She look confused, and denied knowing what we were talking about. I was surprised - she's not a great liar, thank goodness. And in the meantime, her big sister had run out of the room and was crying.
Finally it dawned on us, and we asked Monica if she had eaten the chocolates. She admitted to it. And this shattered our world. Monica has LPLD and knows it. And knows the consequences of eating fat. And knows that chocolate is one of the big no-nos of our house for her. Especially in large quantities! And she is so trustworthy and honest and responsible with her LPLD! And here, a whole box of chocolates was totally gone! Did we need to take her to the clinic? Have her triglycerides drawn? Freak out about the chance that she was going to get really sick from this???????
A statue of Anne Frank in Amsterdam. A little girl who did hard things. |
But Monica didn't eat the chocolate to be rebellious. She ate them because they were delicious and easy to get to. Poor thing, chocolate is indeed amazing. When it came down to it, we talked for a long time while hugging and rocking Monica, and lamenting what a burden LPLD is and how we wish we could give her all the chocolate in the world. In heaven, I am sure she will eat chocolate non-stop. But for now, we will try to help her avoid temptation and keep things like that out of sight and out of reach. And she will try to trust us to tell us when something is just too tempting. We can make temptations go away.
So if you ever wonder why we don't keep Oreos on hand, for our middle daughter, or for us, this is why. Why snack bags of chips, or even big bags clipped shut, will never be acceptable in our house, this is why. My LPLD girls have enough struggles, the last thing I need to do is foolishly tempt them myself. We're certainly not a fat free house, but we're also not a mindless-snacking-on-fat house, either.
Flowers are fat free!! |
At least I can dream.
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