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MOTHER YOU emily moeck
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When listening to a story one learns just as much about the teller as the tale:
The first time I brought your father over to meet my parents,
you once told me,
he couldn’t stop looking at the place settings, never seen anything as
fancy in his life. Your grandmother
had wanted to show
she was capable in the kitchen, despite
her being knockout drunk and never having cooked a meal in her life.
Come dessert time,
she lifts herself up from the table, dismisses
the help, and stumbles into
the kitchen. We hear
banging and clatter and mumbled curses before she enters the room triumphant, a flaming
cherry jubilee that she places in the center of the table. We were halfway through eating
when my father asks
what she used to light the flames and
my mother produces the Sterno can from
the other room. We spent the remainder of the evening each in our own separate bathrooms,
you say as you turn to me with glowing eyes,
we spent the whole evening keeled over
the toilet with our fingers down our throats, gagging out
that glorious dinner.
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