Raspberry honey spread is exactly what I’d delighted to give
my father over many decades. A jar of artisanal Miel Crémeux avec Framboises purchased this fall near Québec City summarized my sadness
over not being able to give this type of gift to him over the last three years
he’d been in a nursing home. Happy to be able to enjoy the whole fruity, sweet,
smooth, mellow mélange
myself, I also felt sad that I couldn’t bring back this souvenir for my dad. The
nursing home fed him a special diet. I would have had to spoon the raspberry
honey directly into his mouth, because he no longer ate bagels or muffins or
crackers or other normal excuses to slather and savor raspberry honey spread’s
wonderfulness.
Many mornings since my dad’s Alzheimer’s required nursing
care, I have cried while drizzling honey into my bagel’s craters. I could stand
at my kitchen counter and make something I love eating. He no longer could. The
simple act of drizzling honey conjured long-ago mental pictures of him sitting
at his and Mom’s kitchen table twirling a ridged honey dipper over his toasted English
muffin. Enjoying raspberry-infused honey this fall, I recalled decades of
making Dad raspberry desserts for his birthdays, and bringing back raspberry
preserves from Michigan for my parents. Jars of raspberry everything are gone
now; so is my father. Everyone in the family knew Dad’s favorite flavors. Knowing
he could no longer enjoy favorite flavors made me sad.
I don’t know, of course, if locking honey and raspberries
into his life’s dusty attic trunk ever depressed Dad. As taste buds age, they
lose keenness. Alzheimer’s dulls cognition. Maybe he never missed pleasures of
eating. Maybe raspberry honey spread only symbolized my loss. Either way, I
will wish I could give him raspberry and honey for a while to come.
4 comments:
Grief lurks in countless small moments of each day because those moments are filled with memories. Glad you could share one of those sweet memories here, Jane.
Thanks, Michelle. It is surprising how teensy the reminders can be ... like the sobering thought that I could still brush my own teeth but Dad could not do even that simple act.
It is amazing how the littlest things can demonstrate how much we lose when someone we love has Alzheimer's. Hugs!
Thanks, Kris. It's true.
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