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Linking up with Wordless Wednesday, BeThere2Day, and Sandee at Comedy Plus.
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Words for Wednesday was begun by Delores and has become a moveable feast of word or picture or music prompts to encourage us to write stories, poems, or whatever strikes our fancy.
This month, the prompts are being provided by Hilary Melton-Butcher and will appear on Elephant's Child's blog.
This week's prompts are:
- Banal
- Bows
- Canyon
- Dough
- Observant
And/or
- Fulminating
- Beady
- Margarine
- Suit
- Brazen
An additional prompt from Charlotte (MotherOwl) is to include Signal Green in your take on the prompts.
Have fun.
The child was not really looking forward to the dinner. BANAL discussions among grown-ups (at least to her they were, if she'd been old enough to know the word), children must be seen and not heard, it was a boring chore. Even though they had a daughter, she and the other girl would only be allowed to talk to each other before and after the meal.
Mom was very busy getting said meal together and setting the table. The good tablecloth had been ironed earlier in the week, the Signal Green one with the eyelet BOWS on it. The "company" dishes and serving plates that went so nicely with the tablecloth had been washed, too.
While she wasn't really told what the menu would be, she was OBSERVANT and realized there would be a large roast with vegetables. The home baked bread was always a given, she loved watching as mom kneaded the DOUGH, and they'd have real butter, of course. No MARGARINE for this family, her mother had tried to serve the stuff once and her father's vehement FULMINATING against it had precluded any such attempt again.
All three family members were dressed in what she called "Sunday clothes" and the other family arrived wearing the same, although she privately thought the man's SUIT wasn't as nice looking as her fathers' was and he had BEADY eyes she didn't trust. The mom looked a bit harried, rather like her mom did, but the men started in to talking and her father said, "What can I get for you to drink?" and served up something from the bottles she wasn't allowed to touch.
The mothers went to the kitchen, and the girls were each given a small cup of non-alcoholic apple juice and sent to "play nicely, dears."
They went to her room and played with her dolls and rather wished they lived close enough to play together more often, although neither said it. They were only together for the dinner because their fathers worked together, but otherwise they lived on opposite ends of town and probably wouldn't see each other often.
Mom had put the food on the table and called everyone in, and father said grace, and the adults started serving up their plates. The children would be served last and knew it and simply waited, mouths watering and tummies rumbling.
When her mom took the lid off the butter dish and started putting some on each plate for the home baked bread, the other little girl did the unthinkable and spoke without being spoken to. "Oh, real butter!" she exclaimed, her eyes wide with excitement.
The family had been to the Grand Canyon the year before, and she thought the silence which overcame the table at the moment was like a CANYON, only in sound not in sight and she wondered how she had dared be so BRAZEN. Both of the girl's parents turned red and her father glared at her. She shrank back timidly and quietly explained, "I meant it as a compliment." That didn't seem to help, but a moment later her father had tactfully asked another question about their work discussion, and the awkward moment passed.
After dinner, the girls went back to the bedroom to play and the guest told her about how they never had real butter at their house and how much she liked it. Not long after, the family left and it was time for bed. The dinner had been a little less boring than she'd expected.
(Based on a true story Grandma tells about a family her parents had dinner with from time to time.)
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Today is:
Alexandra Rose Day -- anniversary of the tradition started by Queen Alexandra on this day in 1912, in which roses and rose emblems were sold in London and the UK, with the money going to smaller charities that are not usually in the national spotlight; also by tradition, the Lord Mayor of London bought the first rose
Alexandra Rose Charities still exists, but uses other forms of fundraising and now supports healthy eating initiatives among lower income mothers and children
Armed Forces Day -- Azerbaijan
Barcode/UPC Day -- the first scanner, at Marsh's Supermarket in Troy, Ohio, scanned its first item, a pack of Wrigley's gum at 8:01am this day in 1974
Beautician's Day -- on a couple of websites, while other list other days; if yours puts the "beauty" in beautician, remember her next time you go have your do tended to
Holiday for the Shemsu of Heru -- Ancient Egyptian Calendar (date approximate)
Independence Day -- Madagascar[Fetin'ny Fahaleovantena]; Somalia
International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking -- UN
International Day in Support of Victims of Torture -- UN
National Canoe Day -- Canada
National Chocolate Pudding Day
St. Pelayo's Day (Patron of abandoned people, torture victims; Castro Urdiales, Spain; Torreira, Portugal)
Sunthorn Phu Day -- Thailand (celebration of the country's best-known Royal Poet)
Ziua Tricolorului -- Romania (Flag Day)
Birthdays Today:
Jennette McCurdy, 1992
Jason Schwartzman, 1980
Derek Jeter, 1974
Gretchen Wilson, 1973
Chris O'Donnell, 1970
Paul Thomas Anderson, 1970
Sean P. Hayes, 1970
Harriet Wheeler, 1963
Greg LeMond, 1961
Chris Isaak, 1956
Claudio Abbado, 1933
Eleanor Parker, 1922
Charlotte Zolotow, 1915
"Babe" Didrikson Zaharias, 1914
Colonel Tom Parker, 1909
Peter Lorre, 1904
Pearl S. Buck, 1892
Sir Robert Laird Borden, 1854
Lord Kelvin, 1824
Abner Doubleday, 1819
Arthur Middleton, 1742
Debuting/Premiering Today:
For Your Eyes Only(Film), 1981
"Absurd Person Singular"(Play), 1972
"A Hard Day's Night"(Album, US version, release), 1964
"The Valkyrie"(Opera, WWV 86B), 1870
Today in History:
Roman Emperor Julian is killed during the retreat from the Sassanid Empire; General Jovian is proclaimed Emperor by the troops on the battlefield, 363
The legendary Pied Piper leads 130 children out of Hamelin, German, 1284
Richard III is crowned king of England, 1483
Francisco Pizarro is assassinated in Lima, 1541
W. K. Clarkson patents the first bicycle, 1819
The Christian holiday of Christmas is declared a federal holiday in the United States, 1870
The Science Museum in London comes into existence as an independent entity, 1909
The United Nations Charter is signed in San Francisco, 1945
William Shockley files the original patent for the grown junction transistor, the first bipolar junction transistor, 1948
The Berlin Airlift begins, 1948
The Saint Lawrence Seaway opens, opening North America's Great Lakes to ocean-going ships, 1959
The Universal Product Code is scanned for the first time to sell a package of Wrigley's chewing gum at the Marsh Supermarket in Troy, Ohio, 1974
Indira Gandhi establishes emergency rule in India, 1975
The CN Tower, the world's tallest free-standing structure on land, is opened to general public, 1976*
Biologists J. Craig Venter and Francis S. Collins announced that their research groups had mapped the human genome, 2000
Wangdue Phodrang Dzong, the four thousand year-old ridge-top monastery in Bhutan catches fire and is destroyed; no relics were lost in the fire because the monastery was under renovation, 2012
Following the military coup in Thailand, people are warned that anyone calling for protest on social media will be prosecuted for sedition, 2014
The city of Falluja is freed from Islamic State control after a month-long campaign by Iraqi forces, 2016
Iceland’s presidential election is won by history professor Guðni Jóhannesson, 2016
The Panama Canal's third set of locks opens for commercial traffic, doubling the Canal’s capacity, 2016
A polio outbreak is confirmed in New Guinea by the World Health Organization, 18 years after it was declared free of the disease, 2018
More than 5,000 smuggled turtles are discovered in luggage at the Kuala Lumpur Airport, Malaysia, bound for India, 2019
Uruguayan President Luis Lacalle Pou declares a water emergency for Montevideo due to drought, 2023
*It is still the tallest in the Western Hemisphere
I do hope that poor little girl didn't get in trouble for her innocent exclamation. Another wonderful slice of life.
ReplyDeletePoor child probably felt very embarrassed, and most likely her parents too
ReplyDeleteWell it beats the usual Whiskers lol
ReplyDeleteHave a funtastic week mimi 👍
Sometimes the odd names are the most fun names. As for butter. Mom always had butter at their house and she always heard from others that the margarine and other "fake" butters were just chemicals so she never would touch those.
ReplyDeleteI would guess year after year of new cats and kittens, you would get tired of naming the same "tom, dick, and harry".
ReplyDeleteMost cats are named Tom, never heard of a Dick or Harry. Not cats. Pigeons maybe.
ReplyDeleteGod bless.
My husband, who has a love for all things rock-ish, would adore these choices for cat names.
ReplyDeleteLove the names. Might as well have fun.
ReplyDeleteLove the use of the prompts. Love it that it's part of your family and I remember those times. Seen and not heard was the rule at our home too.
Thank you for joining the Wordless Wednesday Blog Hop.
Have a fabulous Wordless Wednesday. Love and hugs. ♥
Lulu: "That's pretty funny! It took our Dada a minute to realize that 'Dwayne' can be another form of Rock!"
ReplyDeleteHa! That is some clever geology humor 😹
ReplyDeleteAre those kitten names? :) Nice story. I am glad kids get to talk at meals now.
ReplyDeleteFun sign and great use of prompts for story ~ hugs,
ReplyDeleteWishing you good health, love and laughter in your days,
A ShutterBug Explores,
aka (A Creative Harbor)
Love your story and agree the poor girl shouldn't be punished for speaking. I have never known a family where the children were seen but not heard and am very thankful for that.
ReplyDeleteinteresting kitty names.
Oh, I remember those seen and not heard days. We also had the, "don't ask for anything to eat or drink, if someone offers, you'll have water." - You make using all of those words look so easy and your story just flows. I really enjoy them.
ReplyDeleteHaha. Yes, sometimes the cats at our shelter get some pretty unique names, too. Awesome job with the prompts (as always), Mimi. Hugs!
ReplyDeleteThe kitten names are hilarious! Thanks to The Oceanside Animals for explaining Dwayne's inclusion as that went right over my head :D
ReplyDelete