OOPS
We were shopping with our mom, Sybil at a large grocery store in Connellsville, Pennsylvania. We were walking along side of the shopping cart occasionally asking for something that we saw like all kids do. Kathy, my younger sister was reading the products as she walked along; “Toothpaste, Kleenex…” she paused and then asked, “Mom, what are tampoons?”
We were shopping with our mom, Sybil at a large grocery store in Connellsville, Pennsylvania. We were walking along side of the shopping cart occasionally asking for something that we saw like all kids do. Kathy, my younger sister was reading the products as she walked along; “Toothpaste, Kleenex…” she paused and then asked, “Mom, what are tampoons?”
My mom stopped, leaned over, and
hissed into her ear, “S-h-h-h, I’ll tell you later.”
We finished our shopping. Kathy
was quiet. She stopped reading the products and seemed contemplative. She said
nothing more. Mom paid for the groceries and pushed the cart to the car. We
helped to unload the cart and then climb into the car for the drive home.
Mom hadn’t much more than exited
the parking lot when Kathy asked, “Mom, what are tampoons?”
Mom’s answer was the same,
“Kathy, not now, I said I would tell you later.”
I never knew what mom told Kathy
later, but I am sure that Kathy reminded Mom to tell her what tampoons were.
***<>***
My first child Amanda went
through a stage where she became a vacuum cleaner and picked up anything that
was on the floor; lint, a piece of thread, a bit of paper. She would carry
whatever she had found and carry it to the nearest adult and hand it to them.
She was toddling around in her diaper looking for things to collect.
Most of us had gotten into the
habit of holding out our hand and take it without looking. One day when we were at my parent’s house,
Amanda had been picking up things and giving them to Kathy. For some reason she
had singled Kathy out as the recipient of her gifts.
Amanda toddled over to Kathy and
held out her find for Kathy to take. Kathy was talking and instinctively held
out her hand. When Amanda deposited her “treasure”, Kathy thought it felt
heavier than what Amanda had been finding.
Kathy stopped talking and looked
in her hand. It was a turd. The bowel movement must have fallen out of her
diaper and she picked it up off the floor, carried it across the room, and
handed it to her aunt Kathy.
Now my sister, Kathy always
looks before she accepts anything from a kid.
***<>***
The next story involved my
daughter Amanda again. She was a bit older and we went to my parent’s house for
lunch after church. Amanda was carrying around her small purse. She opened it
and took out a little white tube. She was rubbing it across her lips.
My wife Cindy being curious asked,
“What do you have Amanda?”
“Iptick.” (Lipstick.)
My wife said, “Thank goodness
she didn’t take it out in church.” The “Iptick” was a tampon in a plastic holder.
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