Feature by Kate Raphael
This indefinite time, this slowdown of life, has made me reevaluate what is important.
This indefinite time, this slowdown of life, has made me reevaluate what is important.
Since I’d never cooked much, I didn’t want to start, but I knew I had to do this for my mother.
My rights are less pertinent these days, and I’m learning restraint too late.
My own porch looked unlived-in, a stage for a performance that had yet to happen.
It would be my call to make, that perfect moment of doneness.
I’ll put her hair in pigtails, fishtails, French braids, waterfall braids, Dutch braids—whatever she wants.
Humor is a go-to defense in our family when things go wrong, but so much is wrong now.
Are you, like, actually a boy?
I tune to the wren and hear a thousand miles in a syllable.
I wanted to pretend I was okay, that it was a happy day and I was there for a better reason.