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My grandson on his birthday...apparently his taste buds
are on his face and the top of his head.
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That Tastes Sooo Good
By James L. Davis
I
think I must have defective taste buds because I just don’t seem to get the
enjoyment out of my food the way other people do. If they aren't defective they must be
lazy, because they don’t give me near as much excitement as other people’s
taste buds must give them when sitting down to a meal.
While
I’m not sure whether a taste bud can be lazy or not, I am sure that some people
get a whole lot more out of their dining experience than I ever have. I enjoy sitting down to a meal as much as the
next person (as long as I’m not the one cooking) and my bulging belly can
attest to the fact, but eating is just something I do two or three times a day
between events in my life, it is not an event in and of itself.
Which
is why I think my taste buds must be defective or lazy, because for some people
eating is not only an event, it is The Event of the day.
You
know it is The Event because they will spend long hours planning out what they
are going to eat next, where they are going to eat it and how much they hope to
eat. These are the people that you will
never, ever see grabbing a bite to eat from beneath a convenience store warmer. Their taste buds might actually strangle them
if they were to put so little thought into their meal.
Another way you can spot people who consider a
meal as The Event is by the way they react to eating. They do all kinds of crazy things that well,
frankly, leave me a little embarrassed if I happen to be in the same room as
they are when they are dining.
One of my sons for instance must have superhuman taste buds because we can eat
the same thing and our responses will be totally different. To me it’s a meal, perhaps even a great meal,
to him it approaches an almost out of body experience. Just recently we took my parents out to
dinner and on our way into town the children asked, because it is their way,
where we would be eating. Children ask
this question just so they will have something to whine about for the remainder
of the trip.
On
this trip however, I circumvented the whining by telling my children that we
were going out for steak. Suddenly all
of their preparation for whining was transformed into praise for the Great and
Wise Father, the Father of All Time, the Father Who Was Taking His Children Out
for Steak.
When
we arrived at the steak house we took our seats, placed our orders for steak
and enjoyed each others company while we waited for our food. All was well and good right up until the food
arrived and then something strange started to happen to my son.
He
started to make noises when he ate.
Strange, moaning noises that frightened me.
“What’s
wrong with you?” I asked.
“It’s
so good,” was his response.
It
was a good steak, but I wasn't ready to get quite that vocal about it. Apparently he was and by the end of the meal
his looks and moans of happiness at the meal he had eaten left me equally
disturbed and puzzled. Disturbed because
of the looks the waiter and other diners were giving our table and puzzled
because I have never eaten a meal that gave me as much joy as a steak dinner
had given my son.
The puzzling thing is that while my taste buds are in my mouth, I believe my son's must be in his stomach, because nothing he puts in his mouth actually stays there long enough to get such an enthusiastic reaction.
Upon
investigation I discovered that my son is not alone in being a Meal Time
Moaner, apparently there are a large number of them living productive lives in
society, except of course when they are eating.
When they are eating they are a disturbance to society.
In
my own family my youngest son is not the only Meal Time Moaner. My middle son suffered from the same ailment,
but I am happy to report that he is on the road to recovery.
He
would moan whenever he chewed his food, a long, drawn out moan that would
stretch from the first to the last chew and sound like either a muffled attempt
to communicate or the soft moaning of a dying cow, or both.
In
the case of my middle son he was not even aware that he was making any noise at
all and was convinced we were hearing things when we asked him to stop. It turns out we were hearing things. The
things were coming out of his mouth in the form of moans. Eventually he was able to break himself of
the habit without any form of shock therapy, although I had offered to provide
it if he thought it might be helpful.
Of
course, while he no longer moans he does apparently still possess overactive
taste buds. He still has them and not being able to express his pleasure at
having overactive taste buds results in a tendency toward violence. I know this because while my middle son no
longer moans while eating, he does threaten violence if anyone attempts to
steal his food.
Which in the end makes me
grateful for my defective taste buds.
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