Humor


This one time when I was six years old, Mom was cleaning the kitchen and asked me to check on my four-year-old sister, Sara, at the other end of the house. I found Sara in the bathroom with the door closed, sitting beside a pile of hair and holding the haircut scissors. I looked at her, closed the door, and went back to the kitchen. Now, I had been learning not to tattletale, so I said carefully, “Mom, I don’t want to be a tattletale but if I were a mom, I’d want to go look in the bathroom.”

The first thing Mom saw when she walked into the bathroom was the pile of hair.

“Oh, my, she must be bald!” she thought.

“Sara, why did you cut your hair?”

Sara calmly pulled her fingers out of her mouth and replied, “It was bodderin’ me.”

As many of us head into the holidays with plans to see family or friends, I offer two bits of advice for getting along:

“If you can’t say something nice… don’t say nothing at all.”
-Thumper, Bambi

&

Do everything without complaining or arguing.”
-Philippians 2:14

Happy Thanksgiving!


Once upon a time, I wore a sherbet bucket on my head. As I gaze at this childhood photo of myself, I remember the three year-old reasoning behind my outfit. I knew my frilly, flowered dress made me beautiful, the old purse under my arm made me grown up, and the clean sherbet bucket snugly crowning my head made me royal. The combination of accessories made me into a modern version of the Biblical Queen Esther.

I soon left my sherbet-bucket crown behind and realized that an outfit could not turn me into the beautiful, courageous queen whose story I loved to hear. I no longer believed myself a queen and realized that Queen Esther lived long in the past. Undaunted, I set my sights on a more reasonable future, “When I grow up,” I decided, “I’m going to be a princess.”

I loved the idea of a princess. People adore her because she is beautiful and sweet. As an heir to the throne, she is on the verge of greatness. She has some power but few responsibilities. She lives in a castle with lots of servants. If she gets in trouble, a gallant knight or charming prince rescues her. Finally, she always lives happily ever after.

Even at three, my favorite movies and bedtime stories featured princesses: Cinderella, Sleeping Beauty, and The Princess and the Pea. I practiced speaking “properly” and begged Mother to let my hair grow into long, flaxen tresses. She said that until I could take care of my tresses myself, they would stay short.

My hairstyle vetoed, I focused on the clothing of a princess. I wore only dresses and skirts, scorning pants and shorts. Not just any skirt or dress would do, they had to meet certain qualifications. Mother tried to hide her laughter every time I judged a skirt based on its twirl factor. I liked almost any color if the long skirt twisted gracefully with me when I twirled and billowed obligingly when I stopped. A princess has elegant speech, natural beauty, and fancy clothes. I had all those but was not a princess. What did I lack?

At age eight, I began to devour story after story in search of clues about my chosen vocation. In Journey for a Princess, by Margaret Carver Leighton, I discovered a brave, gracious, and resourceful princess who went on a pilgrimage and sometimes had to do things she did not like or understand. Mother and Father would never allow me to go on a pilgrimage like the Viking princess, so I tried to treat my brothers kinder and to obey my parents better (two things I neither liked nor understood). The Ordinary Princess, by M.M. Kaye, taught me those perfect, dainty, blonde princesses were boring in real life. The best princesses had problems, went on exciting adventures, took care of themselves, and even got dirty! After pondering these revelations, I slipped on shorts under my skirt and climbed a tree. Nothing happened. Like a princess, I was gracious and strong, obedient and adventurous, but I still lacked something. What was I missing?

Around twelve or thirteen years of age, I discovered the missing element: Princesses are not self-made. Every princess is either the daughter of a king and queen or married to a prince. I asked Mother whether I could have been born a princess but switched at birth. She assured me that the only other baby in the newborn ward had been the son of an Asian couple. Not dissuaded, I inquired whether she or Father had distant royal relatives. She laughed and told me about relatives who had been preachers and farmers and soldiers. Since one does not make herself a princess, I gave up my foolish princess pretending.

While in high school, I came across a passage in an old letter, mentioning my adoption into a royal family as a daughter of the king. Stunned, I reread the paragraph and showed it to Mother. I questioned its authenticity and demanded to know why I never saw it earlier. She confirmed the document’s truth and said, “It’s been there. You just must have missed it.” The letter speaks of what occurred the day I entered this royal family.

Although I knew, “The Lord is King forever and ever” (New American Standard Bible, Psalm 10.16), that day I agreed with God that my past behavior defied who He is and what He says. (I had disobeyed His laws and not cared for the consequences.) I knew the penalty for my rebellion was death, but that Jesus Christ paid my penalty. By dying in my place, He offered to rescue me if I would accept Him and the pardon He offered. I eagerly accepted, not knowing that the pardon included my adoption into the family of God. The passage I found declares, “But as many as received [Christ], to them He gave the right to become children of God, even to those who believe in His name” (John 1.12).

Once upon a time, I wore a sherbet bucket on my head and tried to be a princess. Then I grew up and learned that accessories, behavior, and research do not determine a person’s identity. On one hand, I failed at pretending to be a princess according the standards of society. On the other hand, I began to comprehend my standing as a princess according to the precepts of my faith and the grace of God.

I am a princess because I am a child of God, who is King. Today I wear jeans more often than skirts and no longer choose skirts by their twirl factor; I know my clothes do not determine my identity. I still practice kindness and obedience (most of the time), but only because I know it delights my adopted Father. I still have problems and awkward moments, but I enjoy my adventurous and imperfect life as a princess and look forward to the happily ever after.

“I could run away from home someday,” I told Mom contemplatively when I was six years old. (I was not upset, we had just read a book about children who run away from home and live in a museum.) “No,” she replied in a matter-of-fact tone, “You’re not allowed.”

“Oh,” I said disappointedly. That was the end of my plan to run away.

Laugh if you want, but I was born a rule-follower and a perfectionist. I find comfort rather than restriction in rules, criteria, and detailed instructions because they tell me what is expected.

Imagine my trepidation, then, when the professor of my advanced composition class announced that our final paper would have no assigned format, subject, or length! He suggested using a subject, style, or other idea from something we had been reading for another class or for fun and to “make it as long as it needs to be.” The only book I was reading for fun was about the longing that many girls have to be a princess and how that fits into a relationship with Christ. I really did not want to choose a subject so personal for a class where my writing would be critiqued and graded, but none of my class readings sparked any ideas.

The day for subject proposals came and I still had no other ideas, so I cautiously told the professor that I intended to write about the way I always wanted to be a princess when I was little. His response surprised me, “That sounds great! I overheard my four-year-old daughter talking to my son a couple weeks ago and she was saying, “I’m a princess, Colin. No, I really am!“”

My own princess story flowed onto paper, but I got stuck on how to end it. My first idea was something like this:

Somewhere along the way, I grew up and realized that not every girl gets to be a princess. In fact, very few are true princesses. I left the childhood dreams of fairy tales and princesses behind; what I thought could be faded into nothing more than pleasant memories.

My inner editor nearly screeched, “Seriously? That’s depressing, you can’t end it that way! Besides, it isn’t true.”

I tried again:

Years later, I began to understand that the character qualities of a princess were what I admired the most. To my surprise, I found that those same traits of kindness, adventure, and grace were growing in my life, too.

The inner editor rolled her eyes. “Why are you wasting time on this? You know how it’s supposed to end.”

I sighed… and then wrote the end the right way.

On critique day, when the professor critiqued parts of our essays in front of the class, I actually hoped that he would give me something, anything, that I could improve or correct before submitting the final copy. To my chagrin, he only pointed out positive features like the introduction and word choice. “Oh, well,” I thought, “At least he’ll put us into groups and we can give feedback on each other’s drafts.” Then he announced that we should review and edit our own drafts instead of working in groups! (Have I mentioned that I crave structure and instruction?)

I panicked just a little and asked no less than three friends to read and critique the essay. They offered a few minor suggestions, but I was still nervous the day we submitted our essays.

To be continued…

I have only been listening to Christmas music for two weeks and some of the songs are already starting to become annoying. My least favorite is “The Christmas Song”, no matter who sings it.

In high school, however, we sang that particular song with… non-traditional lyrics. I looked for our version online but have not been able to find it, so this is the way I remember the words. If you know where it originated, please let me know!

Chipmunks roasting on an open fire
Jack Frost picking at your nose
A mule named Carol being flung on the fire
And folks dressed up like twinkletoes
Everybody knows some turkey stole the mistletoe
And now there’s gonna be a fight
Tiny tots with their eyes full of coal
Will find it hard to sleep tonight

They know that Santa’s made of clay
He’s gonna run some people over with his sleigh
And every mother’s child is gonna cry
To hear that Rudolph was baked for Christmas pie
And so I’m offering this simple phrase
To kids from one to ninety-two
Although it’s been said many times, many ways
A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.
The early bird gets the worm.

Do you have amusing lyrics to classic Christmas songs? Christmas songs that irritate you? Tell me what they are!

Edit: I found a version of these lyrics in a Youth Specialties book.

Sarah crouched in the garden and the summer breeze ruffled her short blonde hair as she scooped out a small hole in the damp dirt with her right hand.  The petite four-year-old opened her left hand and carefully placed a single Cheerio in the hole.  She studied it for a moment before burying the small piece of cereal in the dark soil.  For good measure, she planted two more Cheerios nearby.  She liked to help Daddy in the garden, so planting was nothing new.  These particular seeds were new, though.  Unbeknownst to their father, Sarah’s older sister, Beth, had informed her that Cheerios are actually doughnut seeds and grow into doughnut trees when planted.

Days after the planting, Sarah returned to her future doughnut orchard and saw nothing growing above the ground, so she dug up the Cheerios to look for sprouts.  Sarah’s disappointment and disillusionment at being duped by a devious six-year-old left a lasting impression on her.  She became a little more skeptical and, together with Beth, began to test what they were told.  Since they saw a plethora of claims and promises on television commercials, started trying them out over the course of several years.

First, Sarah and Beth decided to test a paper towel commercial that depicts two rolls of paper towels falling into a swimming pool and absorbing all the water, leaving children sitting on the dry bottom. Since they did not have a pool, the girls filled the bathtub and tossed in two rolls of paper towels. To their disappointment, the rolls just got wet without soaking up much water and Mama scolded them for wasting paper towels.

Then the girls saw a commercial claiming that Vaseline protects baby bottoms from wetness so well that a sieve coated with it will hold water. They coated Mama’s sieve with Vaseline and were thoroughly impressed to find out that it actually did hold water. Sarah and Beth carefully wiped the goop off the sieve, so they never could figure out how Mama knew it was them!

Later, the sisters saw a shampoo commercial where a pearl dropped into a Prell shampoo bottle falls slowly because the fluid is so thick and rich. They did not have any pearls, so Sarah and Beth took turns dropping marbles into the shampoo bottle while the other watched from the side. To their delight, the marbles did fall slowly through their bottle of luxurious Prell. As an added bonus, what was a half-empty shampoo bottle was magically full again when they finished the experiment. Daddy was less impressed, however, and yelled loudly from the shower when he tried to wash his hair with a handful of soapy marbles.

They also watched a fascinating commercial showing that the cotton is attached to Q-tips so tightly that it can hold up a baby in a special carrying harness. The girls did not have a baby or a harness, but Beth came up with an ingenious plan and took her younger siblings to stand on Daddy and Mama’s bed. She ordered their little brother, Perry, to hold onto the end of a Q-tip while Sarah held the other end, then she pushed Perry off the bed. Unfortunately, the results of the experiment were inconclusive – even with repeated attempts – because Perry let go of the Q-tip every time Beth pushed him off the bed.

Decades later, Sarah still tries things out to see if they are true and she has great empathy for the apostle Thomas who did not believe that Jesus came back from the dead. “His name, Thomas (or Didymus), means ‘another one’ or ‘ditto,’ so you know he was a younger brother. His older brothers probably made him plant a doughnut tree, too! Then they say, ‘Hey, we saw Jesus alive’ Do you think he’s going to believe that? I don’t think so!”

Now the Bereans were of more noble character than the Thessalonians, for they received the message with great eagerness and examined the Scriptures every day to see if what Paul said was true. Acts 17:11 NIV

It is a chilly March morning outside the McKenna residence. The wind rattles leaves in a corner of the yard and swings a knotted rope that is tied to a tree. Along with two friends, the spunky, green-eyed five-year-old Taylor McKenna is having fantastic adventures in her backyard. They are pirates, explorers, anything that requires boldness, daring and agility. In a burst of thrilling inspiration, Taylor catches the swaying rope and scampers up the tree. Perched nine feet above her friends, Taylor calls, “Matt, Jen, watch this!” Commanding their full attention, she clenches a knot between her teeth and jumps.

Mrs. McKenna has just put away the breakfast dishes when her young daughter bursts through the door, bleeding and crying. After calming Taylor and cleaning her mouth, the unalarmed mother pieces together the events that have transpired.

One of Taylor’s front teeth is now missing and another is very loose, so Mrs. McKenna schedules an emergency dental visit. The “Grandpa Dentist,” as Taylor calls him, talks to her about the importance of teeth and how to use them properly. After setting her mind at ease, he goes on to tell Mrs. McKenna how to detect possible abscesses and infections. Taylor is fairly quiet during the visit.

On the drive home, she finally pipes up. “Mom, I just don’t understand something.”

Expecting a question about what the dentist said, her mother replies, “What’s that, Sugar?”

“Well… this never happened before!”

Flabbergasted, Mrs. McKenna could only say, “Are you going to do it again?”

With an incredulous little laugh, Taylor said, “Well, no, Mom. I don’t have any teef!”

Dear baby brother,

Now that you have a family of your own, I want to offer some advice. The best thing you could ever do is to tell stories. Throughout our childhood, I loved the stories that we told about our family.

Remember the one Mom and Dad told about Dad dressing Lacy for church when she was about a year old? All smiles, she must have looked adorable in all those ruffles and bows! Nevertheless, she soon began fussing. By the end of the morning, she was crying constantly and Mom and Dad were stymied. They went home and Mom began to change her clothes (not an easy thing to do with a crying baby, let me tell you!). When she took off Lacy’s shoes, she immediately stopped crying. Upon examining her sore, creased feet, our parents realized that Dad had tied her shoes too tightly! Even though you were not yet born, and I was very young, we know the story well. Oft repeated events like this can affect lives forever.

A good example of these life-changing effects is the story about Miss Coretta. She ran the customer service desk at Wal-Mart and was very cranky. She never smiled or talked to anyone beyond what was absolutely necessary. We kids always thought that the Wal-Mart managers must have put Miss Coretta at the service desk to dissuade people from returning things.

Mom had been saving things that needed to be returned, so she had quite a collection. Apprehensively, Mom hauled the five of us, ages three to 10, into Wal-Mart. On the way into the store, she warned all of us to be on our best behavior. “Now look,” she said in a rush, “I don’t know why Miss Coretta is so cross. Maybe she’s stressed or has family problems. We’re just going to be quiet, polite and we will take care of our business as quickly as possible. Put your hands in your pockets and don’t touch anything! Got it?” We kids all stood in and around the cart, waiting patiently, but Jack’s mind was churning. As he intently watched Miss Coretta from his perch in the cart, enlightenment suddenly dawned. In Jack’s eagerness to be helpful, his shrill, three year-old voice piped up, “Miss Coretta, I know what your problem is – your shoes are too tight!”

Mom froze, her open-mouthed children froze, and Miss Coretta blinked. When she recovered, Miss Coretta began laughing. She was laughing! “What’s your name?”

“Jack”.

“Well, you may be right, Jack.”

She was still laughing when we left and from then on, Jack and Miss Coretta were pals. He took her flowers on May Day and Valentine’s Day and just thought she was “the nicest lady.” Her whole face lit up every time he entered the store and when a family member appeared without Jack, she was quick to ask where he was.

One day, with his usual frankness, Jack told her, “You know, Miss Coretta, you are a lot happier now. You don’t have all those sad wrinkles in your forehead anymore.” She laughed and replied good-naturedly, “Jack, how can anyone be sad with you around?” Other Wal-Mart employees noticed the change in her too. One lady was astounded, “I don’t know what you did, but she has completely changed!”

This story has caused much laughter in the years since then. I don’t know where Miss Coretta is today, but I know that she’ll never forget the little boy who lit up her life… and neither will anyone who hears this story.

In conclusion, the best advice I can give you about families is to tell true stories. Someday, tell the two here to your children. If you forget, do not worry. Aunt Taylor will come to visit and to tell numerous tales about a little boy named Jack who grew up to be their father!
Love from your sister,

Taylor

Based on a true story.

Smiles in the SnowI wrote the following several years ago, but decided to post it here because it explains a lot…

In our family photo album, on a page somewhere between Thanksgiving and Christmas of ’84, resides a series of three pictures. I see them from two different viewpoints just as Mama tells two different stories about the day she took them. She taught me that there are two ways to look at everything.From my early childhood, Mama recognized that, although I was a compliant child, I was also highly opinionated perfectionist. I was so meek that I rarely received a spanking, she or Daddy would only say, “Abby, I’m so disappointed with you!” and I would instantly burst into tears. Despite my tender heart, I had numerous opinions and voiced them without shyness. Mama and Daddy never understood where I got some of my ideas.

For example, I always wanted to wear dresses or skirts although every female I knew typically wore pants. I did not play with my toys, Mama says, but put them in straight lines by size, color, and function. The precocious nature Mama found adorable soon became the source of our first disagreement. Tucked in the midst of holiday memories, the photos hold memories of frustration and fun. They remind me that I can look at anything from more than one point of view.

Each photo features me, an adorable three year-old, in a different pose beside a snowman. At a glance, the photos seem dark. I wear a dark blue coat with the hood tied snugly over my blonde hair. My light blue pants disappear into my dark blue boots. Below my boots, blades of dead grass poke through the trampled snow. Next to me, the snowman’s firmly wrapped scarf matches my coat. A street, darkened by melting snow, lies behind us in the first snapshot while a dark red house provides a backdrop for the other two. Even the afternoon light appears grayish and somber.

That dreary day, my stubborn opinions and perfectionism caused Mama and I to have our first (and second) arguments. I have sketchy memories of that morning, but I remember how unreasonable she seemed to my three year-old mind. After all, I reasoned that I always wore skirts, so why should I have to wear pants to play in the snow? She just wanted to spoil my fun by refusing to let me play in the snow without pants.

First, I tried to persuade and argue with her to get my way. When that plan failed, I resorted to every child’s secret weapon – whining. My persistence was notable but useless. “The long escapade with the dress lasted all morning, but I wasn’t going to budge and the snow was still there,” Mama told me later. By the time my baby sister took her afternoon nap, I gave up and wriggled into my jeans.

While the baby slept, we ventured out to the front yard and started making a snowman. Although she won our first fight, Mama still felt stressed from the ordeal and from trying to make a quick snowman with a small child in tow. “We had the baby monitor on the porch and I was trying so we could finish during naptime.” I tried to help make snowballs, but now I know my efforts slowed Mama more than they aided her. Nevertheless, we laughed and played, giggled and chatted. I remember that I enjoyed having fun with Mama and having her attention to myself instead of sharing with my sister.

Decorating the snowman caused the second argument Mama and I ever had. I watched and gave advice while she placed the eyes, nose, mouth, and scarf. Next, she tried to attach sticks for the arms. Mama still talks about our conversation, “Mama, that one’s too high.”

“Is that better?”

“No… they’re not the same.”

“Honey, I think they’re okay.”

“They’re not level!” At this, Mama began to show her stress.

“They’re fine!” Even at three, I knew God meant for things to be straight.

“But, Mama…” She did not let me finish.

“Abby! They are fine!” By her tone of voice, I knew to drop the subject immediately. The arms stayed uneven and she took three pictures of me with the snowman before we hurried inside to warm ourselves over hot (lukewarm for me) chocolate.

In recent years, Mama and I talked about the day we first fought. Like mine, her memories have two viewpoints. Immediately, she responded, “All I remember is those blasted arms!” Then she reminisced about the wonderful time we had playing in the snow and building the snowman. Looking at the album page, she commented, “If you’ll notice you do have pants on of the color of your choice and we did have a wonderful time. Little children don’t fake adorable smiles very well and yours is one of the best.”

In each photo, the snowman and I stand side by side. We make a cheerful pair with touches of color and smiling faces. The snowman has red yarn hair while my blonde bangs fall below my hood. The rainbow-striped gloves that dangle on his crooked, mismatched stick-arms contrast with the light yellow mittens that peek out from my coat sleeves. He has two faces, one for us to see from the house and one for people to see from the street. He has orange carrot-noses much longer and brighter than my own pinkish, button-shaped nose. Items that I cannot identify form his eyes and mouth, but both of his faces wear grins that match the one on my face, but mine is real.

Tonight was the last ESL class of this session, so I was busy administering post-tests for reading for some students, continuing lessons and reviewing with others, and giving class surveys (in Spanish) to all.  Ester was passing around Mexican candy to share as I was fielding questions about the survey.  I was in the middle of an explanation when Carlos turned to me and offered me a piece, “You want some candy?”

I normally prefer not to eat candy but I do attempt to live by certain values: Loyalty, integrity, worship, flexibility… and eating whatever I am offered when befriending people of other cultures.  I accepted the candy and thanked Carlos, noticing his mischievous grin as I finished my explanation holding the sweet.  I had just enough time to glance down and see the word “mango” on the wrapper before I was asked another question.

As I moved toward the dry erase board for a detailed differentiation between “housekeeper,” “housewife,” and “stay-at-home mom,” I opened the candy and noticed another word just below “mango”.  I quickly popped the round confection into my mouth, determined not to react negatively, and turned to write on the board.  My tastebuds were instantly assailed by a wave of intense, spicy flavor.  I bit into the chewy center and it was indeed mango-flavored.   The outside, however, was coated with enchilada spices!

This was not the worst thing I have ever eaten (century eggs, anyone?), it was not even the worst in the candy category, but I will not be buying them for myself anytime soon!

Oh, and I did manage to keep a pleasant expression and to complete the lesson while eating the candy.

Mango Enchilado Candy

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