She's tall now standing there with the refrigerator door flung open staring into a world of decisions.
The school day wears lightly on her face; her eyes dart between the shelves and the door like fireflies
She is tall now. Her mother competes in a fruitless battle. I notice. She doesn't have to stand on her toes; she doesn't have to step into the refrigerator like her sisters.
She weighs all of her choices.
In a moment, she shifts the weight of her choices on her hips and plucks an apple from the drawer and leaves.
Her choice made.
I consider this moment in the continuum of her life - my life. She is tall now. The choices are hers now. I fear the seduction of the artificial and the shallow will sugar over her innocence, but I remember the apple and all of its symbolism and think . . . she chose the apple . . . and her life will be rich.