A Brood X cicada that emerged early, in 2017 (Flickr by Katja Schulz CC BY 2.0) |
I met Brood X face to face only once, when I was a teenager in Baltimore, Md., in 1987. Every 17 years, the big red-eyed bugs realize that heaven is a place on earth, not under it, and they rise up with a screeching rhythm that's gonna get you. Unlike locusts, cicadas are clumsy fliers and seem oblivious to humans as a threat. So simply going outside invites cicadas to crash into your nicest denim jacket.
This time, the cicadas have failed to anticipate a new human threat. People are popping cicadas onto the grill for purportedly finger-licking-worthy indulgence.
Fried cicadas in China, 2013 (Flickr by Sharon Hahn Darlin, who didn't eat them, CC BY 2.0) |
Nowhere was that shellfish flavor more evident than in the oven-roasted cicada, though I was quickly distracted from that thought by the realization that the bug had exploded in my mouth like a Gusher. My tongue awash in bug guts, I reconsidered all the choices I’d made in my life that had brought me to that moment.
Oh, heads up, the FDA warns not to eat cicadas if you're allergic to shrimp. Because that makes sense.
Well, another voice in the inexplicable camp of cicada supporters is my uncle, Tom Peri, a Baltimore biology teacher with a new video series about Brood X. In four short installments, Buggin' Out with Mr. Peri is now available on Facebook from Notre Dame Preparatory School (NDP). Each short installment teaches us, as Mr. Peri puts it, that cicadas "aren't the monsters you think they're going to be." In episode 1, Mr. Peri promises us life lessons to be learned from the humble cicada, such as, "you're at your best when you're rising from a low point."
Give Buggin' Out a try (ep. 1, 2, 3, 4), and especially share it with kids. Maybe we can condition young minds to think differently from mine. Then, in 2038, our only anxiety will be over which cicada food truck to choose.
An NDP upper-level science teacher with decades of classroom experience, Tom Peri won a prestigious Lead. Learn. Proclaim. Award from the National Catholic Educational Association in 2018. He is a former headmaster of St. John’s Prospect Hall and Towson Catholic High School.