A Chicken Ranch, not THE Chicken Ranch
By Jody Worsham
All rights reserved for therapy
My ten teen is now a tween-ager. She turned 11. According to her, “Babies have teeny birthday
candles on their cakes. I want something
more grown up.” So we had sparkler
candles on her cake. I’m just glad there
was a fire extinguisher at the ready, a precaution taken after the number of
candles required on adult birthday cakes in this house sets off the overhead sprinklers.
She asked for a
special birthday treat, that we all go out to eat. This is not an unusual request given my
inability to cook. Every special
occasion is followed by a request to eat out:
Arbor Day, the Equinox, first day of Spring, summer, fall, winter,
Secretary’s Day, National Hot Dog Day, Bring Your Pet to Work Day, National
Pickle Day, first day of the month, last day of the month, Pay day, Anniversary
of Wal-Mart, Free Willie Day, as well as the regular normal everyday holidays.
She has definitely crossed over into the Tween-ager years of
her life as evidenced by her birthday loot:
8 bottles of fingernail polish, 1 bottle of zebra striped nail overlays,
nail file, lip gloss, packets of mud facials, skin exfoliate cream, facial
moisturizer, skin peeling masks, cell phone (not the flip, track or Wal-Mart
kind), subscription to “17 magazine”, and an iPod 2. Gone are the Barbie Doll days, I guess.
However, the present she was most excited about was becoming
the proprietor of her own business. Dr.
Hubby constructed the Donald Trump Condo for Chickens, complete with
semi-covered courtyard, modern laying/nesting cubbies, fans, security lights,
guarded entrance, and eco-friendly indoor/outdoor space. He purchased 12 chickens, feed, and a ledger
for her to record her expenses and income for IRS purposes. She will even have her own bank account.
She was even more excited when she learned she would soon be
getting 12 eggs a day. Unfortunately her
favorite little chicken, the one she called Sweet Heart, has turned out to be
Sweet Boy, the rooster. Loss of one egg
per day.
Today the newest member of the free enterprise system sat all
afternoon watching her business, listing potential customers, and figuring ways
to cut costs and increase profits.
At this point I am in a quandary. What do I tell people when they asked “What
was your tween-ager’s favorite birthday gift?”
What do I say? She now runs the
Chicken Ranch?”
P. S. If you aren’t from around La Grange, Texas or you
missed the Dolly Parton and Burt Reynolds movie, you won’t understand my
concern.
5 comments:
Heehee. I got it!
Happy birthday to your daughter. Only five years until she starts asking for the keys to the car. ;-)
How exciting. Who is on her customer list? Happy birthday to her, too.
Jody, everybody knows about the Chicken Ranch. So grown up at 11. But good for her to take her business seriously. Pretty soon she'll be selling eggs to Trader Joe.
That's a brilliant idea for a birthday present! My daughter-in-law would kill me but it is a devious idea!
Brilliant, just brilliant
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