Lorraine and
her mother have a very strained relationship, but as far as parents go, she is all she's ever
had. Lorraine doesn't know parent-child relationahips to be any different than the example set
forth by her single mom--until she meets Mr. Pignati. At first Lorraine is taken aback by how
happy the Pigman is. She doesn't quite accept his joy as reality because she says the following
on the first day they meet him at the zoo:
"I felt
sorry for the old man because people just don't go around smiling like that all the time unless
they're mentally unbalanced or harboring extreme anxiety" (57).
Good thing she gives the guy a chance to teach her what it means to
be able to actually trust and have fun with adults. Naturally, as she and John hang out with Mr.
Pignati more, Lorraine compares him with her mother. She pities her mother because being a nurse
is a stressful and demanding job. But as she realizes that she is actually having fun with an
adult, she says the following:
"Sometimes just after
I put the light out, I'd see his face smiling or his eyes gleaming as he offered me the
snails--some little happy detail I thought I had forgotten--and I'd wish she knew how to have a
little fun for a change" (86).
Hence, the way that
Lorraine wishes her mother were more like Mr. Pignati is by having a little fun. Her mother's
interactions with her are too strenuous, bitter and difficult. Life would be more manageable for
both of them if they could have some fun together.
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