
Breakfast
1 Slice Balthazar Multi-Grain
5 Slices Ham
Tea
Snack
2 oz 50% Jalapeno Cheddar
2 Tablespoons Peanut Butter (Super Chunky)
5 Stalks Celery
Lunch: Sushi 21
Seafood Teriyaki
Salad
About six shumai
Pickled Ginger
Miso Soup
Dinner
Chicken a la Emily
Broccoli 'n' onions
Peppadews
Dessert
The ice cream left on the spoon used to transfer the ice cream from one container to another.
Emily and I decided to take Ruby out for ice cream, a tradition that began in our salad days. Many of those trips contained the same exact conversations, such as: "What are you going to get?" , "Get a small, not a large!" and "I don't like that flavor." JP Licks, Ben and Jerry's, Emack and Bolios, Herrels, White Mountain Creamery, you name it, if they sold ice cream, Emily and I went there, and fought about flavors and sizes. From the perspective of having gained and lost 40lbs, I guess I can say she was right— I probably didn't need to get mediums, but I was going on the principle that the ice cream was the least of my problems, so I guess we were both right. We got to Friendly's and sauntered up to the take-out window. WOW, there are about a dozen choices, each one more mind-blowing for a five year old than the one before. Ruby chose the Peanut Butter Cup Sundae, which had peanut butter topping, chocolate fudge, vanilla ice cream, whipped cream, and one whole Reeses cup. I convinced her that she SHOULD only eat a portion of it (it was $4.99) and that she could have the rest of it tomorrow. Even though we went there for Ruby-reward, there was a moment, after we got the kids ice cream (yes, Magnolia had some vanilla) and parked it by the window, where we were just being a family eating ice cream on a summer evening, and that was its own reward.
1 comment:
Well, tomorrow's comment got on today's blog. You'll excuse me. It makes me think about taking Noah and Sophie to Sylvia's house when Sophie was about 4. I ran around after her as the house wasn't exactly child proof. Exhausted I can home and within five minutes Sophie had it her head on my glass coffee table...with rounded edges yet...and just narrowly escaped hurting her eye. The moral of this story is that bad things can happen anytime. Love, MOM
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