Ode
to Bisquick and Other Thanks
By Tiffany Lewis
Amid
the hustle and bustle and bursting waistlines last Thursday, we failed to
honor a long-standing Thanksgiving tradition of going around the table and
saying what we’re thankful for. My grateful list is ever-evolving and a
mile long. So here it is, a young mother’s list of thanks:
- “Kissing it all better” – Whoever thought of this ouchie-soothing technique deserves the Nobel Peace-in-my-house
Prize.
- Bisquick – Surprised it made No. 2? Well, it took me four
years of marriage to discover it, and now I can’t live without it. In
one week I used Bisquick to make chicken pot
pie, pizza, chicken fingers, and pancakes. There’s nothing this mix can’t
do. This year we’re thinking of using it to flock our Christmas tree.
- Disposable diapers – worth every cent and every square inch in the
landfill.
- Stain stick, air freshener (for Chernobyl diapers), and double heavy-duty carpet cleaner.
- Caldecott Medal-winning books – You can’t appreciate them until you’ve read
some real children’s doozies, like What Made
the Snowman Smile, over and over and over and over again.
- And on the subject of books, all the good, uplifting books
I’ve read this year, Dr. Seuss excluded, that have allowed me to stretch
my mind and return to my own life with fresh outlook.
- Book of Mormon stories – Both the song, which includes a lot of fist
pounding, and the actual stories, which include a lot of Lamanite-pounding.
Nothing piques a child’s interest more than a heavily muscled missionary
chopping off a few arms. We’re hoping our children’s love for the scriptures
will morph into something less carnal, but for now we’re just grateful
they’ll listen.
- Naps! – A mother’s saving grace.
- Fruit snacks – guaranteed to get your child to follow you out of the
most tempting toy aisle.
- All of life’s modern household appliances – dishwashers, washing machines, microwaves, toasters,
and pacifiers.
- Double jogging strollers, snap-in car seats, washable
bibs, onesies, bouncy seats, board books, disposable
wipes, Desitin, sippy
cups, Play-Doh (as long as I’m not scraping
it out of the carpet), and jumbo-size boxes of Goldfish crackers.
- And on the subject of food, bananas (we average about
20 a week) and Cheerios, too.
- Cheap long-distance calling cards, which allow me to call my mom daily with questions
about tantrums, biting, sleeping issues, and whether that large gash on
my son’s forehead qualifies for stitches.
- Real-metal Tonka trucks – inspired by and for young boys everywhere.
- A yard with grass, a fence, and flowers – I don’t have one, but someday I will. This
is preemptive gratitude.
- Really great parks with shady trees, a generous sandbox
full of toys, long-chained swings, squirrels, and minimum plastic playscape.
- That magical 18-month-old moment when your child
goes to nursery … or at least that magical moment when your child lets
you leave nursery without going into hysterics.
- Itsy spiders, wheeled buses, twinkling stars, and all
the other children’s songs ever written – which have saved me in many shopping lines and
traffic jams. For those songs unwritten, I thank
my parents for giving me the creativity to come up with my own tunes about
string cheese, castles, jeeps, cement trucks, and candy. (Sample verse:
“Candy, candy, it tastes really dandy, but it’ll rot your teeth – blech!”)
- Hardy houseplants (and husbands) that can withstand severe bouts of neglect.
- And, of course, I thank the Lord for blessing me with
two wonderful boys who keep my life crazy, messy, loud and full of laughter.
I’m
also grateful I didn’t share this list on Thanksgiving. We’d still be eating
our way through the turkey.