Don't you hate it when you buy a big jar of peanut
butter, and a week later, you realize it’s gone, and that you’re the only one
in your home who eats peanut butter?
No. That probably doesn’t happen to you.
Because you are probably a normal human being, and normal human beings don’t single-handedly consume entire jars of peanut butter over the course of one week.
Because you are probably a normal human being, and normal human beings don’t single-handedly consume entire jars of peanut butter over the course of one week.
Not that I do that.
But if I did
do that, I would probably wish to conceal the evidence of my gluttony from
my husband (that is, if he hadn’t already found evidence of this in the form of
my not-so-gradually expanding waistline).
Obviously, I would go buy another jar of peanut
butter to replace the empty jar. This way my husband would just assume that the
new jar was the old jar, and that his wife wasn’t a big giant pig.
During the unfortunate time lag between the consumption of the
old jar and the purchase of the new jar, I would make sure there was just
enough peanut butter in the old jar for it to maintain the appearance of still
being full. This would be easily accomplished by making sure that a tiny amount
remained and was strategically spread over the entire surface area of the
inside of the jar.
If, as a result of absent-mindedness and sheer
stupidity, I accidentally left the empty peanut butter jar in the pantry after
purchasing the new jar, and my husband were to find both the full and the empty butter jars, he would likely cope with
his shock and disgust by proceeding to inform me how many calories are in a jar
of peanut butter.
5680 calories.
The equivalent of almost three days’ worth of
calories.
Good thing I didn’t do that.