Lyric Prose |

“Box of Life”

Box of Life

 

You thought I might like a box of the cereal I devoured as a lad — a change from the breakfast routine now that I’m deep into my oatmeal years.

I resisted, rooted in my ruts as I am, but you persisted.

In the next load of groceries, as promised: the familiar box with the cheerful blue, red, yellow, and green lettering.

At breakfast, I tore open the flap and the bag inside, the sweetness emanating from within luring me.

I almost drooled on myself as I shook out a small bowlful — a fraction of the slag heap I would have had in my boyhood.

I dropped a fistful of blueberries onto the mound of straw-colored squares.

I dribbled in milk — almond milk, true, not the whole milk I used to use — but still up to the task of serving as a creamy liquid foil for the cereal.

I slid the spoon in and took my first mouthful — and I froze.

I was no longer in our kitchen but standing in the sunny piano room of my mother’s small shingled house on Cape Cod.

Green-gold spring sunlight checkered the braided rug where I stood listening to her practice “The Girl with the Flaxen Hair” (and swear like a seadog when she hit a clinker).

As she played, I ladled spoonful and after spoonful into my adolescent maw, my arm and hand a breakfast-food metronome.

I snap back to the now — back from fifty years ago when life was a continuous sea change, when Life became my madeleine, a token of a time long past but never gone.

I pluck a single pale golden latticework wafer-thin square from the bowl even as the oaty sweetness of the spoonful I chew — a flavor a horse would nicker for — lingers in my mouth.

I hold it up and peer through its slats, a minuscule spyglass.

I squint through its louvers and the window to the sky beyond.

Am I looking into the past or into the moment?

In the upper atmosphere I see a cirrus formation shaped like an elongated Life, a vaporous doppelgänger for the square I hold up before me — a prism refracting past, future, and present.

I lower it, then place it on my tongue. I let its sugar dissolve. I crunch down.

And I realize that though the flavor released the memory, the present is what I savor with gratitude.

Gratitude for your gesture, your intuition, your knowing what such a simple treat would mean to me.

You, my giver of life.

Contributor
Craig Moodie

Craig Moodie lives with his wife in Massachusetts. His work includes A Sailor’s Valentine and Other Stories and, under the name John Macfarlane, the middle-grade novel Stormstruck!, a Kirkus best book. http://moodiebooks.com

Posted in Lyric Prose

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