We took the girls to the Chicago Blackhawks Training Camp
Festival last Monday. It’s a fun time with lots of activities and a scrimmage
game. The girls get to sit in the stadium and experience the pre-game
activities from singing the National Anthem to watching the videos that come on
the scoreboard just before the players take the ice.
The festival used to be on Saturday so we’d go down for the
afternoon. For the first training camp festival we took Mom and Dad to see the
Stanley Cup. It’s now held on a Monday night, which means we race home from
school, do homework, get in the car and drive to the United Center. Even though
the girls had something to eat after school, they were hungry when we got into
the United Center.
There were lengthy lines to get into the stadium. Even
though there was a lot of stuff going on outside, we didn’t linger. We walked
through to see everything and then got into a line. Everyone one in line wanted
a Duncan Keith bobble head. We knew Daddy was already inside with our bobble
head.
We got in and found four seats. The scrimmage has general admission
seating meaning it’s first-come, first-serve for all seats. We ended up on the
300-level, just behind the American flag. The girls giggled during the national
anthem because everyone looked like they were staring at us. The blond twin
waved and a player waved back. She was thrilled.
We took turns going to get food so we always had someone in
our seats. The brunette twin and I wandered the concourse for a bit looking for
something she wanted to eat. The lines were really long. She kept moving to the
next place to see if the lines were shorter. We ended up at a place selling
turkey or beef sandwiches, salads and hummus. I thought she’d go for the
hummus, but she wanted a turkey sandwich.
By the time we got up to order, the turkey sandwiches were
gone. The brunette twin ordered a roast beef sandwich. We went to our seats and
she started eating. She kept picking things off the sandwich to ask what they
were. The sandwich had a relish with pickles, peppers and carrots diced into
some mayonnaise. She devoured the sandwich. I took a bit and told her how tasty
the sandwich was while she told me how much she liked it.
She went on and on about how much she liked the sandwich,
saying, “Who would have thought a kid like me would like this so much?” I
laughed because it was my thought exactly. The girl who won’t eat macaroni and
cheese that doesn’t look like what she gets at home was sitting at the United
Center devouring a roast beef sandwich with a pickle, pepper and carrot relish.
And, she was loving it.