car door | Lincoln | Michigan
Inputting Mom
by
Jim ShahinThey've invented a program that
predicts global conflict. It's based on human
I should have known this would happen. I did know this would
happen. That's why I tried to leave the family gathering without
saying an official goodbye to my mother.
But just as I was about to open my
car door and make my getaway,
she exploded through the doors where the gathering was being held
and barreled across the parking lot.
"Wait a minute! Wait a minute!" she hollered. "You forgot the
raspberries."
"Mom," I said. "I'm running late for my flight. It's OK. I'll
…"
And here I didn't know what to say. I'll what? Buy some raspberries
when I get home? I couldn't say that.
To my mother, who doesn't just pinch pennies, she puts them in a
chokehold till
Lincoln cries uncle, only a crazy person would buy
raspberries when he could have them for free.
A larger issue, though, even larger than money - well, about as
large - was quality. These raspberries were handpicked on a small
family farm in
Michigan, a state renowned for its berries. What
kind of son would not want freshly picked renowned raspberries? An
ungrateful one, that's what kind.
Finally, there was the matter of gratitude.
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