That's my girl, large and in-charge. Okay, teensy-weensy and in charge.

Gunn ,'Just Rewards (2)'


Natter 73: Chuck Norris only wishes he could Natter  

Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, butt kicking, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.


Callaluna - Jan 19, 2015 1:06:29 pm PST #16150 of 30000

My mom has been transferred to a larger hospital and admitted. She's seen the surgeon, and they've decided to wait 24 hours to see if the blockage can be cleared with the pump. I can't imagine that's pleasant for her, since the tube for the pump goes down her throat. I still haven't been able to speak with her directly. Hopefully tomorrow. I suppose I should get some sleep, so goodnight!


Susan W. - Jan 19, 2015 1:23:00 pm PST #16151 of 30000
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

Health~ma to your mom, Callaluna!

Y'all have no idea how reassuring it is to me to see that I'm not the only one whose child is/was slow to outgrow a finicky stage. Annabel at 10 is still picky, though at least she's now more willing to at least take a bite or two of a new thing. And now that she's in massive growth spurt mode, she seems to naturally be choosing more protein. Sure, much of it is still lunch meat, peanut butter, and yogurt, but I'm hoping her new taste for things like orange chicken and chicken-fried steak will be a gateway to somewhat less fried and sugary dishes.


Ginger - Jan 19, 2015 1:24:54 pm PST #16152 of 30000
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

I hope the pump works and quickly, Callaluna.

I bought a foam mattress topper online, and it arrived rolled-up and vacuum-squished into the size of a watermelon. The instructions say to open it on a flat surface and let it air for 24 hours. This presented a problem, since the only flat surface the size of the bed is the bed. I cleared off the table and cut off the plastic. Expanding, it looked unnervingly like something alive. Now it's on my oval table with the foam fingers facing up and a foot or so hanging off the table. It looks like a prehistoric albino giant hedgehog.


Connie Neil - Jan 19, 2015 1:25:51 pm PST #16153 of 30000
brillig

So that's how the triffids are spreading.


beth b - Jan 19, 2015 1:25:54 pm PST #16154 of 30000
oh joy! Oh Rapture ! I have a brain!

My parents were from the eat everything on your plate school. I did. Guess who is overweight. My sister( a year younger) would sit for hours and not eat. By the time my youngest sister was around, it was try everything on your plate. I like that idea. because tastes change, and you learn to deal with stuff you don't like on your plate.

best to your mom 'luna


Steph L. - Jan 19, 2015 1:27:44 pm PST #16155 of 30000
this mess was yours / now your mess is mine

I didn't outgrow a lot of my picky eating until I was in college, and then in my 30s I was willing to try things I had never tried before (Indian food, Thai food, sushi, any Chinese other than sweet and sour chicken all scared me, which is funny to me now since they're all favorites). Part of it is that my tastes changed, and part of it is that I learned ways to prepare food that I previously didn't like in other forms.


Ginger - Jan 19, 2015 1:38:53 pm PST #16156 of 30000
"It didn't taste good. It tasted soooo horrible. It tasted like....a vodka martini." - Matilda

I would always try anything and liked almost everything. This was not good for my figure, but I certainly enjoyed food. The current chemo makes everything taste weird. Sweets taste metallic; bitter things taste more bitter; most things are too salty; and things like yogurt and sour cream taste like they've gone off. Whine, whine, whine. On the other hand, I've lost 25 pounds.


Matt the Bruins fan - Jan 19, 2015 1:40:51 pm PST #16157 of 30000
Oh honey, the mentally unwell people have been in the fanbase since Game Changers was Stucky fanfiction on the internet. The calls have been coming from inside the house the whole time!

I was a fairly picky eater as a kid, but some of that was texture issues, some was my mom's no-fresh-vegetables-when I-can-reheat-them-out-of-a-can approach, and some was things like broccoli and squash that taste great now but were awful to my factory settings tastebuds.

Once some relatives introduced me to Chinese food and I started trying more exotic places on vacations, I found that I liked a wide variety of foods.

I am informed that the chicken gizzards were not delicious. (I think it was at a Japanese place, the kind that specializes in Japanese bar snacks.)

Ah, I got a whole table full of Minnesotans to try grilled chicken livers by ordering that as an appetizer at such a place and letting them smell how much better it was than their own choices.


Susan W. - Jan 19, 2015 1:49:33 pm PST #16158 of 30000
Good Trouble and Righteous Fights

I was a finicky kid who grew up pretty adventurous in terms of flavors and cuisines, but with a few remaining no-go foods and textures. I've learned to like fish if it's very fresh, especially the meatier-textured varieties like trout and salmon, but I still don't like sushi because of the squishy raw fish texture. Zucchini and eggplant are also on my too squishy to bear list, and brussels sprouts have to be cooked just so. And I've never acquired a taste for beer.


Connie Neil - Jan 19, 2015 1:50:40 pm PST #16159 of 30000
brillig

Hubby adored chicken hearts. He'd get skewers-full at the Brazilian place. I couldn't eat them because it was such a blatant display of how many chickens died for my dinner. I have no trouble with the food chain and where my meat comes from, I've been in small-scale meat processing places. But a skewer of 30 chicken hearts is a bit . . . oppressive. Eating bits of grilled chicken breast lets me spread the guilt out among lots of people.

Plus I don't trust the texture. Texture and bitter are my no-gos with food.