For
the Love of Bunny
Joan
loved me and her bunny, and I got to keep the bunny when she
went away. I gave it the tricky name of Knuffle, but Joan called it
“Bunny.” One time I asked, “Do you remember Bunny's name?” Joan
didn't like the question because to her Bunny's name was obviously
Bunny, but she liked to please, so she guessed, "Kerfunkel?" Bunny
and I thought that was hilarious. She was Bunny's mother and didn't
know its name. Joan gave things simple names. Her kids are Mary and
David. Before Knuffle, I had a stuffed Bengal tiger with no name
until one day Joan said, “How's Bengal? That'll be his name.
He'll be Bengal the tiger.”
The first two photos are of Joan and the Bunny.
Joan even gave a simple name to herself. Her dad and mother had the easy names of John and Louise, but when they had their first child, mom got creative and blended their names into elaborate “Jonalou.” At seven, Jonalou kicked and whimpered for a normal name like the other kids, and became Joan Louise.
Joan even gave a simple name to herself. Her dad and mother had the easy names of John and Louise, but when they had their first child, mom got creative and blended their names into elaborate “Jonalou.” At seven, Jonalou kicked and whimpered for a normal name like the other kids, and became Joan Louise.
Joan
liked kale and lotion and easy names. She used hand lotion and leg
lotion and oatmeal lotion, and urged me to follow her example rubbing
on goo. She considered it her personal mission to help keep Ulta
the cosmetics store in business.
Three years ago I brought a big load of Utah apples to Tucson. They took over my kitchen and Joan helped me put them up. Two years ago I did the same. After a long period of work, I said, “Will you wash up this next box of bottles?”
Three years ago I brought a big load of Utah apples to Tucson. They took over my kitchen and Joan helped me put them up. Two years ago I did the same. After a long period of work, I said, “Will you wash up this next box of bottles?”
As
she baptized one Mason jar after another in the sink, she laughed, “I
was going to ask who your slave was last year, but then I realized.
Oh, I was!" Later
she said, "We work in an applesauce factory, and we don't get
any breaks.”
I
gave Joan the bunny for Easter the year she went away. I never could
think of a good gift, so I asked her what to buy. “Nothing. My
place is full and I keep cramming it with new stuff. I don't need
your help.”
In
the store I looked at an orchid so pretty the day stood still. Then
I looked at Joan. ”No orchid,” she said, “I'll just kill it.”
“But
that will get it out of your house,” I said.
She
stepped over to stuffed animals on shelves and picked one up.“Let's
get it,” I said.
Photo below is of Joan and me.
Photo below is of Joan and me.
She
darted away. Next time in the store she made a quick stuffed animal
inspection and fled to the lotion aisle. Day before Easter, I went
to Target. On top of a pile of stuffed animals was a plump,
floppy-eared, cute-eyed, cute everything Bunny. It was plumper, more
rounded than real bunnies and those other gangly stuffed bunnies.
The roundness made it as cute as a button, not hard since even a
gangly bunny is cuter than a button in the first place.
The
bunny was good, also, because it was small. It could have fit into
Joan's purse. Of course there was never any room for Bunny in Joan's
purse. About twice a month--or was it twice a day?--she would lose
her car keys or cell phone. After she was ready to scream, I would
mine the depths of her purse. If luck held, I would dig out four
lotion containers and five tubes of lipstick and find the keys or
phone gleaming at the bottom of the mine.
I
bought the Target bunny and took it home in a brown paper sack. I
slipped the brown sack into Joan's house. She didn’t notice. On
Easter morning I handed it to her. “What's this?”
“Merry
Easter.”
“I
don't need a present,” she took the bag.
She
looked in and pulled out the bunny. “Oh, what a fun bunny. Is it
for me? Oh, how nice. Where did you get it?”
“I
got it from its mother. Her name is Target. There's a whole litter.
Since you like it, I'll bring you two more.”
“I
don't have any room.”
We
watched Charles Osgood interview Mo Willems, who wrote a book named
Knuffle
Bunny.
“We'll name the bunny Knuffle,” I declared.
Much
later the Bunny told me by telepathy, "My full name is LongEars
Knuffle.because I have such pretty long ears."
Bunny
quickly became dear. A couple of days later I noticed that she had
taken it to bed. “How's Knuffle?”
“Bunny
is sweet,” she said, “I love it. Her. She's a girl.”
A couple of times she brought Bunny along when she came to my place.
In the first picture above, stylish Joan sports a yellow shirt,
yellow gloves and a yellow hat band, and is goofing off like a good
retiree.This retiree rarely
smiles for her picture but is happy here to show Bunny off.
I
left the Tucson heat for a long trip but Joan wouldn't go unless I
went to San Diego. I made a big mistake and went to Utah. She
called my answering machine, “I made my doctor's appointment. This
darned year has been, uhh, not
good,
but I'm going to make it better. I know I haven't been much fun
because I'm a spoiled brat, but I'm gonna get better. If you're on
your way to Salt Lake City, I hope and pray you'll be safe."
Then Joan said in a high-pitched slow little voice like a bunny, "The
Bunny says to be careful. Pleeeeeeaze be careful.”
A
month later Joan stopped answering the phone and lay for two or three
days face down on her bed before I got people in to check. The
apartment manager smelled a bad smell, saw her lying there dead, and
called the big maintenance man, Joan's friend. He, too, could see
she was dead. They called medical genius number three, the cop. He
saw the dead old lady and waited hours for the coroner. The
coroner did something—nobody ever told me what--and Joan moved.
That got the paramedics. Joan remembered the ambulance was noisy and
knew she had had a stroke, but knew nothing of the time she lay on
her bed.
The
first day I visited her in the hospital, she couldn't move her left
side, but understood every word we said and talked most of the day.
“I want my bunny,” she whispered.
Bunny
came and stayed loyally at her side. On a fateful early July day I
saw Bunny had a better future with me than with her. Joan later told
me in a dream, “I had a choice to stay or go, [live or die] and I
was fighting to stay with you, but someone came to me and said it was
okay to go with them. My body was a lump that couldn't do me any
more good. I just popped out of it and stood there and waited. My
mother came and I left with her.”
That's
how I understand Joan went away.
In this photo Joan wears classy black and white, and pulls a face for a certain pesky photographer (me) who haunted her. She poses as the cutest, happiest witch we know.
In this photo Joan wears classy black and white, and pulls a face for a certain pesky photographer (me) who haunted her. She poses as the cutest, happiest witch we know.





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