The Hole: Never Big Enough For A Boy's Imagination
The Hole: Never Big Enough For A Boyâs Imagination
By Dottie Evans
Rain or shine, hot or cold, before school, after school, during school vacations ââ it has been three years now that Tom Gleason, an 8-year-old third grader at Hawley School, has been digging a major hole in his parentsâ backyard, and heâs not done yet.
Sometimes he digs in the company of his sister, Isabel, 11, and two friends, Jane Sclafani, 9, and Danny Sclafani, 11, and sometimes he digs all by himself.
Tom Gleason is not trying to find water, reach China, or strike gold. He just likes to dig.
âItâs all he wants to do!â said his grandmother Judy Gleason of Branford, with pride and exasperation.
âItâs intense,â agreed his mother, âand itâs never finished. The Hole [as everyone in the family calls it] is always evolving.â
Tomâs parents, Pam and Bob Gleason, do not complain about their sonâs excavating project that has taken over the far corner of their domestic landscape.
âWhen Tommy is digging, heâs totally happy and occupied. As long as he uses his own tools [a hoe, four shovels, an entrenching tool, loppers, a pick, a rake, and a hand trowel] we donât mind,â Mrs Gleason said.
âHe shares it. Itâs like therapy for all the kids. Sometimes his friends call up and ask if they can come over and work on it,â she noted recently as she led a visitor across the back lawn of the Lake Road home the family has enjoyed for the past 11 years.
As they approached the site, a circular rim of red-brown earth could be seen rising out of the green grass as though a giant gopher had passed this way, done his best work, and moved on.
Hole-Oriented: A Work    In Progress
Actually, The Hole is quite nicely situated, since it is set back behind the swing set and sheltered by a canopy of young hemlock trees. From the Gleasonâs deck overlooking Lake Lillinonah, one would hardly suspect it was there. Up close, thereâs no missing it.
As of the second week in June 2004, The Hole is approximately five feet deep and four feet across, and there is a painterâs ladder dug into one end wall so that older, less nimble friends and relatives can get in and out.
The sides are smooth and clay-colored (Tom calls the dirt âIndian clayâ because when wet, it is smooth and plastic feeling). The occasional big rock and lots of tiny tree rootlets are sticking out of the dirt.
At the far end of The Hole, an open snakelike passage has been dug under a tall metal trellis that might or might not be moved depending upon what Tom eventually decides. This passage leads to a new hole ââ a sort of annex under construction. Tomâs plan is to eventually cover this second hole with branches and dirt, and Isabel likes his idea of making four corners inside it ââ one for each of the hole-digging regulars.
âWeâll each have a corner and we can decorate it however we want,â she said.
Tom was asked if he could remember what his very first digging project was, and his mother reminded him that when he was 3, he had made a little town at the foot of the deck steps and had started a hole next to it for a lake.
âBut one day we were carrying a cooler down the steps and someone almost tripped stepping over the village, so we asked him to move it farther across the yard,â Mrs Gleason explained.
âYeah,â Tom remembered, âDad said the town had to be moved. At first, I was really upset.â
In an attempt to explain why he liked to dig, he said when he âwas littleâ he used to go with his dad to watch the men digging holes and roads for new houses. (Bob Gleason, a lifelong Newtown resident, is a realtor with Century 21).
When he grows up, Tom Gleason said he might build houses, or be âa football player or a landscaper, or a guy who drives bulldozers.â
Until then, he plans to keep on digging in his hole, except maybe not in the dead of winter when itâs too cold and snowy to be outside.
âIn the wintertime, my friends and I draw designs like architects do, and we talk about what weâll do with it in the spring. Because if Iâm not digging in it, Iâm thinking about it.â