(an ant)
I
confess: I am a mass murderer. Each day I kill thousands of little
creatures, just because they get in my way. It's their own fault,
because they have attacked my house and now they are swarming all
over the place: in the bathroom, the bedroom and (their favourite) -
in the kitchen.
They
are mini ants and when I checked them out on the internet, I found
horror-like images. Look at these little monsters on a site about
ants in Greece, Antweb
Greece! I
wonder how you could tell what kind of ant you are dealing with. Who
can look such a minuscule ant right in the eyes?
I
see those little dots marching through my house. You can't possibly
miss them when they creep around in military convoy. These misfits
are so small that I need to have my glasses on to see them, but even
then: with or without glasses, head or tail cannot be discerned, let
alone a frightening face with antenna.
Of
the 290 species calling Greece home, the small ones are the minority.
It can be a Pharaoh ant
(Monomorium
pharaonis),
a much too beautiful name for these bullies. They are also called
Sugar ants, a logical name because they love sweets. There also are
the Monomarium
minimum,
called simply Little black ants. But I much prefer the name pharaoh.
Whatever they actually are, I will call them after those legendary
Egyptian rulers, one of whom - Akhenaten (1351–1334
BC) – did look so much like
an ant that he could have been an ant pharaoh and gave his name to
these creatures as 'big' as 2 to 3 mm.
So
I have a house full of pharaohs. The whole day – heat wave or not –
they are hyper active, towing invisible things, hunting delicacies
and even sending scouts to my laptop, hoping to find a hidden cake
there. Where do they get all that energy?
Once
long ago the Greek island of Aegina was raged by a mortal disease and
most of the inhabitants died. The ruling king was devastated and
asked Zeus for new people. This lazy god, who had just seen a train
of ants climbing into his favourite tree, changed the ants into
people: the Myrmidons.
They became reknowned for their endless energy and discipline and
made first class soldiers. Later it was Achilles who showed them off
during the siege of Troy.
In
Africa there still are scary ant armies. When I read The
Poisonwood Bible
by Barbara Kingsolver, I had nightmares about ants eating my house
overnight. I am sure that the ant units mentioned in the book did not
consist of warlike pharaohs (even though they too originated in
Africa) but of a far more bloodthirsty species.
However,
the African, warlike pharaohs of Lesvos party on the dishes waiting
to be washed, break into hermetically-sealed pots of honey and jam,
eat clean and dirty towels and convert each cupboard into a wriggling
nightmare. I am sure that I've drunk several of them, drowned in the
endless glasses of water that you are supposed to drink during the
Greek heat. Those rascals are thirsty and not only rush for sweets,
but also for water: so they have turned the bathtub and sink into
permanent camp grounds, even though again and again I attempt to
drown them with gigantic tsunamis of water
Could
housing those thirsty African warlike pharaohs actually have an
advantage, I ask myself desperately, each day thinking more and more
about giving up. According to Werner Herzog's movie Where
the Green Ants Dream,
there once was an aboriginal people who believed that green ants
created the world and even kept it alive (you'd better say: kept it
clean). Also the American Hopi indians have a
legend telling
how their people once were saved by ants.
So
I have legendary, thirsty, African, warlike pharaohs in my house.
They can be combatted only with lemon, vinegar, dish soap or some
chemical shit. The problem is that I hate to clean; but those masses
of ants have forced me to become an exemplary housewife. Every bite
of food now has to be followed
at least by ten
minutes of cleaning.
So the only positive point of the invasion of these
forcing-me-to-clean, legendary thirsty, African warlike pharaohs is a
free home-polish course! My house has never been so shiny and clean.
(with
thanks to Mary Staples)
©
Smitaki 2016
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