No Birthday Cake Here

The chocolate brownie ice cream cake was lopsided. And there was frost covering one side of it. I couldn’t even finish my piece, not because I was full, but because it just didn’t taste that good.

Lily had requested an ice cream cake for her 7th birthday, and to tell you the truth, I was crushed. I enjoy baking her cake at home and decorating it myself. Somewhere between her sixth and seventh birthdays, however, she decided that cake was not her thing. Enter the lopsided brownie ice cream cake from the generic ice cream shop down the street.

For her 8th birthday, Lily wanted an ice cream cake again. I inwardly sighed and decided I had to buy it from a different place; a place where hopefully the cake would be frost free.

But then, a couple of days before her birthday, Lily changed her mind. She wanted something fruity.

Something strawberry! Something creamy! Something delicious!

strawberry shortcake
Strawberry shortcake for Lily’s 8th birthday!

I was happy to oblige.

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Predictability

At 8:10 a.m. every Monday morning, I hear the “Monday Morning Beep”. I have no idea where it’s coming from; I suspect it’s the lightning detector in the field by our elementary school. Without fail, the beep sounds every single Monday morning at exactly 8:10.

Every day at 8:30 a.m. I take my daughters to school. Every day, I see my neighbor walking down our block at 8:45 a.m. to go to nine o’clock Mass. The mail comes at 3:15 p.m., I leave the house to pick up the girls at 3:20, and the dismissal bell rings at exactly 3:30 p.m.

Children and cats are unpredictable. Yet both thrive on predictability. If a child’s routine is different, their behavior might change…for the worse. Temper tantrums erupt. My brother’s cat routinely expects a clean litter box and if it is not clean, she pees in the bathroom sink, predictably forcing my brother to clean the litter box.

Some people go out of their way to be unpredictable. They hate a predictable life. And isn’t that, in a way, predictable?

One of my favorite movies is Mary Poppins. I still love watching it. I crack up every time Ellen, the Banks’ maid, yells “Posts, everyone!” and everyone runs to hold onto vases, a lamp, shelves and the fish bowl. And then BOOM! The Admiral shoots off his cannon. Every night at the exact. same. time. Bert tells us at the beginning of the movie, “What he’s famous for is punctuality. The whole world takes its time from Greenwich, but Greenwich, they say, takes its time from Admiral Boom.”

Even though predictability seems boring, somehow it knits our lives together. It keeps time secure and in place. It helps us make sense out of our world.

This November, this month of blogging every day, I’ve tried to become predictable and publish a post shortly after midnight. Whether it’s long or short, whether I feel it’s ready to be read publicly or not, I click “publish”.

Here goes.

Are you predictable?

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