1. For my husband, navigating our refrigerator is like
driving on a limited-sight distance road. If he can’t see it on the top shelf or in
front, it might as well not be there. So
when he saw this container right there on the top shelf in plain view, he
gladly popped one in his mouth.
Then he
said, “These are NOT cheese cubes. Very
disappointing.”
raw butternut squash ≠ cheese cube |
2. Here is another case where things are not as they
seem. This box does not, in fact,
contain curiously strong mints.
Sorry, but I am not telling you where I keep this box. |
3. And here is our latest in alternate uses of
vegetables.
Younger Daughter just had
her wisdom teeth out. She’s suffering
through the recovery with painkillers, homemade chicken soup, and chocolate
pudding as her allies.
The oral surgeon promises kids, “After your surgery, you can
have anything you want to eat!” This is
an unfair and grossly misleading statement. The kids imagine pizza, nachos,
ho-hos and all manner of junk food. He
neglects to tell them that the only thing they will want to eat is soft
mush. (A note of caution: Don’t eat
anything with seeds following oral surgery!)
We devised this method of applying ice to the jaw.
Ingredients:
2 bags of frozen peas
1 long-sleeved shirt
2 longish twisties
Insert a bag of frozen peas (do not defrost) in the upper
sleeve of the shirt. Apply a twistie
just below the bag of peas to stop it from sliding down the sleeve. Repeat in the other shirt sleeve. Put the shirt over the patient’s back, with
the sleeves hanging down in front. The
frozen peas should end up right next to the patient’s jaw on either side. After twenty minutes, put the peas back in
the freezer for 20 minutes. Repeat until
it is time to return to school, three or four days later.
After the first time around, you may have to break up the
re-frozen peas by throwing the bags on the table a few times. This in itself is cathartic and improves the
mental health of the caregiver.
Swelling reduction technology |
* * * * *
Our dental hygienist (also known in our household as the high priestess Barb) gave me this idea.
I think she might have said to use a long sock, which probably works even
better than a shirt.
Despite being drugged up, Younger Daughter was paying
attention when I put this together. The
next day she rigged it up for herself, only instead of grabbing the unopened
bags of peas out of the freezer, she grabbed a partially used bag of peas, and
an almost depleted bag of green beans.
As she applied it to her jaw, the bags came open a little bit, and a few
peas got ground into my shirt. It turned
my white shirt (not the one in the photo) a little bit green. But
that’s okay, as long as my sweet little girl’s pain is reduced.
In conclusion, I leave you with these wishes for the
day:
May your cheese cubes be clearly
labeled.
May you find dark chocolate in
delightful places.
May your jaw function
normally.
6 comments:
I remember having my wisdom teeth out and, in my infinite teenage wisdom, thinking that I would be perfectly fine to go to the lake the next day with my fiancé and some friends. Let's just say it was a good thing I wasn't driving. Hope your girl heals quickly!
I put ice bags in the toes of two socks, used a binder clip to hold the ends together, and put the contraption on my sons head, with the icy toes dangling down in the appropriate area. We are the mothers of improvisation!
Oh, that SLAYED me about the cheese cubes!
Hope your daughter's mouth is back to normal fast.
I keep chocolate bars in the tumble drier, so a sneaky son can't find them - he'd eat the lot!
Love the stuffed sleeves idea although I hope I won't have use for it! Hope she's recovering well.
I made salsa with leftover cherry pie filling this morning rather than crushed tomatoes. That's what I get for not properly labeling things in my freezer.
I don't remember what I did after having my wisdom teeth taken out, but I'm pretty sure it wasn't nearly as ingenious as your shirt contraption!
I still remember the time my future husband's roommate thought he was grabbing a caramel off the counter. It was goat cheese.
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