It's one of the most difficult conversations you can have.
Especially when your theology completely differs from the person you're
speaking with. Death is a very hard thing to deal with and it is especially
hard when you lose your mom's best friend, a friend so close that she becomes
your aunt.
The funny thing is I was really at a loss for words. It would be
cold and cruel to say that no mom, I don't think that she is in a better place
she simply doesn't exist anymore, but such words would be cruel. I think on
some level even the most religious people know that the proposition of
surviving death is complete bullshit based on reactions to death that are
melancholy rather than joyful.
Still atheism hasn't turned me into a cold person completely
lacking of humanity, I love my aunt and am very saddened by her somewhat early
departure. I also feel a bit of guilt in not working harder at an earlier age
to fundamentally change the eating habits of my family so that her life could
have been longer.
Still we only have one shot at this. Christopher Hitchens said it
best:
"I know what's coming. I know no one beats these odds. And
it's a matter of getting used to that and growing up and realizing that you're
expelled from your mother's uterus as if shot from a cannon towards a barn door
studded with old nail files and rusty hooks. It's a matter of how you use up
the intervening time in an intelligent and ironic way ... and try not to do
anything ghastly to your fellow creatures."
My
aunt may not exist anymore but she does live on in our memories of her and the
good things she did for the people around her. She did know how to make those
around her feel good. She defied the odds surviving a life threatening gun shot
wound. We all succumb to death at some point, but she was a survivor.
It’s not that hard to cope when I just keep
her in my mind. I will be remembering
her by wearing the cologne she loved the scent of more than anything Cool Water By Davidoff. I will also go ahead and make her favorite
cake. One that she nailed all the time,
I wanted to give a little refresh to the classic pineapple upside-down cake
recipe by adding in bourbon soaked black cherries as opposed to the typical
maraschino that are typically used. I
also wanted to use fresh pineapple. It’s
not quite the same as hers though it is quite tasty.
Knowing
that our time on this earth is so brief is what makes every moment so precious
and we've only got one chance to make it count. I will look back on all of
those time and experiences that we've had together lovingly. She was an amazing
person. Whether your beliefs are that she is in perpetual worship of a divine
creator or like me you think that her life is just over, you can't argue
with the fact that she lived a good life and will be missed by many.
everyone who terrifies you is 65% water. and everyone you love is made of stardust, and I know sometimes you can’t even breathe deeply, and the night sky is no home, and you have cried yourself to sleep enough times that you are down to your last two percent, butnothing is infinite, not even lossyou are made of the sea and the stars, and one day you will find yourself again
-f. butler
Ingredients:
-1 Fresh Pineapple
-1 Fresh Pineapple
-20 or so fresh cherries
-2 ½ Sticks of butter
-1 ½ Cups sugar
-2 ½ cups all-purpose flour
-2 teaspoons baking powder
-½ teaspoon salt
-½ cup milk
-1/3 Cup Pineapple Juice
-½ Cup Brown Sugar
-3 Eggs
-½ Cup Burbon
-About 15-20 cherries pitted
Method:
1. Preheat oven to 325 F.
2. Thinly slice the butter and use it to line the bottom of a
12” well seasoned cast iorn skillet.
Sprinkle ¼ cup of the brown sugar on top.
The wet Ingredients should get to about this consistency. |
3. Reduce the cherries with ¼ cup of the brown sugar and the bourbon until you are left with a very thick sauce.
4. Arrange about half of the pineapple, cut into slices about a
quarter inch thick, along with the cherries in the bottom of a 12” cast iron
skillet.
Spread the butter on bottom of the pan before topping with brown sugar |
6. In a separate bowl sift together flour and baking powder.
7. Transfer the batter mixture to a bowl and mix in a quarter
of the flour mixture followed by an egg until incorporated, alternating between
the flour mixture and the eggs until it is all mixed together.
8. Carefully pour on top of the cherries and pineapple.
9. Bake for one hour.
Allow to cool for about 15 minutes before turning out the cake onto a
pan.
Arrange pineapple slices and cherries as artistically as possible |