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For many of those years, when my children were young, it was Diet Coke. You should know, I homeschool my children, have since the beginning of time, or so it seems that way to me. Way back when Adam and Eve were out in the Garden. Anyway, when they were young we lived in a subdivision in a rural community, and after a morning of trying to get each to do their lessons, like all the perfect homeschool blogger moms that posted videos of their days, I would begin to crumble. You’ve seen those videos, heard those perfect moms talking, offering advice (unsolicited more often than not, I might add) in a pitying tone to you, about how your kids just lack discipline and routine. Videos showing days filled with little girls in bows and perfectly ironed little dresses and boys in their pressed and creased khakis, proudly reciting the whole book of Genesis, even before breakfast.
However, my mornings never went that way, and by 2 pm I needed a fix, a pick me up, something to soothe the desperation and sense of failure. So I would load all the kids in the van and trundle down the hill, 1.5 miles to the McDonalds. McDonald's, where the Golden Arches glistened and gleamed in the sunlight, making me about as exuberant at the sight, as an old miner ’49er panning in a frigid creek in far off Alaska, chewing on his last hunk of jerky and wondering what was he doing, when suddenly he would spot that first glint of gold in the sunlight. I would drive through order my $1 size Diet Coke. The cup was the size of a 2- Liter soda bottle and held as much, but pity the soda girl if she didn’t get that baby filled to the brim. I was entitled to my full due, by golly, I demanded my dollar's worth! I would not be cheated.
My Diet Coke addiction was cured when we moved. No, we didn’t move because of it. My husband did not put the house up for sale in the middle of the night and pack us up, and haul us away from that sinister McDonald’s, the supplier to my habit. No there were other reasons for the move, but in my gut I knew it was time for a fresh start and the move was a place to begin over. We located a house that was too far from any McDonalds and now was the time to clean house! No more chemicals and caramel coloring to pollute this temple, no sir.
Things were rolling along nicely, and then one miserable August day while waiting in line at my neighborhood WalMart, after another long and endless summer day of kids bickering and the looming school year yawing ahead of me, with the pressure of designing lesson plans and school supplies to acquire, I spied a lovely green bottle in the mini fridge in the checkout aisle. It was wrapped in a captivating label. The logo spoke adventure to me and the name of this beverage shouted MOUNTAIN DEW.
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Something snapped in me and it was like that old commercial that showed a woman in the tub after a long day whispering, “Calgon take me away…” Except, this was a 20 ounce bottle of freedom, beckoning me, toying with me, teasing me to escape the monotonous days that were rolling one into the next. One whose sublime, fluorescent green elixir looked suspiciously like a toxic flow of chemicals, but certainly it was not. It was called Mountain Dew, what could be healthier than dew from a lovely, majestic mountain?
I herded the kids quickly to the car and made my way home. I turned on the Sponge Bob marathon and placed the kids in front of the TV. “Mom’s going to take a little nip, er nap, don’t bother me for at least 15 minutes ok?” Silence, the hypnosis had already taken hold and now I was on my way to experience the pleasurable freedom I had dreamt of upon first seeing that bottle. I closed my door, sat down and cracked open the bottle and swilled like a woman who, after spending months crossing the great Sahara Desert, was given her first cup of water. Ahhhhhh the taste, oh the taste, it had the taste of sunshine captured in a bubbly froth. It was my beloved Diet Mountain Dew.
Oh Diet Dew the wonders of you! It was my new fix. I would drink it and feel as if could actually climb mountains! It was so delicious and irreplaceable. How had I ever missed this wonderful concoction? To top things off, it was also really good for my diet, because in drinking Diet Mountain Dew, I never would dare pair it with chocolate or cake or something so sinister to my waistline. I reasoned it was my one sinful pleasure, but really how sinful can something be that contains real orange juice? Never mind that it contains enough caffeine to power a herd of elephants rampaging across the Serengeti! And so the addiction took hold and the rationalizing and the sneaking became common place. I was hooked once again.
Then one day, I was in the dark, in my closet, surrounded by empty Diet Mountain Dew bottles, having guzzled the last of my stash, hands shaking, the kids yelling for me, my husband yelling for me, “Honey, where are you?” and I knew this was no life. I had to beat this monster’s hold. I told myself that I had done it before I could do it again. And so I began the weaning process, and with much effort and hard work I pried the cold, dead grip of that Diet Mountain Dew from my life. Victory was mine, I had a new lease on life. The sun shone brighter, the birds sang louder, I was free, free indeed!
And now you ask, how is it that you find yourself with a new love, a new carbonated beverage with a foothold? Well, it all comes back to the kids, again! I have almost four teenagers (the youngest will be 13 in a month) and I can’t take it! I am at a cross roads, I am reminded daily that I am losing control of them and in no time they won't even need me. They are beginning to fly on their own, making their own decisions. Decisions that will someday come back to haunt me, because everyone knows it’s always the Mother’s fault! Don’t get me wrong, they are good kids, and it’s not their fault. It’s the nature of the job, the way of the world, the natural progression of these things. But for crying out loud I simply cannot take it! I need a fix and so having kicked Diet Coke to the curb and drowning the Diet Dew I find myself with a new seducer, Diet Pepsi.
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Diet Pepsi, with its patriotic red, white, and blue logo and silver (like the betraying strands of my hair) label. It reminds of everything American…tradition, courage, and good old apple pie, although I’m not sure it would taste good with apple pie. That might be something to try later on. "But oh Diet Pepsi", as I slowly and joyfully twist your lid, "I am anticipating your healing bubbles will soothe my troubled soul, at least till I overcome you, too!"