The Tale of the Quarter:
I had a bad day with my four year old son a few weeks ago. We had dropped my daughter off at her reading tutor and were on the way home. Since we were driving by Aldi I decided to stop and get a spiral ham.
If you aren't familiar with Aldi there are two things to know. First, a person can't spend much time shopping there. There is only one brand of anything so you don't spend any time comparing prices or deciding what brand to buy. I can get a cart full of food in twenty minutes. My son was not going to have to suffer long. We're not talking Wal-Mart the week before Christmas.
Second, you have to have a quarter to get a shopping cart. You get your quarter back when you return your cart. This way they aren't paying anyone to round up carts. Because you have to have a quarter to shop at Aldi and because I frequently stop at Aldi, I keep a special Aldi quarter in a special section of my wallet. The Aldi quarter does not get spent. It is always there when I need it. My Aldi quarter had been with me longer than my son has. Key word is had.
Once inside Aldi we found a wooden train set on display. They often have special buys on toys during the holidays and this was one of them. My son decided he wanted to play with the train display only to discover that they had glued all the trains and things down. I don't blame them. However, this discovery triggered the worst public temper tantrum I have ever seen in my life, from my child or anyone else's. I had no choice. I had to abandon my cart and haul a kicking, screaming, cursing child out of Aldi.
My Aldi quarter was gone. Left behind in my abandoned cart. I grieved for my lost Aldi quarter. I thought about going back to see if I could recover it. I haven't been back to Aldi since. Not because I'm embarrassed, but because my quarter is gone. My husband doesn't get it. He thinks any quarter will do.
The Tale of the Nickel:
Today my daughter and I went to the library. They have a little gift shop in the library. She purchased four pieces of nickel candy. I gave her a quarter to pay for it. She asked if she could keep the nickel she got back in change.
Our next stop was K-Mart so that she could pick up a Christmas gift for her brother. There was a bell ringer at the door. She said, "Oh, no! I forgot my money!" and turned around and ran all the way back to the car to get that nickel for the bell ringer. Let me just say we weren't parked near the door. It is Christmas time.
I know a nickel isn't much but it was all the money she possessed and she ran all the way to the car and back to get it for that bell ringer. I was proud of her.
Is there a moral to this? I doubt it. I was just thinking of my shame and anger with the quarter and my pride with the nickel and all the ups and downs of motherhood.


Comments: 16
A friend of mine says her younger son is a paragon of good behavior everywhere she goes except Aldi -- she tells me he's pitched more fits in Aldi than he has everywhere else, ever, combined. Wonder if it's something in the vents? Or maybe all those lost quarters...
I can't work up any warm fuzzies about my Aldi quarter though. The boy was sent to his room and grounded from TV and computer for the rest of the day.
I'm still laughing about the quarter...
You're right. It was more than a quarter. He had a tantrum at the library the day before and we had to leave there too. Perhaps the loss of the quarter was a symbol of my loss of control over my son's behavior and my fear of not getting it back. You know, visions of your son on the ten o'clock news a few years down the road sort of thing. Or maybe it was a symbol of all that I have sacrificed for these kids and a feeling of being unwilling to give up even one more small thing.
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I loved the second story. It brought tears to my eyes, but then, almost everything does that to me today. I think I'd still be teary eyed even if I wasn't dealing with what I'm dealing with, because it was heartwarming.
Kudos to your daughter!