Gingersnaps
This is one of my family’s favorite stories to tell, but we all have a
slightly different take on it. This is my take...
My mom
was a baker. We thought she started “Karen’s Cakes” because she was such a good
baker. We give her credit for all of the delicious family recipes that became
tradition, even though she got most of them from my grandma. When we were
young, my parents told us that my mom didn’t know how to cook until she got
married. Once she got married, she learned to cook, and when she had kids, her
cooking became as dynamite as her baking!
Becky
is a baker also. She always has been. She started baking at a very young age and
while Greg was making his famous bologna bowls for everyone, Becky was making
cookies. She has always been good at baking, and when kids in grade school volunteered
their mothers to make cakes and cookies for bake sales, Becky volunteered
herself.
Like
everyone who does something, Becky tried different recipes and made mistakes
early on. The biggest mistake she made, though, was letting her big brothers
and sister taste her I-accidentally-used-confectioner-sugar-intstead-of-granulated-sugar
cookies before she tasted them herself and noticed her mistake. Being the
youngest of four kids, Becky definitely got the brunt of the teasing. We were
told not to dish it if we couldn’t take it, and we were ready for Becky to
tease back… she just chose not to.
At
dinner that evening, the banter continued. Becky reached her breaking point and
got up from the table, bumping her table with the chair as she shoved it in.
She hurried down the hall, and when she was nearly to her room, I made one more
jerky comment.
Sweet,
adorable seven-year-old Becky turned around, pointed her middle finger up to
the sky, and yelled, “#$*@ YOU!!!” before finishing her run and slamming the
door behind her.
We all
started, slack jawed at my dad, waiting to see what he would do. His eyes were
nearly bugging out of his head, and then he gave a little look as if to say, “You
guys deserved that,” and my mom gently left the table and headed toward Becky’s
room.
We may
have thought Becky was getting in trouble, but we knew it was really us who
deserved a lecture. What I found out years later was that Becky was not getting
lectured. Mom was offering comfort regarding Becky’s baking mistake and
provided positive encouragement to help her get past the mean comments from her
siblings.
Fortunately
for the rest of us, Becky didn’t give up on baking, and once she used the very
colorful language that she learned from the girl across the street, she was
much more effective at standing up for herself. Wasn’t that just like Mom,
though? Don’t get mad… Understand.
Those are good words to live by! See you tonight at 7pm at Udi's:)
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