At the Dentist

November 10th, 2025

I took Asher to see the dentist on Saturday afternoon. I had been dreading the visit. Asher is not quite five years old, and he still has his baby teeth. At his last check up, his regular dentist found a tiny cavity in between his two upper front teeth. She recommended that Asher see a pediatric specialist to deal with the cavity. This was the first cavity that Asher ever had, and I was worried about how he would behave if the pediatric dentist needed to drill. The possible challenges were daunting. Asher had already been upset and unhelpful during a simple cleaning, so I was a bit on edge.

We got to the office of the pediatric dentist on time, but we had to wait for almost an hour. I asked the receptionist about the delay, and she told me that they had a couple difficult patients that day. Asher ran around the office area. He was bored and restless. That did not bode well. Asher really did not want to be there, and I didn’t either.

When we finally were taken into a back room by a dental hygienist. She got Asher into the chair. Then she went about getting x-rays for his teeth. I was relieved to that Asher did what the hygienist needed him to do without complaint. She had given him a toy (a little plastic digger truck) at the very outset of the visit and had promised him another one if he behaved. That tactic seemed to work well.

She took her pictures and then left to help the dentist in the adjoining examination room. He was working with another young patient. Asher sat in the dentist chair and stared straight ahead.

Another dental assistant came in to do some computer work while we waited for Dr. Mohamed to finish the job next door. As Asher and I waited, we listened to some ungodly wailing coming from the adjoining room. The kid was not having a good time. We could hear the dentist plead, nay beg, the child to relax and settle down. I heard the dentist, who is apparently a man of nearly infinite patience, tell the kid,

“Please bite down on this! Let me do my job!”

The child’s response was a long, intense, high pitched screech. I thought to myself,

“Sweet Jesus, what the fuck are they doing in there?”

I looked at Asher. He was sitting in the chair absolutely stone faced.

I asked him, “Are you okay?”

He replied, “Yes.”

“Uh, you’re looking kind of serious.”

“I’m okay. I just don’t want to move my head.”

I tried to ask Asher something else, but the crying from the other room was overwhelming. I couldn’t hear him answer me.

I told Asher, “I can’t hear you with all the screaming.”

The dental assistant snickered, and said, “Sorry about the noise. The patient isn’t being very cooperative.”

“Is that a professional hazard?”

“Oh yeah.”

Finally, Dr. Mohamed came into our room. He was a tall man with dark curly hair. He smiled at Asher. Asher smiled back. The dentist examined the x-rays and then he had Asher open his mouth so he could look at his teeth.

Asher was very cooperative.

The dentist told me that the cavities (there were actually three small ones) did not penetrate the enamel. This being the case, he could apply a sodium fluoride gel that protect the teeth and avoid any drilling and filling. He advised me that the gel would stain the teeth black. Fine. Whatever. They’re baby teeth and they will come out in a couple years, so I told him to do it. He went on to tell me that Asher should brush, floss, and avoid sweets. We can do that. We set up an appointment for his next cleaning.

At the end, the hygienist gave Asher another little toy as the last part of the bribe to keep him calm during the exam. The dentist seemed happy and relieved that Asher was good during the visit. The man appeared to be emotionally exhausted.

Asher spent the ride back home arguing with me about how often he could eat gummy worms.

Jack O’Lantern Nights

October 28th, 2025

It was just after sunset when we got to the Racine Zoo on Friday. There was a Halloween light display that Asher wanted to see. It was getting cold. Asher wore a coat and pants under his Captain America costume. People admired his outfit, especially the shield that he carried with him. Asher definitely looked the part of a kindergarten superhero. He didn’t have fancy Marvel hero boots to wear with the costume, so he wore his dinosaur motif rain boots. Nobody noticed. It was getting dark.

The Racine Zoo is right next to Lake Michigan. It’s not a very big zoo. However, the light show was impressive. The place was packed with pumpkins, real or otherwise. Not long after we entered the zoo, I could hear music playing in the darkness. I was expected spooky classical compositions, like Bach’s organ masterpiece, “Toccata and Fugue in D Minor”, or maybe “Night on Bald Mountain” by Mussorgsky. Not so. The hidden loudspeakers were cranking out “Werewolves of London”:

“He’s the hairy-handed gent
Who ran amok in Kent
Lately he’s been overheard in Mayfair
You better stay away from him
He’ll rip your lungs out, Jim
Hunh, I’d like to meet his tailor

Ah-hooo, werewolves of London
Ah-hooo
Ah-hooo, werewolves of London
Ah-hooo!”

People were gathered a Jack O’Lantern display that had three singing pumpkins. They weren’t real pumpkins, and they were used as sort of a screen for a projector. The pumpkins sang background vocals along with the late, great Warren Zevon.

“Well, I saw Lon Chaney walking with the Queen
Doin’ the werewolves of London
I saw Lon Chaney Jr. walking with the Queen
Doin’ the werewolves of London
I saw a werewolf drinkin’ a piña colada at Trader Vic’s
His hair was perfect

We walked along through the zoo. There were no animals about. However, there were plenty of pumpkins and eerie lamps. There was a bubble machine that spewed forth baseball-sized bubbles under a burnt orange light. Asher popped a bubble, and it was filled with smoke or maybe vapors from dry ice. I don’t know. It was fascinating.

There were Jack O’Lanterns that looked Beetle Juice or Wednesday or Edward Scissorhands. There were skeletons riding farm tractors. There were huge 3D-like images of zoo animals in red, orange, and black. There was a glowing sea serpent along with luminous sharks. There trees were illuminated with bats and spiders.

It was a good show.

Yesterday, I bought a used CD with songs from Warren Zevon. It’s called “The Wind”. He recorded it shortly before he died of cancer in 2003. It is the music of an artist who knows he is dying. Zevon was no stranger to composing music that was macabre. Try out “Excitable Boy” if you doubt me. Some of the songs on the album are slow and sad, but others rock hard. He decided to do a cover of Dylan’s ballad, “Knocking on Heaven’s Door”:

“Mama put my guns in the ground
I can’t shoot them anymore
That long black cloud is comin’ down
I feel I’m knockin’ on heaven’s door

Knock-knock-knockin’ on heaven’s door
Knock-knock-knockin’ on heaven’s door
Knock-knock-knockin’ on heaven’s door
Knock-knock-knockin’ on heaven’s door”

As the song ends, Zevon keeps saying, “Open up! Open up!”

Nice touch.

They should have played song that while we were at the zoo. Or maybe not. We want frightening monsters, but not the scary things that are real. Vampires and mummies are okay. Cancer is not. Prison time is not. War is not. We don’t go looking for the terrors that wake us up at night with pounding hearts and sweat-soaked sheets. No, we don’t want to be visited by broken relationships or chronic diseases. We don’t want images of masked men from the government kicking in doors and dragging fathers away from their children. No, no, none of that.

We’ll stick with the werewolves of London.

” Ah-hooo
Werewolves of London
Heh, draw blood!”