Hi! I'm Lindsay Ferrier. You might remember me from a blog called Suburban Turmoil. Well, a lot has changed since I started that blog in 2005. My kids grew up, I got a divorce, and I finally left the suburbs for the heart of Nashville, where I feel like I truly belong. I have no idea what the future will hold and you know what? I'm okay with that. Thrilled, actually. It was time for something totally different.
January 30, 2012
As soon as I walked into my son’s preschool classroom a few Fridays ago, I knew something was wrong.
Both teachers had the kind of apprehensive look on their faces that generally precedes an overly detailed explanation of how Bruiser skinned his knee on the playground and would-I-please-sign-this-accident-report, or how he made the unfortunate choice of using his hands instead of his words after a kid spit on him. I sighed and braced myself for pint-sized drama.
“We had an incident this morning,” the teacher whispered to me as she approached.
“Did he start it or was he defending himself?” I asked quickly. She looked at me, confused.
“We’ve discovered that one of the children in this classroom has lice,” she said.
She went on about a nurse inspecting all the other children’s heads, and the dress-up clothes and stuffed animals being bagged up and sent out for washing, and blah blah I have no idea what… because all I really heard her say was lice.
LICE.
I’ve never had lice, nor have my kids or anyone else in my family. But I know of women who practically had to check themselves into a mental hospital after dealing with the nasty little bugs. To hear them speak, you’d think they were tiny harbingers of the Apocalypse. Oh, yes. I knew allllll about lice. And I wanted to keep that knowledge SECOND-HAND.
With an abrupt “‘Bye now!” to the teachers, I hustled Bruiser out of his preschool and immediately checked his head in the bright sunlight of the parking lot. Mercifully, his scalp was lice– and nit— free. I said a quick prayer of thanksgiving, strapped him into his seat, and headed to his sister’s school to pick her up. And as we waited in the car rider pick-up line, my own scalp began itching. Uncontrollably.
I was about to become very well-acquainted with GHOST LICE.
(Don’t even pretend like you don’t know what I’m talking about.)
In fact, ghost lice haunted my household all that weekend. Each time one of my kids so much as touched their heads, I was rushing them off to a window, peering through their thick strands of hair for evidence of tiny bugs. Meanwhile, I lay awake at night, scratching my head and imagining that my scalp was host to thousands of six-legged parasites.
Ewwwwwwww.
After several days of checking scalps and hair spraying heads each morning before school, I was satisfied that even our ghost lice had departed. But then I got some disturbing new information.
ANOTHER kid in Bruiser’s class had lice.
“Some of our other preschool classrooms have been affected, too,” the teacher admitted, a little shamefully. She lowered her voice. “It’s all because of the public school,” she stage whispered. “So many of our children here have older siblings in the public school.” She said the words ‘public school’ in the same way one might say ‘vomit-encrusted urinal.’
I guess she forgot that Bruiser’s sister attends that vomit-encrusted urinal.
And I guess that she didn’t know that I would put my daughter’s public vomit-encrusted urinal up against any of the … private urinals… in this town. Also? I’ve now had three children attend elementary school at the vomit-encrusted urinal she was referring to and NOT ONCE have I heard of anyone there getting head lice.
….I’m starting to regret this analogy now.
Anyway, I thought of many ways to respond to that preschool teacher. For example: “What are you saying, exactly? Are you saying that head lice can’t afford private school?”
Instead, I just smiled and said, “Bless your heart.”
“Public schools,” I muttered under my breath as Bruiser and I left the building. “What the heck.” And then I scratched my head, reflexively. The ghost lice were back. “Dammit,” I said through clenched teeth.
“What you said, Mommy?” Bruiser asked beside me.
“I said ‘Can it!'” I told him. “That’s what we can do with any extra fruit we pick this summer! CAN IT!”
After this second lice-spotting in Bruiser’s classroom, I debated taking him out of school for a few days in order to avoid what was clearly a lice infestation at his private school. Caving to the temptation of having a few child-free hours to myself each week, though, I continued sending him in, checking his hair each day until a few weeks had passed and I was satisfied that the worst was over.
A few days ago, my lice-free son and I headed over to the vomit-encrusted urinal to have lunch with my daughter. As I was signing in at the front desk, I stopped short when I saw one of the secretaries behind the desk bent over while another one carefully pieced through her hair. The realization of what they were doing hit me. My scalp started itching again.
“You’re okay,” the secretary told the woman as she stood up again. She looked over at me. “But you’ll probably want to put your hair in a ponytail before you go to lunch. We’re telling everyone to do it today.” She threw up her hands. “Suddenly, we have a lice problem.”
“And I know exactly where it came from,” I told them.
“You do?”
“Cumberland Valley Preschool,” I told them, smirking. “Totally infested.”
“Eww,” the secretary said.
“I know,” I said, shaking my head. “Those private preschools are lice havens.”
Image via Eran Finkle/Flickr
A note to locals: To avoid confusion, please note that his post is intended to be a humorous account of a problem that just about every mom and teacher has to deal with at some point: LICE. Please also note that I love my son’s preschool, I love his teachers, I love my daughter’s public school, and would enthusiastically encourage anyone to send their kids to either place. I do, however, hate LICE. And if you’re offended by my lice aversion, well, I can’t help you.
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one of the dignity stripping experiences in elementary school. face down on the desk while a nurse with rubber gloves comes and digs around your scalp. not cute.
Eek. At least they were thorough. They weren’t anywhere near that concerned at either of my kids’ schools!
Oh this post makes me have PTSD. My daughter had it NINE times in kindergarten because of an repeat offender – I thought I was going to have to be checked into the looney bin that year. And it’s amazing what people think about it’s origins…vomit encrusted urinal indeed! Ha!
NINE TIMES?! I think I’d just homeschool at that point!! ;D
Well, that was on the table too! What made the difference was the firebreathing email I sent to the school, the district, the county, the state, DHEC and the threat to add the news to that list. Magically, the problem was resolved. Heh.
NEVER had it — 12 years of public school for my son and not once thank Heavens!
When I worked in the school cafeteria you always knew the boys who had them when they showed up bald one day.
Your ghost lice is similar to when someone says “so and so has pink eye”. IMMEDIATELY my eyes get itchy and feel gunky. Blagh!
I know- Every time I hear about lice now, I get so irritated because it guarantees a full day of itching!
Pardon my French but head lice suck the big one. But I have to say, it wasn’t so much the lice that stressed me, as the PURE POISON (Malathion) I had to put on my darling children’s heads. And my own. The poison itself nearly sent me over the edge. SO, on that note, I want you to know, if your family should get this problem, that there are some alternative treatments. Get on Google and look up Cetaphil to treat head lice. Even if you don’t need it, you might be able to help a fellow mom this way. Good luck!
I’ve read about all the remedies, but honestly if it does happen here, I’m taking the kids to a place in town that gets rid of the lice FOR you. I’ve heard it’s expensive, but totally worth it!
Totally worth it!! From someone who’s spent HOURS picking strand by strand through my daughter’s very long hair. We’ve had several rounds of it over the years. And when i finally got it, I gladly forked over $250 to have it GONE in two hours by a professional – who doesn’t use chemicals, just conditioner and a nit comb – while I semi-calmly watched a TV screen…
Thanks, now I will have ghost-lice for the rest of the day.
I hadn’t heard that one! After all the treatments we went through, someone told us to use olive oil. SOLVED. And made soft hair. 🙂
“head lice can’t afford private school?”
LOVE IT!!!!
Very funny post. And yes, I have experienced ghost lice myself after my daughter’s little cousins had it. ewwww.
The only thing I can think of that would be worse is pubic lice. EWWWWW!
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The problem with lice is that you have to be very diligent…I mean obsessive!…about getting them out. You can’t just put the RID on and assume it’s over and done. You really do need to “nit pick.” Anything missed, and they will keep coming back. I’ve known other parents who just continue to send their kids to school without having done the work to get rid of them. I almost lost my mind when my daughter got them. The ghost lice…everything. I still get flashbacks.
ICK. You’re bringing homeschool thoughts to mind again…
Oh have mercy…I remember having to pick up my daugter from second grade and spent three plus hours combing through her hair after dumping God only knows what chemicals in it. Factor in the bagging up every single stuffed animal (and there were many), washing every towel, blanket and sheet in the house AND spraying down the carpet and furniture to ensure those suckers didn’t dare survive…ugh. I itch just thinking about all of that again!
I can’t even imagine…
We have a lice outbreak nearly every year at the private school (K-12) that I teach at. It’s always a grade school girl that starts it, since girls are more likely to have long hair, sit closer to each other, and share brushes or hair accessories. Fortunately, I’ve never been infested and neither have either of my sons. But whenever an outbreak occurs, we all–teachers included–have to go through the head check. If I wasn’t itching from the thought of lice, I always itch for hours after the head check. Because, what if the nurse didn’t change her gloves before she checked my head? Or what if the nurse has lice and they jump onto my head?
*off to search for my anti-itch cream now*
I always think of that, too– What if the nurse who’s checking heads actually SPREADS IT HERSELF?
*shudder*
Hahaha! Good one 🙂 I would like to take this moment to pray to God that Ellen never has lice. We have way to many soft surfaces to wash and my brain will not be able to take it. Amen.
Jenna
callherhappy.com
Agreed!
I know ghost lice well. I meet them around the time of the children’s musical each Christmas. They haunt me for days. I always always always have to take a long hot shower after practice and wash my hair. Even if I just washed it.
Yick!
Well, now *I* have ghost lice! My kids go to private school and we’ve endured multiple rounds of those spawns of Satan. My expert tip: lice prefer clean hair, so if there’s an outbreak in your kid’s classroom be sure to spray their hair with a little hairspray or gel in the mornings. Also, tell them to put their jacket or coat on the back of their chair instead of hanging it on a hook next to Licehead Lily’s. 🙂
We’re doing the hairspray, but I never thought about the jackets– Good point!
Ugh! We just dealt with it here. A volunteer brought them with her. All I could say was 10 years in Africa and the lice attack came over from America!! I had to do the nit-picking and my head itched all the time because of it. Thankfully we were able to confine the infestation to her alone. We couldn’t’ even get the chemical shampoo so we used mayonnaise. Worked like a charm.
Unbelievable! I’d say, though, that you have your hands full dealing with everything else that comes your way over there…
Hey wait, my grandmother who hailed from Arkansas used to say, “Bless your heart” when she really wanted to tell someone to stick where God’s sun doesn’t shine. Heh.
My private school daughter has not had it-knock wood, but we have had an outbreak at school every single year (4). Private schools ARE lice havens. Many of the children live near each other, do the same activities, are on the same sports teams. It’s a freakin’ epidemic.
I taught at the vomit encrusted urinal for 10 years and you knew it was lice time when all the teachers had slicked back buns with more hairspray than a Dallas socialite. I still itch when I see teacher lice preventing hair.
Ha! I’m going to be on the lookout now!
My Grandma says “Well Lord love your little heart!” 🙂 LOL
That’s one of the reasons I like living at high altitude. No lice. No fleas. Life is good. 🙂
Love it! And I had no idea lice and fleas couldn’t survive in higher altitudes! Lucky you. 🙂
Oh yes. When my family moved from Los Angeles, CA to the mountains of Colorado and discovered there were no lice or fleas, we threw up our hands and shouted a collective Hallelujah! LOL My family homeschooled in California and that didn’t even protect us from the lice epidemics. My poor mother had to deal with four thick heads of hair.
Sitting here scratching the ghost lice. I feel your pain. My daughters’ PRIVATE Catholic school had an outbreak in both first grade classrooms (daughter #2 is in first). Over for now. BUT, her hair has been in a ponytail for the last three months. Instead of washing her hair every three nights, it’s now more like every six. Because lice like clean hair. I am also spraying my kids’ hair with a water/tea tree oil combo, put tea tree oil in all of our shampoo….. I’ve gone a little crazy.
The thought of lice gives me the creeps and the thought of all of the work involved makes me want to vomit. I did get it at camp when I was 13 and remember what my mom went through. I guess the one bright side is what I heard from two of the moms whose daughters were affected. Their houses had never been cleaner.
By the way, I love how you turned the tables on the private school!
My daughter may well never wear her hair down at school again!
Oh LICE! I had it so much as a kid. It was so horrible. I desperately hope my kids don’t get it.
This is what scares me. The people who’ve dealt with it personally are the ones who are most freaked out when there’s an outbreak. NOT a good sign!
It’s no fun at all.
Absolutely brilliant post. The public school that my 2nd grader attends is about to lose our music teacher, our art teacher, our science teacher, and our band program. Our governor cut 1 billion from the state ed budget last year (PA) and he wants to cut more. I’m just sick about it! Anyway, I love the sly way you stick up for public schools in this post!
That’s awful! I’m getting lots of e-mails from parents in states that don’t have full-day kindergarten- I can’t even imagine… I’m very grateful that we’re zoned for a really amazing PUBLIC elementary school and I’d put it up against any private elementary school in the city. 🙂
Now I have “ghost lice.” My daughter AND I both got them (thick curly hair, you know) when they spread throughout her elementary school. Cetaphil, combing diligently with metal lice combs, wearing ponytails and gel, and eternal vigilance were the ONLY things that worked. So many parents think that one treatment will do it. NOT TRUE. Don’t even waste your money and time on any so-called lice treatment from the drugstore. They do not work. The nasty bugs are resistant to that stuff. Google the Cetaphil treatment. Repeat that in 7-10 days as the nasty bugs have a life cycle.
Cetaphil…. Check!
I get ghost lice anytime I see, hear, think about, or am within ten feet of the word “lice.” My family had one particularly bad case when I was a kid and it scarred me for life. SYMPATHY and glad you’re still in the clear!
You gave me ghost lice. Thanks
Ack, now I have ghost lice too!
Fie on people who talk down on the schools like that, too, by the way. Anytime anyone at that PRIVATE preschool gives you a hard time about that nasty PUBLIC school, you tell them that my husband went there (and he did for fourth grade) and is an Ivy League graduate now (true story).
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Ahhh why did I read it? Now I’m scratching at the ghost-lice too.
We did have a brief outbreak at my son’s preschool last year but thank goodness we never got it.
[…] then I wrote a little post about lice, which was shared among the teachers at my son’s school about as quickly as the little bugs […]
I have to throw my two cents in here. My daughter is always coming home with lice. I’ve discovered that rid and nix don’t work. Instead I use a natural product called lice free. It smells like black licorice, tuck, but works amazingly! Instantly they were dying and it makes the hair easier to comb through, with the METAL comb provided. METAL works way better than the cheap plastic ones.