Anonymous wrote:
19:28 again - the kids barely have 15-20 minutes to eat, less if they have to stand in line at the cafeteria.
I prepare a bento box, with food ready to pop into one's mouth: pre-cut apple bites, steamed broccoli florets, elbow pasta or japanese rice balls, ham or chicken pieces, etc. Everything closely packed together so that nothing moves, with either lettuce or silicone dividers between sweet and savory foods to avoid mixing tastes. So there is just one container to open, and everything is easily seen and ready to eat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This can't be a real post.
Oh shut up. It's totally real. I can't be the only one feeling this way. Just not a "popular" point of view perhaps. But I know I'm not alone. Has anyone filled out the form and had it rejected?
Why don't you just lie on the application. You know you'll do practically anything to get out of making your kid's lunch AND you don't want to pay the $3. Just BS the information.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can't afford 3 dollars a day?
No, I don't want to throw it away. It's not about affording it.
So throwing away $3 every day of the tax payers money is OK? You have serious entitlement issues, OP
Anonymous wrote:I've often thought how cool it would be if there were decent chefs employed by the school system who could just make healthy soups and bread, or good pizza. Our kids used to go to a school (not DC area) with about 150 kids. A couple of moms made awesome pizza and other yummy lunches which everybody loved. They'd do giant sheet cakes, soups and it really wasn't expensive or that much hassle. And the school smelled wonderful from the kitchen!
We used to have delicious school lunches when I was a kid- a different era altogether, it seems.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This can't be a real post.
Oh shut up. It's totally real. I can't be the only one feeling this way. Just not a "popular" point of view perhaps. But I know I'm not alone. Has anyone filled out the form and had it rejected?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can't afford 3 dollars a day?
No, I don't want to throw it away. It's not about affording it.
Anonymous wrote:I normally hate when people say things like this, but I 'm going to say it anyway.... This is exactly what is wrong with our country. I cannot imagine just accepting a "free lunch". It's not free. Someone is paying for it. If we were poor, I would accept the help temporarily, but it would never feel right to me. I would certainly never, never, never consider applying for it if I didn't need it.
Add to that the fact that the OP is, by her own admission, too lazy to pack ONE lunch. We have five children, I packed for five kids plus my DH every day. It took about ten minutes and was probably the easiest task of the day. Not bragging because there is nothing brag-worthy about packing a lunch.
How much longer are we going to allow people to suck at the government tit? At some point we are going to have to expect people to become contributing members of society.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This can't be a real post.
Oh shut up. It's totally real. I can't be the only one feeling this way. Just not a "popular" point of view perhaps. But I know I'm not alone. Has anyone filled out the form and had it rejected?
If you don't meet their income requirements, why do you think you would get approved?
I don't think I would, but it doesn't mean I wouldn't. At my child's first school (title one) they begged EVERYONE to fill it out and sent the form home like once a week for the first two months of school and said "even if you don't think you're eligible, they may work something out for you". But we are not at that school anymore, and when we were, I never tried filling the form out.
Anonymous wrote:I've often thought how cool it would be if there were decent chefs employed by the school system who could just make healthy soups and bread, or good pizza. Our kids used to go to a school (not DC area) with about 150 kids. A couple of moms made awesome pizza and other yummy lunches which everybody loved. They'd do giant sheet cakes, soups and it really wasn't expensive or that much hassle. And the school smelled wonderful from the kitchen!
We used to have delicious school lunches when I was a kid- a different era altogether, it seems.
Anonymous wrote:Hey, I thought the reason so many lunches are going into the bin was due to the lunch period being too short!!
My kids say they don't have enough time to finish. They often end up eating what was left over on the drive home.
I dread packing lunches myself, because I drive myself mad trying to be healthy on a very tight budget.