What is life without doing the things you love imperfectly and being completely content with that

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What is life without doing the things you love imperfectly and being completely content with that

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Blackberries and Caramel
It was a warm, sunny day in May.Ā A group of siblings, Margaret, Adelaide, Frances, Louie, and Oscar, sat in their dining room.Ā It was a beautiful day out.Ā The smell from the ocean drifted in through the little seaside cottage's kitchen window.Ā Fresh flowers and tall grass could be heard whisping in the wind.Ā The eldest sibling, Adelaide, suggested that the five of them go up to the overgrown part of the hill next to the house, and look for blackberries. Frances went to wake up the twins, Louise and Margaret. They each grabbed a bucket and hiked up the hill.Ā From the trail they were walking, they could hear the waves crashing against the rocks.Ā Louie pointed out a big sail boat on the horizon.
After walking for some time, Frances found a huddle of bushes riddled with ripe, fresh berries.Ā The kids excitedly ran to the bushes, picking berries fast trying to get more than their siblings.Ā Margaret was winning the non-existent blackberry picking contest.Ā While picking blackberries, Adelaide turned around and pointed out a black and white spotted bunny.Ā The youngest child, Oscar, took a few blackberries from his basket and held his hand out, trying to get the bunny to come closer.Ā Slowly, the bunny hopped over.Ā The bunny took the blackberries from the small boy's hands.Ā All four kids watched as the bunny ate the blackberries, and hopped back the way it came from.Ā
As the sun set, the kids started their walk back down to their little home.Ā The scent of salty, sweet, bubbly caramel could be smelt coming from the cottage.Ā As the siblings walked into the house, they saw their mother, cooking caramel in a pot on top of an old rusty stove.Ā While the kids had been out, their mom had been cooking up the goods to make dark chocolate, sea salt caramel candy bars. So after dinner, the big family went outside with their candy bars and their blackberries, and watched the stars and the waves.Ā
A perfect day.
tick tick
My bones have begun to creak like the floorboards. I wake up at all hours of the night? Day? Only to be stiff as a corpse, too stiff to move. My unwashed hair now bares similarities to the dirty, drool-stained pillow cases that havenāt been changed in almost a year. Iām stopped every time I try. Itās been two springs, and the sweat leaking off of my nearly bed-ridden, rotting body wonāt go away, even with the cracked window wide open. 4:00 AM. The blinking from my alarm clock is making me sick. I feel hungover, although I couldnāt tell you the last time I went out. I put the far too big hoodie on as I stumble out of bed. Itās a nauseating shade of orange. Carhartt. It reeks like ash now, covered in burn stains. In the hallway I hear something. At least, I think. Itās too dark to see. But how lucky would I be? The bathroomās a mess. Thereās a framed picture on the wall; One thing Iāve left untouched.
āTell me, Blaise, are we very far from Montmartre?'ā April 15th, 1998, written underneath it.
In the picture thereās a handsome young man, twenty-something with his arm around someone unrecognizable. She has short brown hair and her eyes are glazed with the look of puppy love. She smells like peonies. She goes out on Thursdays to get fresh bread from the bakery- boulangerie. She loves living in the cheapest spot in Paris, not very far from Montmartre now. Itās okay, isnāt it? Because heās here. Heās here he must be. Down the dark hallway, he is turning on the lights. Heās home from work! Iām so glad. And he brought me fresh berries! How lucky am I?Ā
I feel myself start to sweat again. This time, Iām on the old tile bathroom floor, dry heaving into the toilet. Thereās nothing in my body to puke up but stomach bile. I stand up slowly and head out the bathroom door and towards the kitchen, trying to avoid the framed pictures on all the walls. Pictures of the handsome young man with his brown hair, standing in front of the New York City Met. Further down, there's one of his green eyes matching the unrecognizable women's evening dress. I canāt stand the silence of this lonely house. I decide toĀ put on jazz music. This way I donāt have to think about any words I hear. I donāt have to think about anything but pouring my cereal. This place that Iām in was once home. I can see the woman in the photographs, picking flowers on her walks to put in thrifted vases scattered around their house. I can see the picture perfect couple painting the walls.Ā
āWell what about this shade?ā
āButtermilk? You canāt paint bathroom walls yellow.ā
Ready, white walls surrounding them. Boxes stacked in the middle of the living room. An air mattress on the floor.
āI was thinking about this for the kitchen. Itās called Pacific Blue. Itāll look good with the backsplash.ā
āItās too beachy I think.ā
I feel sick again. I canāt escape the stink of decay. I didnāt even notice the wallpaper has begun peeling. Maybe because of the mold that grew within the last few years, because of a leak I forgot about fixing; Or that I didnāt care to fix. In the pantry, thereās nothing but Golden Graham cereal. The man had gotten this personally mailed to him from his brother in America. There were also crackers, a jar of peanut butter I remember searching hours for, walking up and down the backstreets of Paris to find,Ā and European snacks I wouldnāt eat because I still couldnāt read the labels on them.Ā
While the cereal was the only thing still edible in the pantry, I couldnāt touch it. Thatās his. Wonāt he be hungry when heās home? I need to go grocery shopping. Silly me. I will get dressed and I will get food. I will clean up this crusty apartment. I need cigarettes. 7:00AM
The sun is coming up now. Iād usually close the curtain and crawl back into bed. Iād curl into a ball and burrow under the ground waiting for days and weeks and months so I could erode and turn into a beautiful stone. A priceless gem that is priceless regardless of its jagged edges or the dirty pile of shit it came from. People would see that and be understanding. But for now, I am getting in the shower, and the water is piercing through my thin skin, cleansing me from the inside out. My matted hair doesnāt smell like mildew or cigarette smoke right now. It smells like peonies.Ā
I get out once the hot water and steam starts to make me feel light-headed. I canāt help but laugh as Iām getting dressed, finding the wine stained white blouse in my closet, laying next to a trash bag full of clothes I meant to donate two springs ago. I remember that handsome man spilling his Merlot all over it, the woman who Iām starting to recognize hollering. They were sat outdoors. A patio table with a view of the Eiffel Tower shimmering. Thatās right! How could I have forgotten? Today is our anniversary! I grab the newspaper off my front porch to make sure, as the calendar in my kitchen still says June, 2001. Ć la une du 7 mai 2002. Headlines May 7th, 2002. I take a quick glimpse at my horoscope, the french politics that I care about, a past obituary page, and the Hollywood section. I make our bed, brush my teeth with his toothbrush, and head out the door. Still feeling achy, still feeling like a zombie, but now with something to wake up for.Ā
Itās around 9ish now? The walk is difficult with my now too skinny body nearly toppling over with every step on the rough stones and brick roads. There are people walking their dogs, sleeping on the street, riding their bikes, some in pearls, some with holes in their clothes. Weāre all the same arenāt we? The woman with her basket of fresh pain au chocolat and market veggies could have experienced motherhood like the older woman across the street, who is hanging her clothes to dry from a washline hung outside her window. Maybe the man sitting on a bench reading overrated literature, and the girl in a long skirt wobbling down a rough cobblestone road have experienced a similar grief. Maybe they both have the favorite color blue.Ā
Arriving at a convenience store, it is now 10h30 du matin the shop tellers clock says. I pick up two packs of cigarettes, an imported āTimes Magazine,ā a stale croissant, and a cheap coffee. My very own french cafe experience.
Ā By my third cigarette and the last drop of my coffee, Iām at the supermarche. Now I remember coming here two or three times a week before. While Iām there I get a pack of cubed beef, a baguette, potatoes, carrots, different fruits, odds and ends. I will make beef stew for our anniversary. Thatās our favorite. While I start to check out, the regular cashiers start to talk to me like we always used to do when I came in.Ā Although, they asked me stuff like, āHow are you doing? Are you okay? Iām always here.ā
They must not remember who I am. I must be unrecognizable to them too. Iām sickly pale and my eyebags look like the craters on the moon. Iām a wolf in sheep's clothes. As Iām taking my bags, they say, āAu revoir! Nous sommes lĆ pour vous.ā
They definitely do not remember who I am. On the walk back home, I have the perfect view of Montmartre. We are not very far anymore, little Jeanne. Our favorite poem. Heād be home soon.Ā
Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Getting home a bit quicker than it took me to get to the store, I cleaned up the place. I threw all the trash out, wiped down surfaces, and lit his linen lavender incense. 1:15 PM.Ā
I went to the bedroom and put on the wine stained white blouse. I think itāll make him laugh. My hair is dry now, silky smooth like velvet curtains. I cut my finger while I was peeling the potatoes. There were blood drops on the cutting board⦠when has a little blood hurt anyone? I wipe my finger on my blouse next to the grape tinted stain. I actually go outside to smoke, not to risk stinking up the house again. I check a phone that I forgot I even had. There are dozens of messages. Texts, voicemails, and missed calls. Theyāre from old friends, family, his family, asking me, āAre you okay?ā Ā
Whatās the password for this phone again? I havenāt even seen it in months. The bubbling from the boiling pot on the stove signals itās time to go inside and throw the rest of the vegetables in. I set the phone aside. With the chopping done and boiling subsided, the silence starts to eat at me like a possession. What if heās late? Will he even show? My guts are bubbling. Itās your anniversary. Of course heāll be here! Iāll put on some music in the meantime. I decide to play a mixtape thatās labeled. Our first valentines day. Feb. 14th 1996. The first song to play is āIāll be Seeing You.ā Billie Holiday.Ā 5:55 PM
He should be here any minute now. The food is done. I made our bowls, buttered some biscuits, made the table, and poured our wine. Tick, Tick, Tick. The clock makes me so anxious I could rip it off the wall and slam it to the ground.Ā Ā
āHeāll show.ā I whisper to myself, waiting. Suddenly, I hear something. A door creak open, then shut. Footsteps. But it isnāt the front door. Something is coming down the hallway, still too dark to see. Itās coming towards me now. There he is. My handsome man, looking very rough. His head is now bald in some spots. His green eyes are now bloodshot red. His skin is peeling down his arms, and itās more green and brown than it was last year. The decaying smell of flesh must be putrid; but all I smell is the scent of evening dew wisping in the grass outside, and the bouquet of dead roses in his hands. Heās stumbling towards me with a limp, handsome as ever.Ā
Thereās a hole in his chest. Heās confused by my confusion. Thereās inaudible words coming out of his mouth in mumbles, but I understand everything. Oh, thatās right. This isnāt wine on my shirt. Two springs ago my husband was shot while we were sitting down at an outdoor restaurant, celebrating our elopement. May 7th, 2000. I held him as he took his last breaths, screaming for someone to help us. This was his blood. I started to cry, and he wiped my tears. For now, he wouldnāt remind me of the night after his burial, or anything I did after that. Swaying together to the music, he would just hold me until the sun rose. How lucky am I?