Milky chance
A friend and co-worker revealed recently that when he went
to elementary school in the Midwest, they were given milk in bags. Like,
individually, for lunch, each kid got milk in a bag. In a bag.
No one had ever heard of such a thing. He texted his wife to
make sure he wasn’t crazy and SHE TOO enjoyed milk in a bag as a youth. But she
also grew up in the Midwest and we attributed the whole situation to random,
bizarre, flyover state milk consumption habits. (We also assumed the two of
them met in some Illinois grammar school—“Illinois Grammar School”—making
flirty eyes from across the cafeteria while sipping gross ass milk from a dang
sack.)
But THEN, in an odd coincidence, a Facebook friend of my
wife, who we don’t think is from the middle of the country, posted a pic of
milk in a bag with a caption along the lines of, “Who remembers these from back
in the day LOL” and people DID. They did remember! WHAT THE HELL. Literally for
37 years I had never heard of milk in a bag, and then in the span of like four
days I was bombarded with milk-in-a-bag information.
Like this:
This is totally my friend and his wife, by the way, save for
… a lot things. Forget it, it’s not them.
Mini-Sip? “Only take mini sips from the bag, kids! In ’91 we
had four near milk bag-related drownings, but there’s a new sheriff in town and
NOT ON MY WATCH! Mini-sips!”
You know what offers “LESS WASTE” of the milk itself than milk in a bag? Literally milk in any other container. Milk in a conch shell is more efficient. And tasty! Considering plastic is toxic.
STEP 1: Place your Mini-Sip Pouch flat on the table.
Don’t go trying to puncture this thing while holding it
above your head in mid-air, kids. IT’S NOT A DANG PINATA!
STEP 2: Hold the pointed straw with your thumb over the flat
end. While squeezing the Pouch tightly, push the straw into the air bubble.
Capri Sun was like any other drink growing up, except for
the allure of it being, basically, a sack. A sack of juice. I used to be able
to get the straw in no problem as a kid, but now that I’m an adult, I can
mysteriously no longer accomplish this feat. (I am referencing occasions during
which we’re at a kids party and my girls want Capri Sun. I no longer drink
Capri Sun personally, FYI.) There is a better chance I will injure myself or
destroy all crucial elements of the Capri Sun than successfully insert the
straw. You have one chance to get at Capri Sun and YOU BEST NOT MISS, SON. That
should be their motto.
ANYWAY, what’s my point? Oh yeah, this sack o’ milk is pretty
much like Capri Sun, and who knows—maybe there’s some scientific evidence that
kids enjoy something more when they have to STAB IT. But dang with these
instructions and inherent risks! How is “1. Open carton 2. Drink milk” not easier and safer? I can’t believe
these things existed (exist?).
STEP 3: Stop squeezing and remove your thumb from the top of
the straw. Enjoy your cold milk!
How about I tell YOU when I'm done squeezing! (twss)
I’d normally be critical of instructions that specify you
must remove your finger from the end of the straw in order to drink from the
straw, but these are milk-in-a-bag instructions so everything is out the
window. “NOW SIP FROM YOUR LIPS AND MOUTH AND NOT YOUR EAR CANAL, MIDWESTERN
CHILD.”
As far as the milk being cold, I’m going to have to trust it
because few things evoke more assumptions of “room temperature” than a sack of
milk lying dead on a table. Anyway, I can't even with this. It's all too much for me and, quite frankly, a little disturbing.
Comments
If you blew back into the bag while there was still milk in there, it would squirt milk out at you the moment you remove your lips from the straw. You try telling a bunch of 8 year olds not to blow into their milk.