When I was five years old, the man I was named after died at the of age 62. I have no direct memories of him. I’m told he was a serious fellow, a hard worker, a successful entrepreneur, strong in faith, family and frugality, and since he was married to my grandmother for over forty years, probably a heckuva good dancer.
I will be 62 next week. Well aware that the coconut does not fall far from the tree, I admit to being a little nervous. Since photos were not commonplace back then, there are only two photos of him and me together, both black and white and fading and cherished greatly. Rarely do I look at the photos but I still keep these sweet links to our past stored safely in the cloud with my digital collection of over 10,000 other photos.
One photo shows the two of us soaking our feet in a bucket of warm salt water. I’m looking at the camera talking about something. He is smiling down at me. Must have been quite the moment for us both. I look awkward. He looks great.
So, last night I had a vivid dream. Like in the photo, Papa and I are both soaking our feet. It’s so real I can feel the warm water between my toes and hear my grandmother clanging in the kitchen. Papa smiles at me.
And in black and white, he tells me, “Drink thistle tea”. Never heard of it. But he repeats himself, “Drink thistle tea!”
I’m five. I ask “How do I get it?”
“You buy it at the store. It’s two hundred dollars. Go get it. I’ll pay for it.”
And he hands me his charge card.
I wake up startled and more than a little curious about this unheard of bit of healthcare advice from a man who I am genetically aligned with and who died at the age I will be next week. Popping out of bed I head straight to the computer and type in the Search Bar “thistle tea”. I hit “Enter”.
The old photo of me and my grandfather soaking our feet pops up.
Ordered that tea on the spot and been drinking it ever since.
Finally, as I sip my grandfather’s warm thistle tea, which according to the internet is full of a powerful antioxidant called Silymarin that fights cancers of the gastrointestinal tract AND is endorsed by my Papa, I leave you with a few quotes, two from Englishmen who know their tea, and one from an American who knows his rum.
“I have lived more of my life than is to come. How do I face this imponderable idea that one day I am not going to exist anymore? I make art. I tell stories.”
— Sting
“When youth departs may wisdom prove enough.”
— Winston Churchill
“Life is a journey that’s not measured in miles or years, but in experiences.
But if there’s a heaven for me, I’m sure it has a beach attached.”
– Jimmy Buffett
Cheers!!!