When a mother is sick, sometimes the lesson learned is not the one originally intended. |
“Mommy?” The whisper exploded in my aching head. I groaned and cracked open an eye. My daughter, still in her pajamas, was standing over me. “What do you need, sweetie?” I croaked. “You still sick?” she asked. I weighed my options. Tell the truth and have her “help” me when my flu-addled body begged to sleep, or lie and have her pester me until I had to drag my sick self out of bed? Thankfully, there was a third option: Avoidance. “What do you need, sweetie?” I repeated. “I'm hungry,” she answered. I looked at the alarm clock. Well past lunchtime. So much for avoidance. Every joint in my body creaked as I shuffled into the kitchen. Having been sick for the entire week meant that the pickings were slim. Even my old standby of a peanut butter sandwich was out of the question with no bread anywhere in the house. I slumped into a chair at the kitchen table and tried to think. “There's popcorn,” my daughter suggested with that little bit of hope in her voice. “Can you make it if I watch?” I groaned as I lowered my head into my arms. “Please, Mommy,” she said, “I am in second grade.” She tore open the plastic wrap and read the directions out loud. I heard the microwave open and the beeps as she set the controls. “Mommy, are you paying attention?” she asked at one point. “I'm watching you,” I lied. The smoke alarm jolted me awake a few minutes later. After the smoldering mess had been cleared, I handed my daughter the phone. “Life lesson for today,” I said. “You get to learn how to order pizza.” Word count: 291 |