Bud and I grew up together. He was raised like me, one of five. Like my home, there was plenty of food at mealtime but treats were rare. After school snacks were leftover biscuits, cornbread, or a grizzled flapjack left over from breakfast. Should a bag of cookies or chips miraculously materialize, ravenous kids would fall on it like a hoard of locusts. It brought new meaning to term, “first come, first served!”
Bud’s mom made cookies one evening. He ate all he was allowed before being dispatched to bed. Long after the house quieted, he lay sleepless, those cookies silently beckoning him from the cookie jar. He waited as long as he could stand it before slipping into the dark kitchen surreptitiously opening the cookie jar. Naturally, he was too wily to turn on the lights.
Slipping back into bed, he gobbled his bonanza under the covers. His appetite satiated, he laid back, finally ready for sleep. Moments later, Bud noticed a tingly, ticklish feeling on his hands. Upon investigation, he found them crawling with the remainder of the ants he hadn’t already consumed.
It was the same at the Swain house. I had some dainty little cousins. Their mother constantly worried that they wouldn’t eat. Invariably, Mother embarrassed me by remarking, “My kids eat anything I put in front of them!” Even a blind man could have inferred that by the smacking. It was hazardous to reach for the last piece of chicken. A slow kid might get a fork in the hand.
Anyway, I spent a few days with my non-eating cousin. Still smarting from Mother’s remark, I made up my mind to be a picky eater for the duration. Though it nearly killed me, I turned up my nose at every meal. I even spurned fried chicken and mashed potatoes and gravy, my favorites.
Aunt Bonnie tested me sorely when she emptied her freezer and offered up the remains of a carton of butter pecan ice cream before she tossing it. Along with her honestly snooty kids, I refused to consider it. I very nearly died of heartbreak as she rinsed the carton with hot water and ran the ice cream down the drain. I fear I would have lost my resolve and eaten out of the garbage if she’d left it in the carton in the outdoor garbage can.
By the time I got home, I was gaunt with hunger, having made a point to be pickier than her miniature children. Finally, my efforts were rewarded. The minute we got home, Aunt Bonnie claimed I was the pickiest eater she’d ever seen. I’d worried her to death!”
I was overjoyed! I rushed into the kitchen and snatched a dried out biscuit off Mother’s stove. I hid under the bed and ate it where Aunt Bonnie wouldn’t see me.

This is me and my cousin. We were about a year apart in age. Of course, I was the big one.
I don’t know how you lasted so long being picky, I mean, passing up fried chicken with mashed potatoes and gravy? You were stronger then me my friend. Glad the picky is over though and hopefully you’ve enjoyed your fair share of those mashed potatoes and gravy along with some amazing southern fried chicken.
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Don’t worry. I haven’t been deprived lately.
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That’s a good thing. I would think it almost a crime to pass up on fried chicken and mashed potatoes and gravy. Yummmmmm.
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I agree
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Funny stories. Poor Bud! And poor you being picky! LOL!!
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Don’t worry. I’m better now.
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This was so damn funny and now I am missing mum’s homemade treats like her caramel slice, or melting moments biscuits and she made good stick jaw toffee as well
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Good. Being picky nearly killed me.
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Any treats at home were home made. My mother made something each weekend (cake, pie, cookies, etc.) and we were lucky if it lasted until Tuesday. My brothers are much older than me and were out of the house so it was just us and visitors.
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I was the second of five. Our desserts didn’t last till bedtime. The cardinal rule was the last serving was saved for Daddy or went in his lunch.
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I would never have considered trying to be picky. I love food much too much!
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It was very brief pickiness.
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Your true stories are hilarious!
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I was so determined to be picky. My success was total but sadly short-lived.
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