There is a memory I keep circling back to during hours of soft, smiling silences. It is rather incomplete, just a piece really. A single shard of shattered years I hold dear.
In this memory, I am on a hill just before it descends holding an ice cream cone that once held a vanilla scoop. My hand still sticky where the dessert dripped down as I sought refuge in the shade of a lilac tree. Late Spring's sun ceded to the blooming lilacs, I could breathe in the perfumed air with an ease of those with lungs that worked consistently. And I could hear bees, buzzing overhead, pollinating the light purple flowers, going about their work at an unbothered pace, like they too were soothed by the lilacs. Content with what they already had unhurried to gather more than they need. I took my time munching on the wafer cone unbothered like a bee. And I thought to myself at the tender age of seven,
I'll remember this.
I just didn't realize at the time how important that promise would be.
This memory is a shard, a piece, it was jagged and hurt to squeeze. Because it was brilliant simplicity just before the concept of breaking touched me. But the years I've cared for it receiving cuts from how much I despaired that it was gone, I'd never feel it again, my care to return to this piece smoothed its edges. I know now that there was no use clinging so tightly leaving a mark in my hands as if it was proof to be read in my palms that I had happiness. Because I haven't lost it.
I will always enjoy the memory of eating ice cream beneath my lilac tree and smile at that simple piece. I remembered it because I said I would. I remember it now to experience it again. It is a memory of happiness. A promising peace.