family of moles. How can you expect them to find buried eggs? You have an evil streak.â
But my father was a competitive sort. We had to work hard to earn our reward. And my dad always liked to winâat any game, at any priceâand he seemed to revel in the fact that logic always won over emotion.
I cry. I give up. I lose.
I keep looking. And digging. I win.
So when my brother and I finally got old enough and smart enough to map out our yard, tote our own spades, and work as a team on our Easter-egg hunts, my dad, like any good engineer, improved his methodology and began scaling our solid oaks and skinny sycamores, hiding our candy-filled eggs in tree limbs and birdsâ nests, places no normal child, unless they were the offspring of Spider-Man and Wonder Woman, could venture, places that no parent, unless they were drunk, would allow their children to go.
âMy Lord, Ted,â my mother said to my dad. âWeâre not a family of squirrels. How can you expect them to climb that high? You have an evil streak.â
Still, I know deep down that my father never did this to be mean. I believe he did it to test himself, his engineering acuity, to see if he still had game. Perhaps, when you reach a certain age, you also do such things to show your children that you are still superior.
As an adult I asked my dad about those Easter-egg hunts, and he told me, âWerenât they a blast! You know, I just wanted to make them fun. We didnât have a lot growing up, and I wanted to create great memories, make it a
real
hunt.â
âOh, it was,â I told him.
And then I made him watch
Blood Diamond
.
Looking back, I donât know why my brother and I wanted to find those eggs so desperately anyway, since there was nothing hidden inside worth eating. My Depression-era grandma often filled the eggs for us, meaning we didnât even get
real
candy, like mini chocolate bars or little marshmallow bunnies. My grandma was too frugal. Instead our eggs were filled with breath mints and nickels. It was like Easter at Guantánamo.
Sometimes my grandma would insert globs of those nasty orange slices, the ones she kept in her cut-glass candy dish that always ended up melding into something resembling a spleen. Occasionally shewould stuff our eggs with leftover liqueur-filled chocolatesâones she hadnât finished from Christmasâwhich I would mainline before becoming belligerent and then very, very sleepy.
And, to top our Easter off, my grandma didnât even use ârealâ Easter eggs, the petite plastic ones that clicked snugly together and came in bright spring colors. Rather, our eggs were actually leftover Lâeggs containers, which at one point housed her taupe stockings.
As a result of all this, my family wisely stopped hunting eggs while I was still fairly young and instead focused our competitive spirit on playing board games and gorging on ham.
Which is whyâat the age of thirty-twoâwhen I spent my first Easter at Garyâs parentsâ home, it came as quite a shock to discover his mom still hid eggs.
For adults and grandchildren.
In spots even Helen Keller could locate.
In fact, Garyâs family had never hidden their Easter eggs outside.
One Easter, when Gary was little, he said he remembers pulling back the dark-brown curtains in the living room of his house and watching other families in the neighborhood hunting for their eggs outside.
âWhatâs going on?â Gary asked his mother. âWhat kind of people hunt for eggs outdoors?
âPeople whoâve obviously never had allergies,â she told him.
For Garyâs mom, a woman who loves the holidays as much as her homemade dickeys, potpourri, and Buick LeSabres, the thought of anything new, any external forces that could ruin a holiday, scared her. To wit:
It might rain.
It might be too cold.
A rabid squirrel might attack a grandchild.
A baby bird might choke on a
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