Tag Archives: ice cream

Dinner for Two? I Think NOT!

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The Kansas City Star – July 8, 2012

Stacey Hatton Commentary

Recently I received the most peculiar invitation in the mail. This gem contained complimentary admission tickets “good for two” persons for FREE FOOD! Now with the hunger crisis widespread throughout our country, why on earth were they trying to give ME and my date a free meal?

At first I was keyed up by the prospect of someone wanting to award me something, especially if that “something” might include perhaps ice cream; but then I remembered a prophet telling me, “No one gives out ice cream for free, unless they want something in return.”

So I called my mother, who is the oldest person I talk to on a regular basis, so that puts her closest to prophet status. I asked her, “Do you think this free meal is some kind of a scheme?” Being that she is a savvy retired elementary school educator, she asked, “Who sent these tickets to you, my child?”

I turned back to the not-so-fine print (actually it was in bold, italicized and about a 32-point font). A first warning I may need to slow down a bit in life, or else bump up to the next level on my classy CVS reader glasses.

This is when I should have hung up the phone or claimed I had the wrong number; but I had already announced to my mother who I was, called her by name, and discussed who was coming to a family get-together. So I’m pretty sure she recognized my voice.

I tried to cough, sneeze and mumble at the same time, “A funeral home.”

Although, since she is my mother and can understand every word of mine even if I had all my teeth knocked out and my lips sewn shut, she blurted, “How did you get on THEIR list?”

“Weight Watchers, I can only assume,” I sighed as if receiving an unsatisfactory mark on my report card.

Then to add salt & vinegar potato chips to my wounds, she laughed, “I haven’t even had a funeral home send me invitations yet!” Nice. Coming from a woman who happens to be substantially older than me.

Our conversation morphed into what we thought should be on the menu for such an event to discuss “final-arrangement planning.” Whole grapes? Big chunks of hotdogs? Or would they go the cholesterol-laden route … triple cheeseburgers and a side’s bar of anything fried? We both assumed a fruit and veggie tray wasn’t going to be part of this artery clogging affair.

Since we were on the subject of dying, I thought it an appropriate transition to inform her I had accidentally killed the Cecropia caterpillars she had given my children. The science project for the summer was over after one week. Fuzzy and Wuzzy wuz no more.

Too bad the funeral homes don’t take caterpillars. My daughters would have loved a nice service for their beloved 7-day inch-long friends. However, I do have these two complimentary tickets from experts who “want to ease my family’s emotional burden.” Maybe I’ll give them a call…

Stacey Hatton’s humor blog can be found at http://nursemommylaughs.com

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FAREWELL WORLD, MAYBE…Math is NOT my Strong Suit

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Since tomorrow is supposed to be the last day of the world as we know it according to some Californian mathematician/religious folk, I have spent the last 30 seconds pondering what should be my post.

My conclusion is as I glanced at this wacko guy’s mathematical formula, it looks like something I would have put together my Freshman year of college after too many “shooters;” hence, my repeating Math 101  three times…I kid you not.  I learned early on you can drop the class without any penalties if you do it at the exact right time.  Timeliness…it’s a gift.

So what do I want to be my final message?

1)      Love one another.  Well, the world is supposed to be gone, so axe that one.

2)      Family is everything…not bad, except for those of you who have crazy families that do terribly bad things to you and you should have never been dealt such an awful hand.

3)      I hope all planning on spending their afterlife in heaven, get there!

Let’s start there…Heaven!!  Ahhh!! So many different religions and viewpoints of what Heaven or Nirvana is.  Who will get to go there, and if you go there, will you know that you are there, and will you know anyone?  So many questions that apparently will be answered tomorrow (Saturday) at 6:00pm.  Are we ready for all these answers?

I mean… since I was a young girl I always assumed that if I made it to heaven, I would have unlimited quantities of ice cream and toppings for eternity.  My only adult change to that list is I will not gain a pound or care how I look.  The opposite being if I don’t make it through the pearly gates, that they offer infinite ice cream as well because of the uncomfortably warm conditions.  These are the things I think of when I can’t fall asleep…

I’m not counting on this catastrophe tomorrow, so I am still scheduling my writing schedule for the next few months.  After all, I have the Erma Bombeck convention to attend next April and I am NOT letting something measly like the end of the world get in the way of me not attending another one!

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Kansas City Star: Stacey Hatton commentary (m.08.16.10)

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The Ice-cream Man Cometh

STACEY HATTON COMMENTARY

Close your eyes and think back to any summer of your youth.

Didn’t you love to hear the calliope music faintly at the end of the block? You would stop dead in your tracks, gasp and stridently whisper to your friends, “Did you hear that?” And in unison everyone yelled, “It’s the ice cream man!”

Then pandemonium! In a frantic, wild disbursement of children, short legs sprinted inside to their piggy bank or their mom’s purse. There was boisterous begging for spare change or last week’s allowance so they could be first to get to the truck ladled full of pure sugar, chocolate and food coloring. The Bomb Pop was the “bomb,” the Drumstick was “banging,” and there was nothing funny about missing a Good Humor bar.

Oh, memories of a simpler time when children were allowed to run the streets with friends and chase trucks stocked with high-fat dairy products. Life was good!

But it’s not the same world now. There are recommendations to refrain from high-fructose corn syrup and high-fat dairy. And I’m sure some study somewhere indicates that food coloring causes behavioral problems in children from Dayton, Ohio. It’s enough to shut down the ice cream business all together. And if that isn’t bad enough, there are documented cases of children being accidentally run over by the trucks!

I have been researching how to resolve this summertime trouble, and an acquaintance in the Chicago area mentioned that she and her young children call the ice cream truck the “music truck.” Her children have no idea the truck is filled with glorious cold snacks. They think it’s nice that a truck periodically comes down their block to provide some music while they are out playing. What a nice person to fill the neighborhood with circus music! She will let them know when they can cross the street carefully.

I know another woman — let’s call her Miss Popular — who for years kept her basement freezer swollen with a variety of icy treats. Every time the ice cream truck would approach her home, her children and those playing with her kids would stop what they were doing and run to her basement. It was their cue to grab a free dessert. My guess is the ice cream man in her neighborhood wasn’t fond of her.

Now, I am not trying to close down the mobile ice cream business. Far from it. I love a good Bomb Pop when the heat index starts climbing. I just advise parents to educate young kids that even though the ice cream truck can be a sweet summer experience, they are no different than any other vehicle driving down the street. It’s best not to run in front of one.

So may your family have a safe summer, and remember to supply your children with the appropriate ice cream requirement mandated by the USDA’s food pyramid. You might have to squint to see it, but I’m pretty sure it’s there. At least that’s what I tell my family.

Stacey Hatton is a pediatric nurse and freelance writer in Overland Park. Her blog can be found at http://nursemommylaughs.com.

Posted on Tue, Aug. 10, 2010 10:15 PM
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