Quantcast
Channel: Mollytopia
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 138

The Lobster on your Chest.

$
0
0

Grown-ups should not wear bibs in public.  Especially ones that feature giant clowny lobsters on them.  It sends a negative message to our brain.  Tonight I will fail.  My food will defeat me.  The waiter is in on it.

It also sends a worrisome message to our fellow diners.  They might think we’ve suffered a head injury.  Why else would anyone who’s been eating for decades unassisted suddenly believe they need a plastic shield at dinner?  They obviously have no memory of being able to successfully negotiate the route between their plate and their face.

Finally, if you’re on a date, it’s really not bueno.

photo credit:  www.hot hardware.com
photo credit: http://www.hothardware.com

It says you’re okay with looking like an enormous child in a white trash bag determined to conquer melted butter…One-way ticket to Nevergettinglaid.

Non-refundable.

Bibs are hygiene tools specifically designed for babies and toddlers.  Parents fasten them to tiny humans because they suck at eating and their motor skills rival a drunken sloth with one arm. Their food-to-mouth ratio is a pathetic 1 to 20 until the age of five.  By sundown they’re stumbling miniature smorgasbords with crusty faces.

No full-sized adult should ever fear reverting back to this state.  It’s physically impossible.  We can hold things for longer than three seconds, our heads don’t bob like dash-board Chihuahuas, and we don’t require a seatbelt at the table.  We’re safe.

Therefore, the next time a server offers you a bib, please smile confidently and say, “No thank you.  I can manage.”  Because you can.  We all can.  And we should.

Full disclosure:  I have coffee on my shirt.



Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 138

Trending Articles