Tuesday, December 29, 2015

The Butcher's Apprentice 2.0

I play soccer with a girl named Summer who was diagnosed with Stage 4 colon cancer two years ago.  She went through treatment, and is now considered No Evidence of Disease.
Pre-cancer Summer never used cuss words.
Post-cancer Summer does not give a fuck.
We call her Summer 2.0. 

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Back Where I Belong

Breaking up is hard.
            You know what else is hard?
            Admitting that you were wrong.
            Confessing that you made a mistake.
            And getting back together.

            Time to get my hands bloody again.


            Don’t worry, my darling.  I’ll be gentle.
            I run an ungloved hand slowly along six pounds of uncut tenderloin, reacquainting myself with this old flame.  We’re gonna do this together. 
            Flip it over, flip it over.
            Press it all flat on the board with the palm of my hand.
This is not the frenzied fumbling of first-time lovers.  This is the authoritative touch of that one ex who knew all your buttons, and just the right way to push them.
I can’t promise that this won’t hurt . . . but I can promise . . . you won’t feel a thing.
            I go for the strap first.
            My knife enters the meat like a sigh, gliding through blood and fat. 
            Next I go after the silver skin. 
            It comes off easy, and smooth.  Seems I haven’t lost my touch after ten months away.  So cutting meat is kind of like riding a bike; or if you’re me, like riding a motorcycle:  you do it inconsistently enough that it still gives you a little anxiety every time you hop back on, so you take it slow. 
            But I don’t feel anxious right now.
            As I clean the gunk off the underside of the tender, I go into a sort of meditative state.  My hands flow like breath; my mind is clear. 
              And my finished product is beautiful, as always.