How to eat a chocolate rabbit
Take the chocolate bunny personality test.
In my family there is a ritual to devouring the bunny.
First, pick up the bunny.
Second, swing the bunny and whack its head hard against a flat surface, such as a table or counter. This will stun the bunny.
Third, while the bunny is stunned and unable to feel pain, bite the head off. You may now gnaw on the rest of the bunny at leisure.
Yes, this is how we eat chocolate rabbits in our family--a tradition that has been passed on from one generation to the next. I never gave it much thought until I stunned my college roomates as I casually picked up a chocolate rabbit, whacked it against a desk, bit the head off, then asked what they were staring at.
In my family there is a ritual to devouring the bunny.
First, pick up the bunny.
Second, swing the bunny and whack its head hard against a flat surface, such as a table or counter. This will stun the bunny.
Third, while the bunny is stunned and unable to feel pain, bite the head off. You may now gnaw on the rest of the bunny at leisure.
Yes, this is how we eat chocolate rabbits in our family--a tradition that has been passed on from one generation to the next. I never gave it much thought until I stunned my college roomates as I casually picked up a chocolate rabbit, whacked it against a desk, bit the head off, then asked what they were staring at.
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S.J.
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Plus, of course, it's all about the chocolate.
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Some days it just doesn't pay to be born English, and eccentric.
S.J.
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Hee! Cute story. I'm flattered that you found the post inspirational.
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That's a great tradition. :)
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Or he may have just loved chocolate. Or mystifying his children. Or all three, because that's the kind of guy he was.
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Both of my mother's parents were from Kenmare, and I've been there a few times, though now only distant relatives are still living there. Most of them emigrated in the 20s when my grandparents left, or their children were the ones to leave, in the 40s and 50s.
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Seriously, an Irish passport is an EU passport, and that's DAMN useful to have.
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The applicable parent, in this case, is dead, but according to the website for the Irish consulate I should still be able to go through the process if I get copies of the relevant birth & death certificates.
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EU passport *goooood*. :)
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o.o
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Does this mean that the People for the Ethical Treatment of Chocolate Bunnies are gonna come after me? *chews talons nervously* Hmmm...*eyeballs chocolate bunny* What the heck! *Crunches a whole chocolate bunny*
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Probably.
Then again, that's what they say about mattresses.....