Product Details
Howard Books, September 2001
Trade Paperback, 249 pages
ISBN-10: 1416533494
ISBN-13: 9781416533498
Read an Excerpt
Chapter 1
The Cheez Doodle Principle1
Nancy Kennedy
Recently, I estimated that I've packed 2,179 school lunches.
That's something like 1,084 peanut butter and jelly
sandwiches, 829 tuna, 45 egg salad, 143 bologna and 78 unidentified. Only 1,822
of those were actually eaten by my children.
Of the 2,179 carefully packed pieces of fruit I've lovingly
included for balanced nutrition, I'd say most, if not all, are now compost at
the bottom of some landfill. Add the thousands of carrot sticks, dozens of
cherry tomatoes and scores of cheese chunks that go directly from lunch box to
trash can, and I have 2,179 reasons to sleep in.
The only foods I'm certain get eaten are the
factory-packaged, artificially colored and flavored, chemical infested, sugar-
and fat-laden goodies that I warn the lunch-box carrier not to eat until after
the healthy stuff is gone (which kids define as wadded up, smashed beyond
recognition and soaked with milk before being thrown away.)
That leaves me to conclude that if you are what you eat, then
my children are Cheez Doodles and Ho-Ho's.
I have other options in the Lunch Box Game. I could stay in bed, forget about
packing lunches, and look like the Joan Crawford of all mothers—or pack what
they do eat—namely, junk food. That might win points with my kids, but word
would leak out and I'd become the dreaded "other kids' mom," as in, "Other kids'
moms pack candy bars and fried pies in their lunch boxes."
I could make them eat cafeteria food, but as I've been duly
told, "Cafeteria food is garooosss." Case closed.
That leaves packing the lunch box.
As a veteran packer, I've observed several Lunch-Box Laws and
Principles:
The Law of Negative Consumption. Simply stated, expensive sandwich fillings such
as roast beef or honey-glazed ham never get eaten. Out-of-season fruit gets sat
upon on the bus. The last bagel that you secretly coveted but gave to your child
gets immediately drenched in red Hawaiian Punch.
The Law of Unbearable Temptation. This occurs whenever a
child is confronted with a food having a higher playwithability factor than
eatability factor. These include raisins, which get arranged barricade-style
then flicked across the table; bananas, which are used as guns and/or
nonreturnable boomerangs; and marshmallows, which occasionally get eaten, but
only after the child stuffs them all into his cheeks at once.
The Law of Leakability. This law states that even if you wrap
your child's field-trip permission slip/report card/school picture carefully in
triple plastic bags before putting it inside his lunch box, his leak-proof
factory-sealed boxed drink will leak, destroying everything in its wake.
The Law of "Oh, No!" Under this law, soda in a thermos
explodes, Jell-O melts and mustard permanently attaches itself to white
clothing.
The Principle of "Go Figure." Ziploc bags neither zip nor
lock when in a child's possession. Metal spoons and expensive plastic containers
never come home, but disposable plastic spoons and Cool Whip containers do. The
same kid who won't eat a broken potato chip at home will smash a bag of chips
into chip dust—then eat it with a spoon. Go Figure.
There is a bright side. Even if my children never eat the
thousands of lunches I pack for them during their school careers, my efforts are
not in vain. Colossians 3:23–24 reminds me: "Whatever you do, work at it with
all your heart, as working for the Lord, not for men, since you know that you
will receive an inheritance from the Lord as a reward."
There's also an end in sight—my last child graduates next
year. Until then, I'll just take things one day at a time. Meanwhile, pass the
Cheez Doodles—the bus is almost here.
1. "The Cheez Doodle Principle" by Nancy Kennedy. This article first appeared in Christian Parenting Today magazine (September/October 1997), a publication of Christianity Today, Inc. Used by permission.