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Tragedy plus time: When it’s funny…later

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LFH

Many of life's fumbles can be transformed into humorous anecdotes years later. Photo by the author

It was summer and, although my mother and I don’t remember exactly how old I was, I was old enough to read and old enough to know better. My mother held the box of effervescent denture tablets in one hand and, in the days before 911, dialed Poison Control on my grandmother’s rotary phone. I stood there stupidly in my grandmother’s kitchen, wondering how soon it would be before I died.

I had a stomach ache and had accidentally downed two of my grandfather’s denture tablets instead of Alka-Seltzer. I could only hear my mother’s side of the phone conversation, but it went something like this:“Yes. Denture tablets. Yes. It’s not funny. It’s not…stop laughing. STOP LAUGHING!” My stomach started to hurt worse than before, and I wondered how mad she would be at me if I died. She slammed the phone down, and then my grandmother asked if they should induce vomiting or if there was anything else to do. My mother said when the operator at Poison Control finished laughing, she told my mother not to worry—I wouldn’t die, but I would definitely have the cleanest esophagus and stomach in town.



Stacy Murison is the Writer in Residence at the Flagstaff City - Coconino County Library, funded through the generous support of the Arizona State Library, Archives & Public Records, a division of the Secretary of State, with federal funds from the Institute of Museum and Library Services. 



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