Quote #12168
I hate changing my baby's diapers after he poops. I know exactly what he ate at daycare. Yesterday, it was carrots. Tomorrow I'm hoping for long-stem roses.
Shirley Lipner
About This Quote
This quote needs no introduction—at least for now. We're working on adding more context soon.
Interpretation
The speaker uses blunt parental disgust—changing a diaper after a bowel movement—to set up a comic observation about how vividly a child’s diet can reappear in the most unglamorous way. The detail “carrots” grounds the joke in everyday daycare reality, while the wish for “long-stem roses” escalates into absurdity: it’s an impossible, romanticized substitute for what parents actually confront. The humor depends on juxtaposing bodily mess with the language of gifts and courtship, hinting at a parent’s desire for appreciation or beauty amid routine caretaking. Beneath the gag is a familiar truth: caregiving often involves intimate, uncelebrated labor that invites dark or surreal humor as a coping mechanism.



