Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Runaway Bunny

In unpacking my bookcase in my new place (I think the Shabby Shack is the winner unless I change my mind) I ran across a copy of The Runaway Bunny


My childhood was a little off in terms of classics. For instance, Where The Wild Things Are? Missed that one completely. I mean, maybe I read it, but it didn’t stick with me.


Same thing with Legos. I never played with Legos as a kid, and then somewhere in the middle of college, I was ALL about LEGOS! LEGOS! I WANNA BUILD A TREEHOUSE LIKE THE PICTURE ON THE BOX!


So even though The Runaway Bunny is in my bookcase, it wasn’t something I read as a kid. In fact, I distinctly remember My Mother The Phone Harpy Whom I Love Very Very Much buying me this copy a few years ago when the bookstore in the mall was going out of business. I bought the Lord Of The Rings trilogy, and the Lloyd Alexander Black Cauldron series (still an excellent and underappreciated series.) My mother bought The Runaway Bunny, and then gave it to me.


Now, everyone knows the basic story of the Runaway Bunny, right? He’s not Pat The Bunny, he’s the Runaway Bunny. He runs away. Repeatedly. Because he’s trying to get away from his Stalker Mother.

Fine, yes, I KNOW it’s a religious metaphor. Runaway Bunny is Amy as Runaway Bunny’s Mom is God. And that there’s nowhere that Runaway Amy can run to that God can’t find her, and the depths He will go to get back to her. And it’s touching, and beautiful, and a lovely game of Find The Hidden Runaway Bunny In The Picture, and la la la.


But seriously, people. Have you read the story lately?


Once there was a little bunny who wanted to run away.

So he said to his mother, “I am running away.”

“If you run away,” said his mother, “I will run after you.

For you are my little bunny.”


ALERT! ALERT! STALKER MOMMY IN EFFECT! Because I’m sure the Runaway Bunny has a good reason for running away. A reason that nobody is listening to, just merely brushing off the silly reasons of a Runaway Bunny.


(…)


“If you are a gardener and find me,” said the little bunny,

“I will be a bird and fly away from you.”

“If you become a bird and fly away from me,” said his mother,

“I will be a tree that you come home to.”



This picture scares the crap out of me. Stalker Mommy Bunny has turned herself into the only place that Runaway Bird Bunny can land, regardless of where he wants to go. Again, Runaway Bunny isn’t being heard. I’M LISTENING, RUNAWAY BUNNY! I AM!


“If you become a tree,” said the little bunny,

“I will become a little sailboat, and I will sail away from you.”

“If you become a sailboat and sail away from me,” said his mother,

“I will become the wind and blow you where I want you to go.”


Smothering Stalker Mommy Bunny! It’s not about what where you want your kid to go! Let the kid goes where he wants to go! He’s got plans! He’s got ideas! Let him breathe!


(…)


“Shucks,” said the bunny,

“I might just as well stay where I am and be your little bunny.”


That’s right! Beat your kid down so he just gives in to what you want!


And so he did.

“Have a carrot,” said the mother bunny.


That’s my My Mother The Phone Harpy Whom I Love Very Very Much’s favorite part. “Have a carrot” she likes to say.


Seriously, am I the only person who ever saw the story that way? Maybe that’s my next project. A retelling of Runaway Bunny, from the kid’s point of view. A thriller, in which he desperately tries to avoid his shapeshifter mom, and nobody will believe him when he tries to tell the authorities she’s a killer. Hmmmmmm.

3 comments:

E.R. Womelsduff said...

This was amazing. I giggled very loudly while I read this.

Anonymous said...

Okay - i never thought about this that way, but then I remember our mutual friend's little brother....for a while there he ran away daily, pulled his little red wagon to the top of the steep driveway, sat down, had the sandwich he'd packed, then came home. So I always thought "nah, the bunny is playing a game. It doesn't REALLY want to run away."
BUT! If you want a SUPER CREEPY STALKER BOOK --- then NOTHING CAN BEAT "I LOVE YOU FOREVER". That is just SCARY and WRONG!

-spunkyselkie

Lauri said...

ROFL. I have never liked the Runaway Bunny book (didn't have it as a kid, but it creeps me out as an aunt) and that picture of the bunny tree haunts my dreams.

But Spunky is right about Love You Forever. It makes Runaway Bunny look like a fairy tale. If you haven't read LYF, I'll be glad to lend you our copy, given to us by a friend (our age) who is a neurotic mother to her own children and bought it for us because she wanted to share the most beautiful book she'd ever read. Uh huh. If Runaway Bunny's mom has issues, the one in LYF has subscriptions.