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Moms Dictionary --- AIRPLANE: What Mom impersonates to get a 1-yr.-old to eat strained beets. ? ALIEN: What Mom would suspect had invaded her house if she spotted a child-sized creature cleaning up after itself. ? APPLE: Nutritious lunch-time dessert which children will trade for cupcakes. ? BABY: 1) Dad, when he gets a cold. 2) Mom's youngest child, even if he's 42. ? BATHROOM: a room used by the entire family, believed by all (except Mom) to be self-cleaning. ? "BECAUSE": Mom's reason for having kids do things which can't be explained logically. ? BED AND BREAKFAST:
Two things the kids will never make for themselves. ? CARPET: Expensive floor covering used to catch spills and clean mud off shoes. ? CAR POOL: Complicated system of transportation where Mom always winds up going the furthest, with the biggest bunch of kids, who have had the most sugar. ? CHINA: Legendary nation reportedly populated by children who love leftover vegetables. ? COOK: 1) Act of preparing food for consumption. 2) Mom's other name. ? COUCH POTATO: What Mom finds under the sofa cushions after the kids eat dinner. ? DATE: Infrequent outings with Dad where Mom can enjoy worrying about the kids in a different setting. ? DRINKING GLASS: Any carton
or bottle left open in the fridge. ? DUST: Insidious interloping particles of evil that turn a home into a battle zone. ? DUST RAGS: See "DAD'S UNDERWEAR." ? EAR: A place where kids store dirt. ? EAT: What kids do between meals, but not at them. ? EMPTY NEST: See "WISHFUL THINKING." ? ENERGY: Element of vitality kids always have an oversupply of until asked to do something. ? "EXCUSE ME": One of Mom's favorite phrases, reportedly used in past times by children. ? EYE: The highly susceptible optic nerve which, according to Mom, can be "put out" by anything from a suction-arrow to a carelessly handled
butter knife. ? FABLE: A story told by a teenager arriving home after curfew. ? FOOD: The response Mom usually gives in answer to the question "What's for dinner tonight?" See "SARCASM" ? FROZEN: 1) A type of food. 2) How hell will be when Mom lets her daughter date an older guy with a motorcycle. ? GARBAGE: A collection of refuse items, the taking out of which Mom assigns to a different family member each week, then winds up doing herself. ? GENIUSES: Amazingly, all of Mom's kids. ? GUM: Adhesive for the hair. ? HAMPER: A wicker container with a lid, usually surrounded by, but not containing, dirty clothing. ? HANDI-WIPES:
Pants, shirt-sleeves, drapes, etc. ? HANDS: Body appendages which must be scrubbed raw with volcanic soap and sterilized in boiling water immediately prior to consumption of the evening meal. ? HINDSIGHT: What Mom experiences from changing too many diapers. ? HOMEMADE BREAD: An object of fiction like the Fountain of Youth and the Golden Fleece. ? ICE: Cubes of frozen water which would be found in small plastic tray if kids or husbands ever filled the darn things instead of putting them back in the freezer empty. ? INSIDE: That place that will suddenly look attractive to kids once Mom has spent a minimum of half an hour getting them ready to go outside. ? "I SAID SO":
Reason enough, according to Mom. ? JACKPOT: When all the kids stay at friends' homes for the night. ? JEANS: Which, according to kids, are appropriate for just about any occasion, including church and funerals. ? JOY RIDE: Going somewhere without the kids. ? JUNK: Dad's stuff. ? KETCHUP: The sea of tomato-based goop kids use to drown the dish that Mom spent hours cooking and years perfecting to get the seasoning just right. ? KISS: Mom medicine. ? LAKE: Large body of water into which a kid will jump should his friends do so. ? LEMONADE STAND: Complicated business venture where Mom buys powdered mix, sugar, lemons, and paper cups, and
sets up a table, chairs, pitchers and ice for kids who sit there for three to six minutes and net a profit of 15 cents. ? LIE: An "exaggeration" Mom uses to transform her child's papier-mache volcano science project into a Nobel Prize-winning experiment and a full-ride scholarship to Harvard. ? LOSERS: See "Kids' Friends" ? MAKEUP: Lipstick, eyeliner, blush, etc. which ironically make Mom look better while making her young daughter look "like a tramp." ? MAYBE: No. ? MILK: A healthful beverage which kids will gladly drink once it's turned into junk food by the addition of sugar and cocoa. ? "MOMMMMMMM!": The cry of a child on another
floor who wants something. ? MUSH: 1) What a kid loves to do with a plateful of food. 2) Main element of Mom's favorite movies. ? NAILS: A hard covering on the end of the finger, which Mom can never have a full set of due to pitching for batting practice, opening stubborn modeling clay lids and removing heat ducts to retrieve army men and/or doll clothing. ? PANIC: What a mother goes through when the darn wind-up swing stops. ? OCEAN: What the bathroom floor looks like after bath night for kids, assorted pets, two or three full-sized towels and several dozen toy boats, cars and animals. ? OPEN: The position of children's mouths when they eat in front of company. ? OVERSTUFFED
RECLINER: Mom's nickname for Dad. ? PENITENTIARY: Where children who don't eat their vegetables or clean their rooms eventually end up, according to Mom. ? PETS: Small, furry creatures which follow kids home so Mom will have someone else to clean up after. ? PIANO: A large, expensive musical instrument which, after thousands of dollars worth of lessons and constant harping by Mom, kids will refuse to play in front of company. ? PURSE: A handbag in which Mom carries the checkbook and keys she can never find because they're buried under tissues, gum wrappers, a plastic container full of cereal, toys from a fast-food restaurant, a teddy bear, a football, wallpaper samples, a grocery list and several outdated coupons. ? QUIET:
A state of household serenity which occurs before the birth of the first child and occurs again after the last child has left for college. ? RAINCOAT: Article of clothing Mom bought to keep a child dry and warm, rendered ineffective because it's in the bottom of a locker stuffed in a book bag or because the child refuses to wear "the geeky thing." ? REFRIGERATOR: Combination art gallery and air-conditioner for the kitchen. ? ROOM MOTHER: A position of great honor and responsibility bestowed on a mom who inadvertently misses a PTA meeting. ? SCHOOL PLAY: Sadistic ritual in which adults derive pleasure from watching offspring stumble through coarse reenactments of famous historic events. ? SCREAMING:
Home P.A. system. ? SNOWSUITS: Warm, padded outer garments that, when completely zipped and snapped performs two important functions: Protecting children from the cold and reminding them that they have to go to the bathroom. ? SOAP: A cleaning agent Mom puts on the sink on the off-chance one of her kids will accidentally grab it while reaching for the towel. ? SPIT: All-purpose cleaning fluid especially good on kids' faces. ? SPOILED ROTTEN: What the kids become after as little as 15 minutes with Grandma. ? SWEATER: Magically charmed article of clothing that can ward away colds, flu and even pneumonia. ? SUNDAY BEST: Attractive, expensive children's clothing made of a fabric
which attracts melted chocolate and grape juice. ? TEACHER CONFERENCE: A meeting between Mom and that person who has yet to understand her child's "special needs." ? TERRIBLE TWO'S: Having both kids at home all summer. ? "THAT WAY": How kids shouldn't look at moms if they know what's good for them. Also applies to how they talk. ? TOWELS: See "FLOOR COVERINGS" ? TRAMP: A woman with two kids and no stretch marks. ? TROUBLE: Area of nonspecific space a child can always be sure to be in. ? UMPTEENTH: Highly conservative estimate of the number of times Mom must instruct her offspring to do something before it actually gets done. ? UNDERWEAR:
An article of clothing, the cleanliness of which ensures the wearer will never have an accident. ? UTOPIA: See "BUBBLE BATH" ? VACATION: Where you take the family to get away from it all, only to find it there, too. ? VITAMINS: Tiny facsimiles of cave people Mom forces you to swallow each morning as part of her sinister plot to have you grow up to be "Just like Daddy." ? WALLS: Complete set of drawing paper for kids that comes with every room. ? WASHING MACHINE: Household appliance used to clean blue jeans, permanent ink markers, loose change, homework, tissues and wads of gum. ? "WHEN YOUR FATHER GETS HOME": Standard measurement of time between
crime and punishment. ? XOXOXOXO: Mom salutation guaranteed to make the already embarrassing note in a kid's lunch box even more mortifying. ? XYLOPHONE: Small toy musical instrument often given as gifts to children who show their appreciation by playing the stupid thing constantly, over and over, all day long! See also "DRUMS" ? YARD SALE: Heart-wrenching emotional process wherein Mom plans to sell kid's outdated toys and clothing that she decides at the last minute are treasured mementos she can't bear to part with. ? "YIPPEE!": What Mom would jump up and shout if the school year was changed to 12 months. See also "YAHOO!" ? ZILLION: Amount of times Mom must have
gone to the supermarket already this week. ? ZUCCHINI: Vegetable which can be baked, boiled, fried or steamed before kids refuse to eat it. ****** ? Kevin Rayner Oak Tree Church of Christ Rochester, MN . . . . .
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| << January05, 2006 - Noah's Ark |
January08, 2006 - Keep Smiling >> |
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