Human Parts

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The Last Bowl of Soup

What my grandmother taught me about dying awake

Srini
Human Parts
Published in
4 min readDec 19, 2024

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A bowl of creamy yellow soup garnished with chopped fresh parsley sits on a light-colored surface. Two toasted white bread rest on the edge of the white bowl, and a silver spoon lies nearby on a linen napkin.
Photo by Jess Loiterton from Pexels

Steam rises from my grandmother’s hospital soup, curling like a question mark in the yellow afternoon light. The plastic spoon clinks against the bowl’s edge as she lifts each spoonful with deliberate grace. Outside, a maple leaf catches the October sun, spinning gold before releasing its grip on the branch. One moment it’s part of the tree, the next — it's a traveler on the wind. No ceremony. No warning. Just a simple release. That’s when I finally understand what death really means.

“You’re becoming morbid,” my best friend Sara says later that evening, her coffee cup creating perfect rings on my kitchen table. The kettle whistles behind us, and rain taps against the window like hesitant fingers. “Death isn’t something to dwell on.” She tucks a strand of hair behind her ear, avoiding my eyes.

But that’s exactly what we all do, isn’t it? Death sits with us during morning coffee, its chair is always empty but never vacant. It rides shotgun on late-night drives, humming along to forgotten radio songs. It lingers in the spaces between goodbyes, in the caught breath before “I love you.” We run from it, build paper fortresses against it, and fill our days with noise to drown out its whispers.

Back in the hospital room, my grandmother’s fingers trace patterns on her blanket. The heart monitor beeps steadily, marking time like a metronome.

“Look,” she whispers, pointing to sparrows gathering on her windowsill. Their feathers ruffle in the breeze, little puffs of life against the sterile hospital backdrop. “Have you ever seen anything more alive?”

She lifts another spoonful of soup to her lips. The fluorescent lights cast shallow shadows under her eyes, but they sparkle with something I’ve never seen before.

“This might be my last bowl of soup,” she says, rolling the liquid on her tongue like wine. “So I’m going to taste every drop.”

The evening nurse comes in, her rubber-soled shoes squeaking against the linoleum. She checks vitals and adjusts tubes, her movements efficient but gentle. My grandmother catches her hand as she turns to leave. “Thank you, dear,” she says, her voice warm with genuine gratitude. “You make even these machines…

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Human Parts
Human Parts
Srini
Srini

Written by Srini

Humor alchemist | Ship broker 🚢✨ For more humor, comics, and philosophy, subscribe to my "Wit & Wisdom with Srini" newsletter: https://srinihere.substack.com/

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