Babies and bread: you want to eat them both. On Japanese Twitter, parents have recently started to compare their children's adorable baby rolls to a "pull apart bread roll" available in Japan's 7-Elevens. While 7-Eleven is exactly the kind of creepy chain that would sell babies off the shelf (no disrespect), the bread rolls are not, in fact, tiny humans. Still, the similarities are disturbing and adorable. #我が子の最強ちぎりパン画像 pic.twitter.com/tWHQP8qSlk The hashtag #MyBaby'sGotTheBestBreadPhoto, or 我が子の最強ちぎりパン画像&, started after one parent noticed the similarity between her baby and the beloved carb. 次男が100日の頃のちぎりパン。 Is this bread, or is this a baby? Bread (pictured top) baby (pictured bottom) happiness (pictured everywhere). #我が子の最強ちぎりパン画像 pic.twitter.com/kilL4KeS0L I want to eat this ... bread! Baby? 手だけですみません…そっと置いておきます(*ノд`*) #我が子の最強ちぎりパン画像 pic.twitter.com/zFN5VtSSNV #Chub #is #trending. タグ作ってみたのでみなさんのも見せてください Similar hashtags in the past have compared baby parts to rice balls and mochi. They may be cute, but readers please: Do not eat your baby. #我が子の最強ちぎりパン画像 こうですか。#我が子の最強ちぎりパン画像 pic.twitter.com/pmkJ1Hk2a6
#我が子の最強ちぎりパン画像 pic.twitter.com/2CYkWxrHCr
最強タグの予感がするのは私だけだろうか
#我が子の最強ちぎりパン画像 pic.twitter.com/0Ei85Ey10t
最高だなこのタグ(笑) pic.twitter.com/JK4bAp7U8p