I remember last summer
You were sitting at the table
Like so many summers before
With skilled hand piercing
watermelon skin
And with a fluid motion
Began the ritualistic carving
I had seen you do this
Hundreds of times
But not through these eyes
These eyes savoring precious moments
These eyes watching an ordinary act
As if it were extraordinary
You cut it in circles
Then slicing them in half, forming tasty boats
And the knife followed the
Curve of the boat
To free melon from the rind
Then up, down, up, down,
making cubes
on the curved “u” stand
Lightly salted
And a knife stab of a savory chunk
Plopped it in your mouth
How I remember
I hadn’t eaten mine
For I was mesmerized
In the moment
Watching your face light with delight
At each piquant morsel
A sweet summer treat
I did and didn’t know
that would be the last time.
-This post serves as my “I Remember,” a collaboration with fellow writers, and as savoring a precious memory of my daddy.
Sometimes the beauty of knowing that someone is in their last days, you hold on to the how extraordinary ordinary moments are.” Sounds like another collaboration of “extraordinary ordinary.”