Deady Dude – The wobbliest of wobbly teeth

Deady Dude – The wobbliest of wobbly teeth

It is hard to say just how long Deady Dude hung improbably onto Milo’s front gum. Milo says five years, which seems something of an exaggeration. But certainly three years is possible, perhaps longer. Either way, Deady Dude enjoyed one of the more remarkable runs in baby-tooth history. He was the Lebron James of dentistry, and we will always remember him.

Like most of history’s more problematic, complex figures, Deady Dude did not develop in a vacuum. There is always context, and continuum; and Deady Dude’s started in early 2016, long before his notoriety began.

Milo was a reckless toddler, and loved to thrash around on his ‘Mimi’, a $20 plastic ride-on fire engine from K-Mart, gifted to him by some well meaning friend or aunt. I guess we were equally reckless parents, or perhaps we just had no idea what we were doing. The line between fostering independence and inviting injury is so fine, and often impossible to identify as a first-time parent. Actually, perhaps that line remains elusive for every parent, forever, regardless the number of children or length of parenting resume. Today’s Mimi becomes tomorrow’s Can they walk home from school alone? and the day after’s Is a full-length back tattoo of Patrick Ewing a good idea?

Anyway, one morning I allowed an 18-month-old Milo to ride his Mimi down a rather steep concrete ramp, and, somewhat embarrassingly, filmed it. Mimi had no brakes, that should be obvious, and Milo’s little feet were not strong enough to adequately overcome the relentless persistence of gravity; and so, enterprisingly, he employed a little assistance from his face.

In my defence, despite the swollen lip and blood, his teeth appeared fine.

Some months later, under Kuepps’ watchful eye, Milo slipped while clambering up a ladder at a crappy neighbourhood park and dinged one of his front teeth. Over the course of the next 12 months the tooth blackened and became increasingly funky until, following a sheepish visit to a dentist, poor Milo had it removed under general anaesthetic. It is unclear which injury played the leading role in this unfortunate outcome; as is always the case, no one parent is to blame, and no one parent is ever fully exonerated.

So, like a tall person who finds themself unexpectedly sleeping alone in a queen-sized bed, Milo’s other front tooth took advantage, and began growing diagonally into the space.

When, finally, an adult tooth appeared in the gap, the diagonal tooth began jutting forward, as the diagonal sleeper does, reluctantly, when the co-sleeper returns in the middle of the night; not vacating the space but accommodating slightly. Perhaps I have stretched this metaphor too far.

So now we had ‘Snaggle’ (as the diagonal, jutty-outy tooth was dubbed), and a very languid adult tooth growing at a slight angle in the gap, pushing Snaggle into an ever more audacious contortion.

By now Milo, quite reasonably, was rather sensitive about his teeth. He refused to pull Snaggle out, despite its alarming wobbliness. No amount of financial enticement could lure it (even with me dressed as a nightmarish tooth-fairy), no number of stern warnings from dentists, no corn cobs, no toffees, nothing. Until Snaggle stuck out so far that Milo had to rearrange it every time he wanted to fully close his mouth.

It should be pointed out that most of the Snaggle saga played out within the private confines of COVID lockdown. Had the wider community witnessed Snaggle, coupled with his horrendous lockdown haircut (super high forehead fringe trim with unkempt mullet), we would certainly have been reported to family services, or at least shamed in private parental whatsapp groups.

Snaggle finally fell out on Tuesday 15 June 2021, whilst playing ‘Pokemon Bus Driver’. I know this because it featured in the blog that recorded our second stint of COVID hotel quarantine:

Milo’s front tooth fell out. Affectionately known as ‘snaggle’, this was long in the making. It is now in an empty pill box in the front of the suitcase. Not sure what to do with it now.

Snaggle’s long overdue dislodgement revealed to us another wobbly little guy, the next one along, perhaps that’s an eye tooth? Certainly, one of the carnivore focused ones. Overjoyed by the apparent return to some sort of normalcy inside Milo’s mouth, we thought nothing at all of this wobbly little white pea. But sometimes, when you remove a despot, it only creates room for another, more dastardly tyrant to emerge. Be careful what you wish for.

Deady Dude was born.

So, for the next three years or so we sometimes paid attention to Deady Dude, and sometimes ignored him. A full-sized adult tooth grew at a slanty angle over the top of this wobbly little kernel, whose transition from white, to whiteish, to greyish, to grey, to blackish was therefore largely obscured. We can’t recall when Milo anointed him ‘Deady Dude’’, but presumably it was around the grey or blackish stage.

What I can recall however, is that over the last 12 months of this period, Milo started to alert us to the fact that he was quite regularly forcing Deady Dude back into its little hole, as it desperately and forlornly attempted to jettison itself from his face. He provided this information to keep us informed, but also to troll us, as the update was always accompanied by a provocative little grin. We usually took the bait, shaking our fists and warning him of the dire future consequences of his folly. He usually shrugged, smiled, and walked away, muttering something about braces.

Eventually Deady Dude gave up trying to escape and a strange, translucent pink pseudo-gum grew up and over, holding him in place. The human body is indeed a strange and adaptable organism.

You awful parents, I hear you say, didn’t you take Milo to the dentist, and what did the dentist do about it? And the answers are yes, regularly, and… not much.

You see the dentist, like most people (including us) misunderstood Milo’s commitment to everything, and utter lack of flexibility. Visit after visit, year after year, the dentist (which changed as we moved city to city) would say “ah, don’t worry, it will fall out by itself.” But it didn’t.

By the end, Kuepps and I were taking it in turns to accompany him, to spread the parental scrutiny. We had some continuity with the same dentist, and the visits were becoming more strained, and more judgy. Milo, as ever, was entirely unfussed by the tut tutting of his parents, and by the judgement of the entire dental profession.

And then one morning, on 12 September 2024, Milo informed me that Deady Dude was “really, really painful” and perhaps that weekend he might be willing for me to have a look at it. And by that afternoon, after school, Deady Dude sat in a small ziplock bag in the front pouch of his backpack, like an inconsequential, shrivelled little dried-out black corn kernel. This despotic little bean that had ruled our dental lives for more than three years, that had caused such consternation, debate and parental stress, now a trivial little artifact in a bag. What was all the fuss about? Milo displayed zero remorse, zero regret and zero emotional attachment to his weird little mouth companion. I offered to drill a tiny hole in it and present it to him on a golden chain to wear around his neck. No interest. Milo simply moved on with his life.

So what did we learn from all of this? Not much. I doubt there are any insights from the Snaggle/Deady Dude saga that dramatically shift our view of Milo as a human-being; all of it was entirely consistent with what we know of him, his brain, and how he likes to navigate the universe.

There’ll be more of this in future no doubt, maybe not teeth, but something. And we will of course fall for the same traps, tie ourselves in knots with stress, and ultimately Milo will change course once more, when he is good and ready.

Vale Deady Dude.

Not a picture of Deady Dude, that’s way too gross. Just a tube of GC Tooth Mousse.

Huckleberry – The cat of many wonders

Huckleberry – The cat of many wonders

It is surprising to me, in fact, that it has taken me quite so long to write this story. We have a cat, and his name is Huckleberry. In fact we have two cats. The other one is Huckleberry’s sister, Suu Kyi, and although she is without hyperbole perhaps in the top 5 cutest creatures on planet earth, for pizzazz and personality, she has nothing on her golden-furred brother.

Our pair of cats came into our lives in the same year Milo did, which is why I am surprised to find it has taken me almost 10 years of blogging to mention him. He is a very curious creature indeed. He may well be a human trapped in a cat’s body, or an actual lion so confused by his domestication and constant belly rubs that he forgets to kill us each day.

I don’t really know why I write this blog. Sometimes to amuse myself, sometimes to amuse my mother or my children. But sometimes it is just to record something properly for posterity. I think this story is the latter, so I might just list his many strange habits one by one, some of which might seem unbelievable to you. They are all definitely true and unembellished.

He can open any door unless it is locked, including our front door. He leaps, grabs hold of the door handle with his paws and mouth, dangles and slowly slides down the handle until it pops open. This is completely true and it is a real problem for us. The straight long handles are a breeze for him but I am sure one night, in a dazed state on my way to the bathroom, I saw him do it on one of those stumpy circular handles. He has also learned when the door is likely to be unlocked. He does not bother most of the time, but if we open the door to go out and close it behind us, he will immediately appear and leap onto the door handle. He can execute this move in less than 3 seconds.

Huckleberry has a gross, misshapen, distended, formerly plush little stuffed-toy donkey that he purloined from one of the children at some point, and made his own. We call this tangled little beast ‘Donkey’.

Whenever we feed our cats, Huckleberry will immediately go in search of Donkey. Donkey is usually nearby, but sometimes he has been carried away and left somewhere unseemly like on a pillow, or in the pantry. Anyway, Huckleberry will locate Donkey and then carry him back to his food bowl, with a strange mix of embarrassment and primeval violence in his eyes. He will place Donkey adjacent the bowl, gnaw on him a little, and then take a mouthful of food. Gnaw on Donkey, eat some food, gnaw, eat, gnaw, repeat, until he is finished. He is very much simulating the thrill of having caught and killed poor old donkey while he eats pre-packaged chicken mush, over and over again. Donkey’s nightmare never ends.

Well, in fact one day it will, because Donkey is the second such talisman of the savannah that Huckleberry has had in his life. The first was one of Milo’s first ever plush toys, a cute little fox, that Huckleberry chose to invite into his ‘circle of life’ cosplay. Foxy was with us for many years, he nose pulled and flattened and stretched almost as long as the rest of his body, before one day he finally turned into a pile of thread, and disappeared.

Watching him do this is as weird as it sounds.

Huckleberry is happiest on your shoulder. This was cute when he was a small, agile kitten. He would leap softly from a high place, and land gently on your shoulder. You would then walk around with him up there for hours while he purred and rubbed your cheek gently with his.

Now that he is not small, and increasingly less agile, this odd behaviour is less endearing. He will now leap out from behind a pot plant with no notice and thunder into your neck and chin area while you are peeling carrots. At best this will cause you to drop your carrot and stumble awkwardly to one side as the momentum of his ample frame tries to dissipate into your body. Usually, however, he underestimates the size of either his bottom, or your shoulder, misses his mark and then thrusts his claws into you in desperation as he cascades awkwardly down you back and onto the floor. So then you end up with both a dropped carrot and a bleeding neck.

Linked to this behaviour (probably) is his overwhelming desire to sleep on your face. This was a genuine concern when our boys were babies; the threat of asphyxiation by feline was real. These days it is only Milo and Kuepps’ faces that will do, and it is more the kind of forehead area with the volumous tail and legs sprawled across the pillow. How either of them sleep like this is a mystery to me.

Huckleberry is a many-nicknamed cat. Here are the ones that come to mind:

  • Huck
  • Huckie
  • Huckie Boy
  • The Huck
  • Punk
  • Punkie
  • Punkie Boy
  • Punko the Munko
  • The Punk
  • Punkleberry
  • The Punkleberry
  • Punklebaby
  • Huck Bomb
  • Spunkle
  • Spunkie

I’ll finish with two anecdotes about The Punk.

First – shortly after Milo was born, Kuepps was feeding the baby, and I was heading out to the supermarket. We were both delirious, in that sort of first weeks of baby way. As I was opening the door to leave, Huck pushed up aggressively against my leg, making a most unusual noise – not dissimilar to that guttural sound he makes while brutalizing donkey. His tail was all big and puffy. Once he had captured my attention he motioned for me to follow him. I could not tell you exactly how he did it, but I remember his intention seeming crystal clear to me. So I did, and having walked the 5 metres to the laundry, I found Suu Kyi inside the washing machine. A front loader, the cycle was just beginning, with water trickling in and the barrel gently rolling from side to side, but not all the way over. Suu Kyi could be seen clearly inside, atop the wet nappies, stumbling back and forth, and looking quite distressed indeed. I yelled for Kuepps and immediately switched off the washer. Being a front loader, half full of water, there was no easy way to release her, so we channeled our inner Schwarzenegger, ripped the door off its hinges and retrieved a very bedraggled but grateful Suu Kyi… who immediately began purring. Huck literally saved his sister’s life, and a good deal of mental anguish on behalf of his owners.

Second anecdote – Huck and SK are now very much indoor cats, but they once lived a slightly more outdoorsy sort of life. During this time, we were moving from Canberra to Sydney. We had removalists in our house all day long, packing and moving, and drinking energy drinks and packing and moving. At the beginning of the day I told them about Huck’s proclivities, and warned them of the very real possibility that he may try to stow away in the truck. I asked them to make sure he was not inside the truck before they closed the doors to depart. They laughed and obviously thought nothing more about it because at the end of the day, of course, they had done just that.

It was about an hour after they left, with Huck nowhere to be seen, that I called the driver. He initially scoffed at my suggestion that perhaps he could check, but eventually I convinced him. He kept me on the line as he pulled his large truck to the side of the road on the Hume Highway, levered open the heavy doors and then gasped and said some rude words as he discovered Huck, standing on top of a sofa in the back of his truck.

Fortunately the driver managed to capture The Punkleberry (probably by moving a shoulder into his nearish vicinity) then kept him safe in his cabin until the driver made it to his home in Camden. We were only a few hours behind, and arrived at the driver’s house around 8pm to find Huck sitting on the man’s shoulder, purring, and watching Friday Night Football together.

Huck, the coolest cat on earth, barely looked up to say hi.

One day, I am sure of it, Huck will just start talking to us, with a deep James Earl Jones-type voice, and all of it will finally make sense.

Making light work of our perimeter security