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Local Honey | Midwest: Miracle Whip

I’m delighted to announce that my essay “Miracle Whip” has just been published in Local Honey | Midwest. Last summer, I responded to a submission call from Local Honey | Midwest requesting pandemic inspired essays. Local Honey | Midwest is an online literary magazine for midwest writers. I’m not from the midwest, but my mom was born in Rochester, Minnesota, and my essay is partially about my grieving her death, so I guess I snuck in by association!

Just to add legitimacy, here is a picture of my grandfather and mom in Rochester back in the late 1930’s.

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My essay details the difficulty I had with the sense of taste after my mom’s death, specifically how I could not manage to recreate the way she cooked. I write about how the shuttering of the buffet-style restaurant, Souplantation, triggered similar feelings of grief.

I talk a bit about the controversial condiment “Miracle Whip,” which was a staple in mom’s cooking. I realize that Miracle Whip is on par with the “Does pineapple belong on pizza debate” (for the record, a resounding yes- it’s delicious.) Yet, I hope that wherever your opinions on Miracle Whip or pineapple on pizza fall, you’ll give my essay a read. Thank you!

tags: Miracle Whip, Miracle Whip Essay Karen Lea Germain, Karen Lea Germain Writer, Local Honey | Midwest, Midwest Writers, Midwest Literary Magazines, Rochester Minnesota 1930's, Minnesota 1930's, Family from the Midwest, Pineapple on Pizza, Controversial Food Choices, Mayo or Miracle Whip, Souplantation Closing, Chains Killed by Covid, Souplantation and Covid, Local Honey | Midwest Miracle Whip Karen Lea Germain, Vintage Family Photos, Essays About Grief, Essays About Grieving, Essays About Mom's Death, Recipes with Miracle Whip, BT Sandwiches, Essays about the Sense of Taste, People Die and we Lose their recipes, Recreating Family Recipes, Time Travel with Taste, Most Powerful of the Senses, Covid Casualties, Cooking Through Grief, Photos from the 1930's, I love Miracle Whip, Pineapple Does Belong on Pizza, 1930's fashion
categories: Life, Read
Monday 06.14.21
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

Intima: Crossroads Blog

I recently had the joy of learning that author Michael Lund picked my essay, “Weight” to reflect upon in his recent post that was published in Intima: A Journal of Narrative Medicine’s Crossroads Blog.

My essay detailed my grief and complicated emotions after my beloved aunt’s death in 2013. Lund’s fictional short story “Bees” involves grief that comes from a terminal diagnosis. Intima: A Journal of Narrative Medicine offers an interesting opportunity via its Crossroads Blog. It asks those who are published in the current issue of Intima to write a blog article that connects their contribution with that of a previous submission. Lund’s story was published in the Fall 2020 edition of Intima and he connected to my Spring 2020 story.

I also contributed to Crossroads, when I reflected on artist Inés Ixierda’s drawing “Fasciotomy” from the Spring 2016 edition. One of the missions of Intima is to facilitate communication and understanding between patients/caregivers/medical professionals. This fits well with the concept of connecting unrelated submissions in the Crossroads Blog.

I have to admit that I had never heard of Intima prior to discovering them through Submittable and taking a chance that “Weight” might be a good fit. I was thrilled to be published in Intima, but even more, it has led me to discover new artists and writers. The idea of a medical journal might send some people away, thinking it is not for them, but as someone who is not in the medical field, I find Intima to be very accessible. All of us humans go through grief and pain. A majority of us will experience our own medical problems or be caretakers for people that we love. Intima is a platform for conversations around these issues. I encourage you to check it out.

As a sweet bonus, Lund’s blog was posted on Veteran’s Day. Lund is a Veteran and he also teaches creative writing to a Veteran’s group. He couldn’t have known it, but this holiday also has a connection with my family. Although “Weight” is primarily about my Aunt Trudy, it is also connected to my Uncle Larry. My aunt and uncle had an epic love story and both passed in 2013. The grief from my aunt’s passing and the difficulties in carrying for her in her last months, we most certainly compounded from losing my Uncle. He passed in April and she passed in December. My uncle was a Navy veteran and they are buried together at Riverside National Cemetery in California. Prior to learning about Lund’s post, I had been thinking about my uncle and missing him on Veteran’s Day.

I will close with a picture of my aunt and uncle on their wedding day in Las Vegas. They are loved and very much missed.

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tags: Intima: A Journal of Narrative Medicine, Weight Karen Lea Germain, Bees Michael Lund, Michael Lund Author, Michael Lund Bees Intima: A Journal of Narrative Medicine, Spring 2020 Intima: A Journal of Narrative Medicine, Fall 2020 Intima: A Journal of Narrative Medicine, Larry LaRue Peck, Trudy Lea Peck, Riverside National Cemetery, Veteran's Day 2020, Ines Ixierda Fasciotomy, Ines Ixierda Intima: A Journal of Narrative Medicine, Crossroads Blog Intima, Vintage Las Vegas Wedding, Vintage Wedding Dress, Essays About Grief, Essays About Addiction, Riverside National Cemetery Veteran's Day, Essays About Being a Caregiver, Essays About Being a CaregiverUsing Submittable, Writing for Veterans, Vintage Family Photos, Columbia University Intima Journal, Communication Between Doctors and Patients, Communication in the Medical Field, Published in 2020
categories: Life, Read
Tuesday 11.17.20
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

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