Empty Coffee Cups and Overflowing Ashtrays

Dad with his coffee and cigarette

Sipping decaf latte with oat milk

at my local coffee shop, watching

the interplay of light and shadow

on granite-colored walls, I recall

growing up with empty coffee cups

 and overflowing ashtrays

in the kitchen, the dining room,

the living room, the bathroom:

flowered cups with curved handles 

tipped over in saucers, stained by years of use, 

and ashtrays mounded with 

Camel, Kent, and Pall Mall butts,

curtesy of my parents and my grandmother,

who often used her saucer as an ash tray—

cigarette smoke and the smell of old coffee

wafting through the house, like 

the resentments and repressed anger

passed down by generations of depression and alcoholism,

not to mention the shame and worry about money

and what would the neighbors think—

a miasma so pervasive I never noticed,

any more than I noticed a house empty

of spontaneity, security, and joy.

So why wouldn’t I start to smoke and drink coffee

and wallow in anger and shame,

until emphysema and heartburn and divorce

said, “Had enough?”

And here I am,

an old man, parents and grandmother

long gone, drinking my latte and 

checking my iPhone (another addiction,

even the size of the cigarette pack 

I once carried in that pocket),

working my 12-Step program,

and practicing gratitude for the life I have.

This too is grief.

2 thoughts on “Empty Coffee Cups and Overflowing Ashtrays

  1. Yes! How am I alive at almost 89? And why? But grace came at thirty, though at 45 I was still going through three packs a day,. I stopped cold turkey then because of a lump in my throat. Not because I feared death, but I was terrified I’d lose my voice! That’s funny now. My marriage lasted sixty years, because my husband’s personality simply accepted the world and most people as they were. We were total opposites in personality, I spent the first forty years working on changing him!!! Luckily God was working on changing both of us! I’ve had so many miracles, that I am trying to write an honest memoir, to show that God’s love is unconditional. Bogged down right now, trying to be honest. Harder than I thought it would be, mostly because of my five grown children, who were spared the worst of it, Thanks for your honesty. It’s grace for me,

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