Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Huffington Post is still a thing?
I suppose so. I didn't bother reading the link once I saw it was the HuffPo. Like such publications it's always whining and judging and criticizing good intentions. Someone brings you a casserole and you privately don't want it? Smile, say think you, how kind, appreciate the effort, and then quietly feed it to the dogs when they're not around. Don't write a moaning article about it.
THIS!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Huffington Post is still a thing?
I suppose so. I didn't bother reading the link once I saw it was the HuffPo. Like such publications it's always whining and judging and criticizing good intentions. Someone brings you a casserole and you privately don't want it? Smile, say think you, how kind, appreciate the effort, and then quietly feed it to the dogs when they're not around. Don't write a moaning article about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Huffington Post is still a thing?
I suppose so. I didn't bother reading the link once I saw it was the HuffPo. Like such publications it's always whining and judging and criticizing good intentions. Someone brings you a casserole and you privately don't want it? Smile, say think you, how kind, appreciate the effort, and then quietly feed it to the dogs when they're not around. Don't write a moaning article about it.
Anonymous wrote:The Huffington Post is still a thing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This was an interesting article, thanks.
When my grandmother died, our family appreciated the many gifts of food visitors brought us in support. I was baffled, however, that most were chocolate cake. I don’t think it’s a regional custom because I’d never noticed it on other occasions of death. While my grandmother was an excellent baker, she had no special affinity for chocolate cake. I can’t remember a single incidence of her baking or eating one (although her chocolate pie was a family favorite). Nonetheless, I lost track of how many chocolate cakes there were.
They knew she liked baked goods and most people, who might not bake much else, have a standard chocolate cake recipe on standby. I'm not a great cook and don't have any casserole recipes.
Anonymous wrote:This was an interesting article, thanks.
When my grandmother died, our family appreciated the many gifts of food visitors brought us in support. I was baffled, however, that most were chocolate cake. I don’t think it’s a regional custom because I’d never noticed it on other occasions of death. While my grandmother was an excellent baker, she had no special affinity for chocolate cake. I can’t remember a single incidence of her baking or eating one (although her chocolate pie was a family favorite). Nonetheless, I lost track of how many chocolate cakes there were.
Anonymous wrote:
Midwesterner and the cheesy goopy casseroles the church ladies would bring to the funeral dinners were directly correlated (in my mind) with the funeral of the obese, diabetic 62 year old retiree