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| Farm to Factory to Fork |
I endured unimaginable abuse as a child. Oh, I don’t blame
Mother. She thought she was doing the right thing. And good old Dad? Well, he blithely
stood by and allowed it all to happen.
Mom praised my every move. I wasn’t spanked. She encouraged
me to excel in school; she invited my friends to stay over; and never use
alcohol or drugs (unless you count her belief that Aspirin cured everything from
a cough to a complete disembowelment).
Sounds wholesome and nurturing, right? Not so fast.
My mother was one of the worst cooks of the mid-20th
century. She fully embraced the post-WW II industrial manufactured foods
industry in all of its preserved, dehydrated, soul-sucking, life-draining
glory.
If mashed potatoes are good, boxed potato flakes were better.
If fresh green beans are delicious, canned and boiled-to-goo were healthier. If
Virginia ham was mouth-watering, spam was, well, at least it was trichinosis-free.
She took a cake decorating class one time, and we kids imagined iced goodies
and home-made petite-fours. No, sir. That woman used a cardboard cake form as a
practice dummy. It was like waving an empty pizza box in front of a college
student.
Compare my tale of torture to those of other more well known
down-and-out children, and mine wins hands-down any day.
·
Oh, sure, Oliver Twist was subject to the filth
and squalor of a 19th century London workhouse, but at least his
food was good enough that he held up his bowl to inquire, “May I have more,
sir?” You never saw me asking for seconds.
·
Harry Potter was forced to live in a tiny closet
under the stairs, but his Aunt Petunia produced a bounty of food to turn Uncle
Vernon and slothful cousin Dudley into obese slobs. No matter how hard I tried,
I couldn’t digest that cardboard cake.
·
And let’s not forget Sybil, the young girl with
multiple personalities created by her crazy mother. Okay, that’s all bad and
everything, but I remember from the movie that Sybil’s mother cooked a
sumptuous pot roast dinner, with potatoes and carrots and the whole she-bang. I
didn’t even know what a pot roast was until I was an adult.
Yes, it’s tragic, but my story has a happy ending. Through years and
years of intense, daily food therapy (i. e., stuffing my face), I’ve overcome a
childhood that was almost beyond belief. I’m a survivor, and a chubby one at
that.

I promise to never utter a word to Mom. Ha ha get the anonymous.
ReplyDeleteLove her. She's incredible, but she still scares me.
ReplyDeleteI was just sharing your boxed potato flakes story with my husband last night! Your mom is so adorable; it's hard to believe you were subjected to such abuse lol.
ReplyDeleteLooks can be deceiving. She is very nice otherwise.
ReplyDeleteOMG, you don't know how lucky you really were---we used to beg my mother to buy dehydrated potato flakes!! But noo...we had to suffer through freshly boiled russet potatoes hand-whipped with cream and butter.
ReplyDelete