I just realised (mostly because a lot of people who know me and to my eternal surprise, still love me, called me up and yelled - "TEN things and you didn't mention that you almost got us arrested for child abuse?"), that I should have mentioned that I am mortally scared, terrified, petrified, horrified and frightened of all things reptilian. I can stand to be in the same room as lizards, as long as they're at the other corner of the room, where I can keep an eye on them. I shudder when garden lizards and salamanders cross my path. Snakes have me running for the trees. I'm not even getting on to the subject of crocodiles and alligators. I can't watch movies which are shot on or around rivers because I'm always dreading a huge ugly crocodile lumbering out of the water. But just like a moth is drawn to a flame, I watched all the Jurassic park movies and Godzilla. It is now part of the family&friends lore that I didn't sleep for weeks after each of these and when I did start sleeping, my dreams had me sobbing through the night. I am not proud of this. I generally tend to keep this a deep dark secret. And I will shortly close this blog and start an anonymous blog so that certain unnamed people (much as I love them and am grateful that they still love me), cannot force me by blackmail to reveal certain so-called-truths on my blog.
This phobia of mine affords great entertainment to my family. I have tried hard to gain the respect of my nieces and nephews, but dropping your parcels and running out of a store because you saw a lizard does not generally engender respect. Just the opposite. And as to what the sight of a three year old laughing at you does to you, his wise, kind and altogether wonderful aunt, I leave to your imagination. My mother, the one kind and understanding soul in my life, is the only one who at least tries not to laugh at me. I love her for this. I love her for lots of things, but for this, she will be enshrined among the angels.
She saved me once you know, from a salamander attack. Well, she and my brother (the small big brother) and the maid, and half my father's office staff, and the corporation sweeper, and arbid people who were walking by on the road, and the neighbours, and I really have lost track of how many other people were there.
It all started on one quiet Saturday morning many many many years ago at about 11 a.m., when I drifted out of sleep and into the bathroom. All I was doing was standing by the wash basin with a toothbrush in one hand, and a tube of toothpaste in the other, when I felt the weight of an evil gaze on me. I look

It was large, with a deep brown black body and a deep red back. And as I stood there petrified ( yes, I did turn to stone), it slowly started to advance towards me, stepping over the grating that it had knocked down in order to get at me. And it was really large. As salamanders go, it was humongous. Do you remember that scene in Godzilla, where they're down in the tunnel with the creature and they're almost caught under it as it lumbers away down the tunnel. Well, that's the kind of stride that it had. At this point, I came to my senses, and with one bound, I had leaped on to the relative safety of the closet. I say relative, because I am sure that if it had stood upon its hind legs, it could have pulled itself on to the closet with ease. While I was getting my balance by grasping the flush tank, I was wondering what the wailing in the background was.
It was only when I heard the pounding on the bathroom door and my mother's agitated voice that I realised the wails were coming from me. And I just couldn't stop. It took about 15 seconds longer for my small big brother to come hurtling down the steps shouting agitatedly. He told me later that he thought I was being murdered. Once he realised that I was not in immediate danger, he tried to figure out how to get me to 1. stop that infernal noise 2. come out of the bathroom 3.behave like a human being. Now, we lived in the house that my grandfather built, and he built houses to last. This meant that bathrooms had doors which could easily have repulsed the barbarian horde. Breaking it down would have meant bringing a battering ram into the house. SBB realised that that only way to get me out of there was to get me to open the door. And that involved my getting down from the closet. I am not going into the details of how my small big brother talked me into quietening the wails into deep shuddering sobs. All I'm telling you is that it took him a long time. All this while our maid was standing by my mother and singing what she thought were soothing songs to quieten the wild beast - me, not the salamander. But since they sounded like funeral hymns, it just didn't help.
My father, already on a short fuse, gave me a look that would have incinerated a small animal and since even my angel mother had stopped sympathising, I decided it was better to shut up. Of course, for the next few days, until my father forbade the mention of the word 'arana' in his house, I kept muttering under my breath that it had been MUCH bigger.
AND on one Saturday morning three weeks later, the family woke up to the sounds of my screams again. And that's when we figured out why the salamander was so much smaller when the maid caught it. It was no longer pregnant. The cunning creature had laid its eggs in a crevice in the wall. And they had begun hatching. The floor of my room was covered in baby salamanders and there were millions of them. Okay, thousands. Oh okay, hundreds.
But anyway, I had been vindicated. It had been bigger. MUCH bigger. And I was insufferable for the rest of the day.
"arana" is the malayalam word for salamander.
15 comments:
3inone - i SO hear you. if it were upto me I'd murder every lizard/chameleon/salamander on the planet. really.
although, i'd have to hire somebody to do it, because i run at the speed of light in the opposite direction as soon as i spot one! and those evil creatures seem to follow me everywhere.
ha aha...lovely..and i laughed a lot when i read the part where u said ur maid was standing outside singing..haa..dont know why..just visualizing it makes me laugh :)
anwyay...i too am real scared of crawly creatures..well.i dont really mind lizards etc..its just snakes that bother me..and i used to dream a lot about snakes..real scary dreams....so what i did was, i started watching a lot of snake stuff on tv and the internet... i do it atleast once a week, and i have never dreamt of snake ever since :)
@dw
i've had one follow me on the road. and oh yes, i did run or at least walk really fast. shuddddder.
@mac
you watch them? eeeek. i change the channel. unless of course it is jurassic park or godzilla and then i sit there mesmerised under some evil spell and watch it.
there's this legend in my home about how i screamed so loud in the theatre while watching 'when dinosaurs ruled the earth' that my brother had to clap his hand over my mouth to shut me up. it's another matter that he had to do this for 'jaws', 'alien', 'poltergeist' and a host of other movies.
but that's a whole other story.
haa.. ok..now id love to watch a movie with you some time :)
@mac
ha!!!!! as long as the deal includes you cooking one of those awesome dishes, i'm game.
@dw
if you ever feel the need for company when you're running from the evil creatures, just give a shout. i'll be there.
If its any consolation Liz, here is sthing to make u feel better:
I was in the loo, the indian version of it that too, answering the longer one of nature's calls, when I looked heavenward and saw a HUGE lizard. This was a loo built outside the house like it was in older days..and the door, unlike urs wasnt built to last..the second i saw it, I ran out bawling and shouted out to my uncle and grandma to help. My uncle very bravely chased the lizard out and I was able to continue with my call..
Of course, I was only 6 then :)
Shain,
I can just imagine this and sympathise with all my heart.
Once in MCC, we had a grass snake baby keep us company while we brushed our teeth. That was quite something, because the girl near the window saw its head and thought it was a lizard and then suddenly realised that it had a really loooong body and was GREEN. I had already hotfooted it out , and stood outside in the corridor watching while about 5 of my friends tumbled out into the corridor in a pile.
And then there was the scorpion too. I loved MCC believe me, but I have no idea how I survived the creepy crawly things there - and I don't mean the guys.
You made me laugh out loud, 3! I share your automatic reaction to creepy critters-- for me it's what I mentioned, spiders, mice and bees. I flap and flail and embarrass myself thoroughly when one crosses my path, especially in the house.
How horrible that your room was the breeding ground for the salamanders.... eeeewwww! That makes me squirm just thinking about it!
@pam
yeah it was awful.
:-) but now i can look back on it and laugh with the rest of you.
as long as no creepy crawly thing comes and finds me, i'm fine.
i'm not okay with mice. spiders are okay if they're small. the big ons set me off. bees are scary because sometimes i'm allergic to some stings.
Ha ha, that must have been scary :D
I don't have any problem with reptiles, especially snakes and lizards. But maybe I wouldn't want to sleep with one, either.
The issue right now, however, is STREET DOGGIES. Brrr!
hey, just came across your blog and I love it! this story had me in splits. Though I hate lizards and all reptiles I'm not particularly frightened of them. I do have a friend who does though. I completely empathise!
@rohan
:-) yeah, i'd be sitting bug eyed in front of the screen scared to pieces.
And I don't mind big horses either.
@Jim
Well, I'd be terrified of your street doggies too. And oh my god, you just reminded me of a place where my sister worked for two years. She had to use a mosquito net while she slept, not to keep the skeeters out, but to keep her safe from the snakes that used to drop down from the tiled roof.
@fireflies
welcome. always glad to see a new light!!
Please say hello to your friend.
Hi, saw your comment on Chandy`s site. We don`t have lizards where I live.
Now I`m not afraid of garden snakes, but did freeze once when I came upon a rattle snake looking at me with it`s beady eyes, with his tongue jumping in and out and his rattle noise getting louder as he got taller. Probably a good thing I did freeze and couldn`t move. Then a brother started tossing rocks at it and after a few rocks started hitting each other, the rock noise connecting each other finally broke my frozen state and I was soon helping my brother tossing the large rocks. I often wondered if my Aunt or Uncles ever wondered how their rock pile got suddenly moved a few feet further from where they had piled them.
Another time I killed a rat with a brother`s baseball bat and once it was dead, I would have no part of getting rid of it. A neighbor`s daughter came over, used my father`s coal shovel to carry the rat from my mothers home. My mother was standing in a chair screaming for me, with the little girl I was watching in the chair with her and she had put my youngest sister standing on the klitchen table. When I asked my Mom what was wrong she just kept yelling and finally pointed to the corner just a couple feet behind me. I didn`t have time to think, saw the bat and grabbed it. Only rat that was ever seen in my parents home, and it just had to show up while I was home.
Just thought you might like laughing at someone else who was scared over small animals.
My biggest fear is of drowning as I fell down a farm well when I was younger.
Read a lot of your posts and enjoyed reading them.
Hi Dot
Welcome.
Glad you enjoy the posts.
You have killed a rat!! And thrown rocks at a rattlesnake!!!
You are now officially my hero!
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