Bio
Chicken Or The Egg
I grew up in the city, but I have always held an idealized notion of farm life. A classic red barn,
Old McDonald sort of farm is what I longed for in my childhood, not sprawling fields of crops
but just a place to keep some animal companions. I relentlessly begged to adopt every
creature that could be found in the zoo or on Noah’s Arc as a pet.
I hope every kid gets at least one moment in school that lights up a spark behind their eye. For
me, it was our second-grade biology project: hatching chickens from eggs. Each morning I
would rush to class and peer into the incubator, even though there was nothing to see but the
same old dozen eggs just sitting there. It didn’t matter; just imagining that these seemingly
lifeless objects were soon going to change into something else was thrill enough for me.
The day they hatched was like Christmas morning. I joined the cluster of kids peering into the
incubator to find several of the eggs already replaced with tiny, damp little birds, panting from
the exhaustion of finally breaking out into the world. Eventually, they fluffed up and began
exploring the world of the plastic bin we set up as their home. Our teacher made a valiant effort
to keep up the lesson that day, but it was an uphill battle.
I was obsessed. I would tell anyone who would listen about our new class pets. The chicks
even made it into my writing material at the time.
“What is a baby chick’s favourite food?” I wrote, with a drawing of a chick to accompany it.
“Peep-za.” I answered, with a flourish of self-satisfied pride, and ran off to show my mom.
This may have in fact been the peak of my writing career. I can only hope to ever write anything
of this caliber again.
Eventually the chicks got too big for the classroom, the teacher sent them home to a farm
upstate (I think it was an actual farm, at least I hope it was) and I moved on to other science
projects and another school.
It wasn’t until I got to high school that I learned that the second-graders here had no such
project. They were completely missing out! So I got permission to set up an incubator in one of
the science classrooms, and became the advisor of the biology club. Not only did I get to see
that tiny yet enormously brave act of cracking into life once again, but I also got to see a whole
new group of young people become spellbound by it — and that was even better.