When I was a kid, Mom used to make a dish called “cheesy mashed potatoes.”
It was my favorite.
Smooth, creamy, and this perfect golden-orange color. She told me it was mashed potatoes with cheddar cheese — and in my innocent little brain, I thought, “Wow, Mom’s a gourmet genius.”
I would beg for it every week.
I told my friends at school about it. I even wrote a poem about it in second grade.
“Cheesy mash is the best, better than all the rest…”
It won first place in a classroom contest.
I felt proud.
Special.
Loved.
Years later, as a teenager, I was walking past the kitchen when I overheard Mom talking to my aunt.
She laughed and said:
“Oh yeah, he used to gobble those up. All I did was mix instant mashed potatoes with a jar of baby food carrots. Told him it was cheddar cheese — little sucker believed it!”
I stood frozen in the hallway.
Not because I was mad… but because in that moment, my entire childhood collapsed like a house of over-boiled potatoes.
It wasn’t cheese.
It was baby food.
And not just any baby food — carrots.
The one vegetable I refused to eat. The one I swore tasted like sadness and disappointment.
She had tricked me.
My mom, the woman I trusted with my life, had fed me lies with a spoon and called it dinner.