This year the first Passover Seder falls on Saturday night, April 23. Two weeks away, you're thinking, but in many homes Passover preparations have been under way for weeks. (I have friends who are much farther along than I am. I try not to resent them.) The entire house must be free of leavened grains (wheat, barley, rye, spelt, oat) and their products, which one is forbidden to consume or have in his possession during the eight-day holiday.
The key areas of concern are the dining room and kitchen, so I've started cleaning out my pantry, which will be dedicated to Passover foods. (My friend Penny in Boca Raton e-mailed that she's been nibbling on a bag of Hershey's kisses she discovered. No kisses for me, though I did find a mini-pack of Oreos, which I promptly ate.)
In my home, and in many others, the preparations turn into spring cleaning. Passover gives me the impetus to flip the mattresses and launder the bedskirts, to wash the windows and the chandelier (I have yet to find a Cheerio in either location), to venture boldly into overstuffed closets and purge them of items that have long ago passed their prime or utility.
Over the past few days I've reorganized spices, closets, and drawers. I freed a guest room cabinet for my husband, whose desk and study I appropriated years ago when I began writing. I tossed out manuals for Windows 95 and Leading Edge, warranty cards I never mailed for items no longer under warranty, canned vegetables with suspicious bulges, medications that expired months ago.
I've also been feeding my shredder a great many pages that I can't leave in the trash because I worry about identity theft. (In California's Riverside County, identity theft poses a greater danger than meth labs, according to District Attorney Grover Trask.)
Buried among the papers were memories: a hospital bill for the emergency surgery one of our daughters had when she was less than a year old, to remove a piece of Shrinky Dink she'd swallowed; another hospital bill for one of our sons, who had been kicked in the shin by a horse when he was in a high school in Milwaukee; a tuition statement from the private Jewish school our kids attended. We paid less fifteen years ago for three kids than our adult children pay now for one child.
I also found a contract, hand written by one of our children on behalf of herself and her siblings, titled "TV Tickets." No date, but I'm guessing it was written twelve or thirteen years ago:
We, the children of ..., agree to abide by the following rules for TV Tickets from Sunday through Friday every week of the school year (except for exceptions listed below).
Each child receives 20 tickets per week. Each ticket gives you half an hour of television. When you want to watch television, you must give a ticket to either parent for each 1/2 hour of television you watch.
TV may not be watched past 11:00 P.M. Saturday nights are exempt from this contract.
Each child must read for a total of three hours during the week. A reading session is a full 1/2 hour, not less. Acceptable reading material is Mommy's books (which you haven't read yet) or other regular books. Newspapers, Sweet Valley High, Baby Sitters' Club, or any ridiculously fictional material such as the above is not accepted.
Family Night' TV (i.e., Oscars, Emmys, Grammys) is exempt from the TV Ticket deal.
On vacation or fast days, additional television hours will be allowed with no ticket requirement, subject to parents' discretion.
To gain extra tickets for the week:
1/2 hour of reading = 1 additional ticket
1 hour of reading = 2 additional tickets
If one reads less than the required 3 hours, tickets for the next week will be subtracted from the 20 tickets.
If one reads 2 hours instead of 3 hours, 6 tickets will be subtracted.
If you're caught watching TV after you've already finished the 20 tickets, 6 tickets will be taken away.
Cooking shows and news are included in the contract, unless Mommy gives permission to exempt them.
All homework must be done before watching TV. No TV after bedtime.
If you have leftover tickets from one week, you may not add those to next week's 20 tickets. Those tickets are put back in your envelope.
We are on our honor.
This is why I love Passover cleaning.
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