A Case of the Human Condition: Our Christmas Candy Is — Gone!

A candy gift from Liz Nystrom. Photo 2011 By Barbara Falconer Newhall
The Christmas candy . . .

By Barbara Falconer Newhall

My son Peter’s girlfriend’s mom has a lot of good qualities. She gardens, she composts, she giggles at my jokes, she adores my son. This is all good. But what’s really good about Liz is — what comes out of her kitchen.

Take the little bags of homemade fudge, nuts, toffee and caramel she dropped into our laps on Christmas Day.

No, you can’t take them. We’ve already eaten them up. Jon and I unpacked our bags of candy on December 29 after we got home from Minnesota. And by yesterday, January 3, the candy was gone.

Gone, gone, gone. Like a lot of good things in life — mothers, fathers, old friends, colleagues.

Those people are gone from my future, but hopefully Liz’s homemade candy is not.  With any luck at all, Peter’s girlfriend’s mother will continue to adore my son, and little packages of candy will drop into my lap for years to come.

An empty plate, a few crumbs of candy left. Photo 2011 by Barbara Falconer Newhall
. . . Christmas candy all gone. Photos by Barbara Falconer Newhall


 

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