I say yes, you say no, OR People are Strange

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Comments

  • bluedahlia
    bluedahlia Member Posts: 6,944
    edited July 2011

    Something fruity would be nice.....

  • kira1234
    kira1234 Member Posts: 3,091
    edited July 2011

    This has been one day around here. My DH runs his own business out of our house because of the turn down of the economy lost the shop bummer. So our DD works for him. So while I play on this old computer DD works. Today I decided she should make chocolate chip cookies(see what all the talk of food does to me). So didn't have brown sugar so smart mom says lets make our own. DD says to me it does't look right. That's ok it will be fine. Then she says the dough itn't right. So smart mom decides to take matters into her own hands. Well the dang mixer just started smelling, DD says mom I thinks it's on fire. Brilliant mom says na, guess what DD was right.

  • Wabbit
    Wabbit Member Posts: 1,592
    edited July 2011

    I thought for sure that tuna pea wiggle would be tuna casserole ... tuna, noodles and peas.  The truth sounds much worse. 

    I went to a small school in a rural area.  Our lunch cooks were local farm wives and we actually had very good food!   Real food too ... not pizza or fish sticks or chicken nuggets like they serve nowdays.  And you didn't go around complaining about the food and refusing to eat it when the cooks are your - or your best friends - or your boyfriend's - grandmother, mother, aunt, etc. even if you didn't like a particular day's menu.

    Libby ... hope they get your surgery date worked out soon. 

    Edited for spelling ... I always have to edit for spelling ... or wrong word.

  • otter
    otter Member Posts: 6,099
    edited July 2011

    Kids are kind of weird. 

    I was a "bus kid" -- rode the bus to and from school every day and brought a lunch my mom packed with lots of love each morning.  Then the school system figured out a way to load us country kids back on a bus at noon and carry us to a newer elementary school that had a cafeteria.  (The kids that lived in the neighborhood near the school walked home for lunch.)  Even way back then, the school lunches were dirt cheap.  Twenty-five cents, maybe, or even less; and we weren't poor so that wasn't the reason.  The meals were hot -- prepared fresh (more or less) an hour or two before being served.

    Our junior/senior (combined) high school also had a cafeteria; in fact, we weren't supposed to leave the building during the lunch hour.  I think everybody ate lunch in the cafeteria, or in the band or choir rooms if they had a hall pass.  I don't recall very many kids bringing bag lunches -- that wasn't something teenagers wanted to be caught doing.  OTOH, the lunches were mass-prepared and served up quickly, to enable us to get back to class.  I think lunch "hour" was half an hour, with maybe 5 minutes tacked on either end for the run down the hallways.  Heaven knows how we had time to hit the loo.

    Like most public and parochial schools in the upper-midwest, we always had fish on Fridays.  Always.  It was often fish sticks, which were okay because we never had them at home; but sometimes they would serve creamed-tuna-on-biscuits.  Honestly, it tasted just fine (especially in retrospect); the biscuits were fresh and flaky.  But the whole thing looked like a dog had thrown up on your dinner plate, so the meal was rarely eaten.  Lots of wasted food in high school... 

    In elementary school, one of the teachers on "lunch duty" positioned herself next to the garbage cans as a food monitor.  Anyone who tried to throw away uneaten food was sent back to his/her seat to finish eating.  My sister had to drink creamed peas and carrots through a straw once, because she'd tried to conceal them in her milk carton and got caught.  Pretty darn funny, if you asked me.  I pretended I didn't know her.  It was safer that way.

    otter

  • Wabbit
    Wabbit Member Posts: 1,592
    edited July 2011

    OMG Kira ... you were obviously not meant to have chocolate chip cookies!  And how do you make your own brown sugar?

  • rosemary-b
    rosemary-b Member Posts: 2,006
    edited July 2011

    I hate to admit it but I liked tuna pea wiggle. My mom made it I never had i at school. Like tna cassarole but without the noodles. I have not cooked with mushroom soup in years. I think it is bleeech now.

  • kira1234
    kira1234 Member Posts: 3,091
    edited July 2011

    sugar and molassis. I'm not sure where she went wrong but the dough is really sticky. It stuck to the mixer till the poor thing just started smoking.

    The cookies are in the oven now, will see how they taste.

  • AnnNYC
    AnnNYC Member Posts: 4,484
    edited July 2011

    Otter, I didn't realize we went to the same elementary school! Wink

    In elementary school, one of the teachers on "lunch duty" positioned herself next to the garbage cans as a food monitor.  Anyone who tried to throw away uneaten food was sent back to his/her seat to finish eating.  [One of my friends] had to drink creamed peas and carrots through a straw once, because she'd tried to conceal them in her milk carton and got caught. 

  • Wabbit
    Wabbit Member Posts: 1,592
    edited July 2011

    You may have created a completely new culinary delight Smile

    otter ... LOL at your lunch stories.   

  • kira1234
    kira1234 Member Posts: 3,091
    edited July 2011

    It really is a shame to see how much food is tossed in the trash daily.

  • crazy4carrots
    crazy4carrots Member Posts: 5,324
    edited July 2011

    Tuna pea wiggle was actually salmon pea wiggle in my school -- served on biscuits -- every Friday!  You're right, it looked like a dog's breakfast after he ate too fast, but it was good!  All through grade school my mom packed my lunch.  I loved bananas so that was usually my fruit -- the riper the better.

    Then in high school we had a fabulous cafeteria with wonderful fresh-cooked food (Jamie Oliver would have been so pleased!).  I was skinny, always trying to put on weight, so Otter's sister could have given her peas and carrots to me and I would have gobbled them up!  Usually finished my girlfriends' lunches -- they were always dieting, it seemed.   Aahhh, those were the days!  We're having a 45-yr reunion in September with over 100 attending.  I'm not skinny anymore - will my old BF recognize me??

  • Alpal
    Alpal Member Posts: 1,785
    edited July 2011

    I was skinny, too. Those were the days.

  • AnnNYC
    AnnNYC Member Posts: 4,484
    edited July 2011
  • RetiredLibby
    RetiredLibby Member Posts: 1,992
    edited July 2011

    I weighed 125 lbs at 22 - and I'm 6'1" ... skinny didn't begin to describe it. 

  • crazy4carrots
    crazy4carrots Member Posts: 5,324
    edited July 2011

    They said, if I drank tomato juice, I could be a thermometer.  ouch, that hurt!  My mother, OTOH, always said that if you got teased, then that meant they liked you.  Being ignored was far worse.  Hah!

  • crazy4carrots
    crazy4carrots Member Posts: 5,324
    edited July 2011
    Gee Libby, you could have been a giant thermometer!  You know, the kind that gets pinned to the wall to show how many more dollars are needed to reach our goalTongue out.
  • RetiredLibby
    RetiredLibby Member Posts: 1,992
    edited July 2011

    Oh yeah, Linda!  "Stick your tongue out and turn sideways -- you could be a zipper!"  And, because I'm tall, "How's the weather up there?"  Why did people ever think that was a clever thing to say?  My response was usually, "Much clearer than down there, thank you." 

  • RetiredLibby
    RetiredLibby Member Posts: 1,992
    edited July 2011

    I went to a Hallowe'en party once as a crayon -- put a conical hat on my head and a yellow wrapper around my middle.  It was quite amusing!

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2011

    KIra, I'm still giggling - how were the cookies???

    Anne and OTTER - drinking peas/milk in a straw...sounds like your "monitor" was a model for Nurse Ratchet!  Didn't realize at first it was Otter's post too ;-))) toooo funny...you can tell how old I am. We  walked home for lunch, and then back to school.

  • kira1234
    kira1234 Member Posts: 3,091
    edited July 2011

    When I was in 6th grade we had a Halloween costume contest. There was one girl who showed up wearing a diaper and nothing else. It was really embarrassing. I often wonder if she ever thinks of it.

  • 1Athena1
    1Athena1 Member Posts: 6,696
    edited July 2011

    LOL at/with HL!!

  • AnnNYC
    AnnNYC Member Posts: 4,484
    edited July 2011

    I know, CS !  I went to a Catholic elementary school in Wisconsin -- Otter's was in Minnesota, and I don't whether public or parochial...  I'm a little stunned to see we witnessed a nearly identical scene in the cafeteria!  Was there some upper-Midwest training camp for lunchroom monitors of all denominations??!!  Something the Lutheran, Catholic and public schools could all agree on??!!

  • RetiredLibby
    RetiredLibby Member Posts: 1,992
    edited July 2011
    One year, I went to a Hallowe'en party dressed in just ordinary clothes.  When people asked me what I was, I said, "Homicidal maniac.  They look just like everyone else -- that's how they can get close enough to get you."  My friends thought it was hilarious -- people who didn't know me ... not so much!  Tongue out
  • Bren-2007
    Bren-2007 Member Posts: 6,241
    edited July 2011

    The Lutheran school I attended believed in corporal punishment too.  ouch!  I couldn't wait to get to public school.

    Bren

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited July 2011

    HAPPY LIBBYMoney mouth chortling  - not just laughing CHORTLING - fits so well with what's been on these boards last night & today - FANTASTIC!

  • RetiredLibby
    RetiredLibby Member Posts: 1,992
    edited July 2011

    CS -- thanks!  I actually got it from my mother, who used to say, "Be careful about the boys you go out with.  Murderers don't have a big M on their foreheads ... that's how they can get close enough to murder you!"  I come from a nice, careful, Midwestern family that looks both ways even on one-way streets before crossing -- at the corner, of course.  Might as well get a little twisted humor out of it!

    L

  • BarbaraA
    BarbaraA Member Posts: 7,378
    edited July 2011

    Too funny! I can just picture Kira's cookie dough flambe. When I was in jr. high I was 5'0' and weighed 80 lbs in 9th grade. I had legs like Olive Oyl, sticks with knobs for knees and HUGE boobs. ARGHH! I had a terrible self image then. Boobs were c's on a teeny tiny frame. The boys were unmerciful.

  • kira1234
    kira1234 Member Posts: 3,091
    edited July 2011

    Gees I was a double A till after my first kid. Wish I was that small now nothing would be hiding in these boobs.

    Barbara, I got teased for being so small. I don't think it makes a difference anyone who is different will be teased.

    Diagnosis: 6/1/2010, ILC, <1cm, Stage Ib, Grade 1, 0/1 nodes, ER+/PR+, HER2-

  • Alpal
    Alpal Member Posts: 1,785
    edited July 2011

    At a slumber party in 8th grade, we gave each other nicknames based on our boob size. Mt. Everest, Rockies, etc. I was Plains.

  • RetiredLibby
    RetiredLibby Member Posts: 1,992
    edited July 2011

    HHAHAHAHAHA! I didn't even wear a bra until my early 30s. I have no children, but apparently my estrogen-making factory kicked in and I blew up to a 36D in a couple of years. As DH puts it, when we met when I was 38, I had a rack.

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