Lulu Devine


 
'The poppies are to remember all the people who fought in wars,' said a father to his daughter, doing his best to teach her the meaning of the annual appeal. She looked at him with wide eyes and said, 'Like the hobbits?'

Priceless overheard gems like that are as good a reason as any to wander into a coffee shop and take a leisurely half hour out of a busy life. People-watching is another, although it had better be a very good latte for me to linger for more than thirty minutes.

Supermarket cafes are especially entertaining. From the mind-bogglng vanity of girls who have clearly spent an hour glamming up just to buy potatoes and washing powder, to te the football shirted men who are obviously earning their right to an uninterrupted can of lager and Sky Sports 1 later, all of human life is there at the business end of a wonky trolley.

Nothing tests a relationship like a supermarket run. If you're at the stage of wondering whether to take things with that special someone to the next level, accompany each other on the next groceries stock-up; if you're both still feeling that aura of contented togetherness when it's done, it's safe to think about more.

Traditionally, women shop and men are reluctantly dragged along to fetch and carry. But we females do have some irrational annoying habits.

Trolley-guiding is the absolute worst. This is when the woman is efficiently prowling the aisles, with the man following and pushing the trolley. Perfectly helpful and a system which works smoothly and saves time. So why, ladies, do we suddenly insist on putting one hand on the front of the trolley and nudging it an inch to the side in the direction of the next item? Boyfriend/husband has eyes and is more than capable of not running the thing into our ankles, but we just have to do it, that fingertip steering that serves no purpose.

My husband pointed this out before we were even engaged, and I was able to cease the practice thanks to some short sharp shock therapy; I won't go into detail, but it involved a withdrawal of privileges, a clause that should be read with as much innuendo as you assume.

I do have a friend whose last relationship ended in a Kwik Save, when he and his then girlfriend realised that if they couldn't get from entrance to checkout without making each other tut and sigh then frankly they stood no chance, and agreed to pack it in over the packing. It makes a bag for life seem rather sad.

Of course, negotiating a supermarket with a child is a whole new challenge which we have yet to face. The solution may be online shopping, something that I've thus far resisted for the most part. That Asda is barely a five-minute walk from our apartment also shrouds the idea in guilt, not because of any carbon footprint concerns but because it would take the delivery driver longer to negotiate the security gates than to get here and back. Needs must when the devil drives, as the old saying goes; let's just hope that doesn't prove to have connotations too close for comfort...
 
Whilst making my mind up between the many indulgent delights in a high-street bakery, I overheard a conversation between a mother and her young child.

'There are three colours in a rainbow!' the child loudly proclaimed out of nowhere. To which the mother replied, 'Don't be silly. There are eight colours in a rainbow.'

I struggle to say a kind word about this country's previous administration, but I had a strong urge to turn to the woman and shout, 'Education, education, education!' I only wish I could be there the next time she sits down with her offspring and a picture book and begins helping him to count the rainbow's colours. And no doubt scientists would like to know what that eighth one is; who knows, it could be as significant as the elusive particles they're looking for in the Large Hadron Collider, that ultimate big boys' toy.

Instead, I plucked a chicken mayo baguette from the shelf and said nothing. Later, at Asda (other supermarkets are available) I found myself buying the biggest frozen chicken I could find, and realised that the first random craving of my pregnancy might just have kicked in.

It hadn't, as it turned out. But since then, two cravings do seem to have taken a firm grip on my daily dietary intake and assumed control of a whole shelf in the fridge. I am now at the mercy of rice pudding and custard. Not at the same time, I hasten to add, but in equal measures.

The shame of it is that I'm not even making my own. I could, and indeed often do, but life is busy and when a craving for either hits me the last thing I want to do is have to make it myself. So there is now a sizeable collection of (I say it with shame) tins of custard and rice pudding in our kitchen.

True, wandering around Asda and filling a corner of the trolley with 17p tins of own-brand rice pudding and custard doesn't feel good. Usually I wouldn't stoop so low. Speaking of which, could we please have it on a slightly higher shelf rather than at almost floor level? The pitying smile as all those cheap tins beep their way over the scanner is bad enough, without having had to almost go down on my knees to get them in the first place. I'll pile them high if you will!

But it turns out that custard is a secret love that hangs over from the treats of childhood well into our adult lives. Think about it; when dining out, custard is seldom seen on any menu, even as an option, and it's not something any of us ever mention when talking about food. But there I was, texting a friend the other afternoon, when I happened to mention these new cravings and he instantly craved custard himself. You see? We never grow out of it. It's a moreish secret treat.

And thus one of the rules of motherhood that I shall be instigating during my child's life is simply this. Custard's too good for children; it's ours!