreted to mean that
while there wouldn’t be fried chicken, potato salad and lots of rides
on the swings, there would still be an element of fun that she
subsequently was unable to find in the tonsillectomy.
My daughter denies under oath these possibilities, stating flatly,
“You said we were going on a picnic.” While I would never attack my
daughter’s credibility, as a concerned party I feel compelled to note
that she was the only one that was given drugs during the episode.
Anyway, there can be no question that to this day she believes her
version.
She certainly believed it at the time. The Germans at Stalingrad
got a warmer greeting than we did when we went to St. Joseph’s to
pick her up. We hurried in all full of smiles and solicitations only
to be met by a silence as frozen as the Russian winter.
“Her throat hurts,” explained the kindly sister who was her nurse.
The look we received from our child made it quite clear that her
silence had nothing to do with the pain in her throat. There was one
glacial glare, and then we might as well have joined the Germans at
Stalingrad for all the attention she paid us. Despite our entreaties,
the cold shoulder went on and on until it looked like she was going
to spend the rest of her life among the sisters at St. Joseph’s
rather than return home. Finally, in desperation I ran to the nearest
bookstore and bought a brand new “Oz” book, which I beseechingly
presented. She looked at the bribe, thought a moment -- probably
weighing if there was more loot to be had -- then allowed herself to
be enticed home.
Her throat eventually returned to normal, as did her attitude
toward us. The only lingering awkwardness occurred when we would
occasionally venture lectures on the importance of honesty. “Oh, like
telling a child she’s going on a picnic and then taking her to the
hospital to have her tonsils out?” would be the withering reply.
As for my great grandsons, I’m sure their mother said nothing
about a picnic. Maybe Disneyland?
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
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