![]() The caterpillar ate through one nice green leaf, and after that he felt much better.” A pivotal line from a formative piece of literature that I, like many thousands of other now-adults, first encountered in childhood: The Very Hungry Caterpillar.Įric Carle’s The Very Hungry Caterpillar-in which a caterpillar hatches out of an egg on a Sunday, proceeds to eat vibrantly colored fruits it finds in escalating quantities from Monday to Friday, goes on a junk-food-eating rampage on Saturday, eats a nice green leaf on Sunday, and then nestles into a cocoon for two weeks and emerges a beautiful butterfly-was released 50 years ago, on March 20, 1969. Somehow, in my mind, the more vividly green the leaves in the salad, the more purifying the ritual will feel, and with that first crunch on a crisp piece of greenery, I hear a tiny voice in my head, murmuring, “ The next day was Sunday again. The day after I’ve partaken in some sort of weekend or holiday eating-and-drinking binge-i.e., the Monday after the Super Bowl, the fifth of July, the first week of January after the entire Thanksgiving-through-New Year’s season officially comes to a close-I engage in the same detoxifying, repenting ritual: the consumption of a fresh, nutrient-rich salad. ![]() ![]() ![]() It happens pretty much the same way every time. ![]()
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