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#balkans
My father says the peppers need more sun. This is somehow about my mother. The balcony smelled like soil and cigarettes. He kept looking at the plants instead of me. Men from our part of the world treat eye contact like a border crossing. Later, at home, I cut red peppers slowly for a salad I wasn’t hungry for. Outside, rain. Of course. Everything important in my family eventually becomes weather. I suddenly remembered my mother standing barefoot in the kitchen telling me not to refrigerate tomatoes. As if love could survive through small correct instructions. The knife, the cutting board, the quiet apartment. I understood my father completely then. Not verbally. Worse.
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May 3
May 3, 2026 at 7:44 AM UTC
Peppers
My father never says: “I miss your mother.” Instead he asks if I am eating enough fish. This is Balkan male emotional openness. Yesterday he sent me a photograph of a tomato from his garden with no context. I stared at it for ten minutes like it was a Renaissance painting. The tomato looked honest. Slightly damaged. Sun-warm. Very red. Sometimes I think all men over sixty communicate through produce because language disappointed them early. When I visit him we sit on the balcony in silence watching weather move through trees. Occasionally he says something devastating while pretending not to. Last summer: “Your mother liked when the house was full.” Then immediately: “Rain tomorrow.” As if emotions are dangerous animals that must be released quickly back into nature. I inherited the opposite disease. I explain feelings like a tour guide in a burning museum. Once I asked him: “Do you miss her?” He didn’t answer for a long time. Then he pointed to the garden. “The peppers need more sun,” he said. I went home that night and wrote a poem about peppers. He will never read it. But the peppers exist. And so does she. And so do we. And so does the silence between the tomato and the rain.
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May 3
May 3, 2026 at 7:41 AM UTC
My Father Explains Nothing