My Sister Teaches Me How to Dice an Onion
By Jessica Franken
What on earth are you doing? she says, (my mistake was cutting the ends off first, (I’m staying with my sister for a while, aunting haphazardly (when my mom came to visit her grandchildren (she wanted nothing more in life than to be a grandmother (my sister always wanted kids (I dreamed once, in adolescence, that my sister and I raised a little girl together (she lays her hand atop mine (curl your fingers inward (I was the one, with the undertaker, who couldn’t cry (oh onion, (oh, one tear) oh beautiful excuse) so my sister spilled our tears) like you’re cupping a baby’s foot) to show me how to hold the onion gentler) and we each braided one side of her hair every morning) but I couldn’t decide about kids) but she died when her grandkids were one and two) she would bring hand-made activity books) to fill one drop into the dead-grandmother hole) because you must leave the root in place to hold the pieces together) sounding just like our mother.
Jessica Franken’s essay “The Hayflick Limit” was included in River Teeth 22.2 and listed as a Notable Essay in The Best American Essays. She lives in Ithaca, NY, and leads generative writing communities with writers around the world.
Image by PamWalker68 courtesy of iStock
*This essay originally appeared in the Beautiful Things series on January 27, 2025.
Damn, this is one of those pieces I love so much, it makes me kind of jealous, The use of the parentheses like petals of onion to cup all of that rich content is just too good.
Stunning and so clever. Perfect form, metaphor within metaphor. Compelling story ….. a woman born to be a grandmother who died too early just clenches my heart. Thank you.
This is such excellent use of form and content. I just love it.
Stunning
Such a stunning, beautiful piece. I’ve read it several times now and find a new reason to tear up each time.