Children

Time to Make the Omelets: Confessions of a Sleepy Short-Order Cook Mom



There comes a point in every parent’s life when you realize you’re not just running a household. You’re running a diner. No, not the cozy kind with checkered floors and sassy waitresses. I mean a full-blown, high-pressure, breakfast-rush kind of diner where the customers are perpetually hungry, impatient, and occasionally bark.

Every morning, I find myself channeling the spirit of that Dunkin’ Donuts guy from the 80s commercial. The one who woke up at the crack of dawn muttering, “Time to make the donuts.” Except in my case, it’s *“Time to make the eggs, the coffee, the kibble, and maybe a side of sanity.”

There’s a choreography to it now. I’m flipping omelets with one hand while slicing apples with the other, the toaster humming in the background like a sous chef that refuses to take direction. My son’s lunch is being assembled with the precision of a NASA operation. Sandwiches, fruit, snack, hydration plan are all being assembled while the dogs hover, their breakfast plates awaiting the chef’s special.

Meanwhile, my coffee (my most loyal companion) sits brewing in the corner, knowing it will be gulped down lukewarm between tasks. I sip it standing up because sitting would imply the show is over, and the show never ends. We’ll, it does once my son heads out the door by 6:47am.

By 5:45am, I’ve performed more multitasking feats than a Vegas magician. I’ve flipped, toasted, sliced, packed, and served. I’ve mediated interspecies eye contact (because the dogs do think my son’s omelet smells better than their food). I’ve become the culinary embodiment of controlled chaos.

And yet, there’s something oddly satisfying about it. This morning routine whicch is absolute madness, is a rhythm of care. Each pancake flipped and apple sliced is a small act of love disguised as labor. It’s my own domestic version of performance art, minus the applause and with significantly more crumbs.

So yes, I’ve become the short-order cook of my household. But unlike the Dunkin’ Donuts guy, I don’t trudge through the door muttering “Time to make the donuts.” I mutter something more modern, like “Time to survive breakfast.”

Then I take a deep breath, refill the coffee, and start all over again. Because after all, the customers, both two-legged and four, are my favorite regulars.

3 replies »

  1. SMiLes Dear Miriam

    So Far So Good As i Always
    Tale Her It’s All Good i Remain

    A Well Served Customer With

    The Chef
    in Charge
    Of All the
    Recipes

    Somewhat oF A Relief
    That i’m Barred From
    Using Any Kitchen Utensils
    And Appliances Yes As long as i get

    to
    Eat
    With
    SMiLes

    StiLL Piling
    On the Calories
    Required for a Dance of Life

    Free
    At Least

    Hehe With All the
    Free Government
    Cheese of Being
    Retired Once and Twice too

    With
    SMiLes..

    On How Rare
    This Will Likely
    Be In What’s Becoming
    of the Customer in the
    Heat of the Big Kitchen Indeed

    Dear Lord We Refuse to Pay the
    Modern Prices for Red Meat Silver

    Lining
    Hair For my
    Overall Health too…

    Yet Hey Great Deal
    Frozen Pizza’s A Meal
    For Two at Walmart

    Still

    Five
    Bucks to
    Stick in the Oven

    Corn Dogs on the
    Dozen So Cheap too

    Hehe There’s Always
    A Work Around the System

    As Is…

    The Local Catfish
    House Has a Dozen
    Jumbo Fried Shrimp
    Two Sides and Hush Puppies

    For

    $11.49

    Almost Half
    Price all Day Tuesday

    Okay Gotta Go and Ask
    the Head Chef What’s for
    Lunch

    Here…

    Egg Rolls!

    And Turkey Burgers!

    Will Do Just
    The Trick for Treat…:)

    Like

I welcome your thoughts