Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He's 10, almost 11, and in 5th grade. Yes we discussed what to buy and how much it'd cost, and how the $20 was for lunch and souvenir.
Instead he bought junk - burger and hot dog and soda. Another I'm still mad...
OP, $20.00 is not enough to purchase lunch, a drink AND a souvenir. It just is not.
And the souvenier is would purchase would be actual junk, a $5.00 eraser or trinket that would end up in the trash. Maybe a postcard. But that is about it.
Be grateful he bought food instead of wasting the money on cheap trinkets.
Also, a burger and hot dog do not sound excessive for a boy on the threshold of puberty. If you are flipping out about this minor lunch how the heck are you going to handle $300.00/week grocery bills trying to feed a growing teen boy?
Anonymous wrote:Man hope he at least got a joint for that
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So OP, let's say your son went on a typical DC metro area fieod trip to the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History.
The T-Rex platter (cheeseburger and fries) costs $13.25.
Add a drink to it. He tried to be healthier and choose juice because he knows you flip out over soda and fountain drinks.
Minute Maid is $3.60.
So now we are up to $16.85.
Your son knows you aren't a fan of meals of just burgers and fries, so being the good boy he is, he decides to add an apple to his tray.
Fresh fruit at the museum is $1.25.
Which brings your son's food court lunch to a grand total of $18.10.
A cheeseburger. Fries. A bottle of OJ. And an apple.
Think about it OP, then apologize to your son about flipping out over this.
You almost have a valid point, but your armchair psychoanalysis is weird and OP already said her son bought two entrees.
Anonymous wrote:So OP, let's say your son went on a typical DC metro area fieod trip to the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History.
The T-Rex platter (cheeseburger and fries) costs $13.25.
Add a drink to it. He tried to be healthier and choose juice because he knows you flip out over soda and fountain drinks.
Minute Maid is $3.60.
So now we are up to $16.85.
Your son knows you aren't a fan of meals of just burgers and fries, so being the good boy he is, he decides to add an apple to his tray.
Fresh fruit at the museum is $1.25.
Which brings your son's food court lunch to a grand total of $18.10.
A cheeseburger. Fries. A bottle of OJ. And an apple.
Think about it OP, then apologize to your son about flipping out over this.
Anonymous wrote:Instead he bought junk - burger and hot dog and soda.
Anonymous wrote:He's 10, almost 11, and in 5th grade. Yes we discussed what to buy and how much it'd cost, and how the $20 was for lunch and souvenir.
Instead he bought junk - burger and hot dog and soda. Another I'm still mad...
Anonymous wrote:You are expecting way too much from a kid. It's one thing to eat thousands of lunches at food courts and come to the conclusion it is overpriced crap, but to expect a kid on an adventure to show restraint is ludicrously controlling.