Tag Archives: gift

The Heart of Everyday Normality

“Merry Christmas,” said the white haired lady, thrusting a jar of honey in your hands. “It comes straight from her hive,” she continued, gesturing to another white haired  lady near the tree who, evidently, was an apiarist.

The lady’s words sounded oddly perverse, to you, and you laughed. Your girlfriend, along for the ride since it’s the holidays, gave you a proper slap on the shoulder. The white haired lady looked crookedly at the two of you before going elsewhere to, probably, deliver more honey “straight from [the] hive.”

You had no interest in this particular jar of honey, having plenty of honey at home and very little room in your suitcase. Nevertheless, the next day you gently wrapped the jar of honey in an old necktie and buried it in your carry-on. Maybe she’ll let me do something sexual with it: you pictured your girlfriend covered in bees.

You hear a few days later that the white haired apiarist is dying of cancer. You don’t really know her, but you’re still sad a little.

You decide to watch a documentary about bees. They’re dying in large numbers throughout the word, you learn. But they probably aren’t dying of cancer.


The Subsequent Blossoming Forth

For my birthday, my girlfriend gave me something she made. Last year it was something she constructed from forks and spoons.

This year it was a flower pot, out of which a hand was growing. I recognized the hand; I had bought it for her to hang jewelry from.

“You don’t have to water this kind of plant.” She laughed.

I watered it everyday after she left for work. It didn’t take long before the hand grew a wrist.

Under some pretense, I took my potted hand from her apartment, claiming it would look good in my house, which I hardly called home at all these days.

There I watered it dutifully, spoke to it, played it pleasant music. The wrist grew a slender arm, which grew a graceful shoulder.

A woman! I grew excited and pulled on the arm. A beautiful woman emerged from the soil. Our eyes met. We embraced. Then she pulled me back into the soil.

Later that day my girlfriend came by. She didn’t find me. But she found a flower pot with two hands in it. Presuming I had made it for her, she took it back to her apartment. Her birthday is tomorrow.