It all started with
science. Weird science, yes, but science. Our physics-wielding friend Dave was
trying to "educate" his children on Easter with a little good-natured Peep jousting. I could have been mildly amused and logged it away for future
use, but who sees a video of Peeps jousting and doesn't want to immediately do
that?! I choose to believe no one. Let me believe it, it makes me feel better.
Anyway, we fought our poor
remaining two Peeps in a death match that very day.
We were hooked. I even went
to the grocery store for more.
"We're sold out of Peeps."
What? Have those words
EVER been uttered? One thing I am sure of every year is the Technicolor rows of
unwanted Peeps, languishing on clearance shelves until they petrify and get
tossed. Did the secret get out about the jousting? I vowed to keep looking.
The next day I sought out
potential jousting champions at the behemoth store down the road. You know the
one. The one that rhymes with "ball cart". NO PEEPS! Seriously? The day after
Easter and none? It was just weird.
Not to be deterred, I tried
one more large chain store that sounds much better when pronounced in a French
accent. Props to my Peep Scout Tara for the heads up.
Finally. PEEPS! Glorious
rows of Peeps. They were all there. I snagged a pack in every color.
Side note-food should
never be these colors!
Here is where I was
probably put on some grocery store watch list.
I hauled all my peeps
(still talking about the sugar birds, not my family and friends) to the
register. The lovely woman behind the counter said, "looks like someone at
your house really likes Peeps."
As my good friend Amy
said, "You should have just said yes. In the immortal Ghostbusters
tradition-'When someone asks you if you are a god, you say yes!' So you should
have said yes."
But I didn't. I looked
this sweet, unassuming woman in the face and said, "Oh, no. We're going to
fight them."
Crickets.
Of course I kept going.
"Like jousting, in a
sort-of microwave Thunderdome? No?"
Really getting a weird
look now.
"You put toothpicks
under their wings and face them at each other then turn on the microwave. As
they heat up, they puff up and lunge at each other."
Finally, a wave of
understanding crossed her face and she said, "Oh! You have boys."
Sigh...
Could have let it go, but
no.
"Nope, three
girls."
I lost her for good there. She didn't talk much after that.
So later, back at the
house...
"When is it time for
Peep jousting?"
"You said we would do
Peep jousting!"
"Can we start Peep
jousting?"
The natives were getting
restless, obviously. They had already called colors and were grabbing paper.
The oldest was coordinating a score chart and the jockeying for positions had
begun.
The youngest loudly
claimed, “I’m the pink one! I’m the pink one! I’m the pink one!”
I wonder what color she
wanted.
The middle child just said
simply, “I’m purple.”
The youngest was
impatient: “Let’s do this thing!”
The oldest was the judge
in the first match as the buttons were pushed, the door closed and the joust
begun.
The youngest was a
trash-talker. “I am gonna DOM-i-nate!”
The middle child said,
“No.”
I uttered (in my best Vince McMahon voice) "Two Peeps enter, one Peep leaves! Let's get ready to rumbuuuuuule."
Turns out, the youngest did
dominate. “Ha! I stabbed you first!”
Maybe this was gratuitous
violence.
She moved on to face the
challenger-the eldest. This is when they discovered the inherent tragedy of
Peep jousting. The champion never made it to round two.
They queued up their next
contenders and started off. “You are going down!” taunted the oldest.
“If I stab, I stab,” asserted
the youngest, with logic I certainly couldn’t argue with.
This time, it was looking
like a stalemate. Both Peeps were blowing up, but without any actual lance (toothpick)
contact.
“Um, the one that gets
biggest wins,” said the oldest quickly. The impending tie had sent her grasping
for an alternate method of victory.
“Maybe it is just a
practice round,” the youngest said diplomatically.
I noticed that the middle
child was quietly scraping the burned remains of the first jousters off the
plate and eating them.
“Quit eating Peeps!” I
told her.
“But the Peeps are
delicious!!!!” she said with despair.
The rounds went on and on,
getting more heated. No pun intended. I finally stepped in to shut the thing
down.
“Final joust, All Peep
Open!” I declared. “Pick your Peep!”
Everyone got involved,
Daddy and all.
The youngest was doing a
happy dance, singing, “All Peeps to the arena!”
As they were all crowded
onto a plate and started to heat up, the girls started chanting, “Daddy, Daddy,
Daddy, Daddy!”
Daddy said, “Wait a
minute! You totally have my lance pointing way off to the side. You are all
cheating! This is rigged!”
The girls just giggled as the Daddy Peep was put out of its misery.
Turns out, clearance Peeps
can provide way more entertainment that snack value. Hooray for Peeps. And a
mop. There was sugar everywhere!
Oh, and there was science
in there somewhere. I’m sure of it!
4 comments:
Absolute greatness! Thanks for the shout out - I totally feel special!! The pictures were great :)
"But Peeps Are Delicious" most unexpected thing in the article.
I made the blog! Quoted and all! My favorite line is S's "If I stab....I stab." All I can think of is Ivan Drago, "If he dies...he dies!" Haha. Love it!
"Oh stewardess, I speak jive...Let my peeps go."
Greatness
Love the way everyone is crowded around the microwave like it is a 70" big screen for Super Bowl of Peeps.
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