When your sister died, it was the blue box of Kraft Macaroni and Cheese. Your half- sister from your father’s previous marriage cooked it up for you—she was only a year or two older than you were—and you fell asleep there on the floor, where it remained half- finished for the entire night. When you awoke the next day, before you had even opened your eyes, you thought for a brief moment that maybe it had all been just a dreadful nightmare, but then you opened them and there the macaroni and cheese still sat, half- eaten on that paper plate. No— it had all actually happened.
When your coworker fatally poisoned herself, you made up your mind to buy the nicest ingredients you could find and to cook the best Italian pasta recipe you could think of in order to show your family how much you loved them. You wanted to be present with them, to be still alive with them. You wanted to not make the same mistake twice, but then there you were at dinner, distant for the entire meal, unable to even make simple conversation, ashamed of the awful contortions your brain was doing in order to process your guilt over her death.
When your father died, it was some left- over soup you had cooked up a week prior. You were embarrassed about how the black-eyed peas and sweet potatoes had turned out; you apologized to your wife for their mushiness, and she smiled sadly and told you it was the best soup she had ever tasted. After a week in the refrigerator, the kale tasted slimy. The soup was overhot; its texture, nonexistent. By this point in your life, the texture of nearly everything—even that of death—had become wholly unremarkable to you.
And when your old friend from college died, there was no meal at all—just a hasty cup of black coffee you poured yourself right before the big work presentation began. The text message said that he had thrown himself from atop a skyscraper in lower Manhattan, and that he had finalized his divorce just a few months prior. You thought about calling off the meeting, but your boss said that he would be in attendance and, grimly, you decided to swallow your bitter emotions right along with the coffee—you didn’t want to let him down.