avatarAkemi Sagawa

Summary

The author reflects on their father's habit of buying fruits in bulk, revealing it as a response to his childhood experience of scarcity during and after World War II.

Abstract

The article delves into the author's childhood memories of having an abundance of fruits year-round, thanks to their father's practice of purchasing whole boxes of fruit. Initially perplexed by this seemingly wasteful behavior, the author later understands it as a reaction to their father's impoverished upbringing, where he and his eight siblings had to share a single apple. The father's desire to provide more than enough for his own children, ensuring they would never experience the deprivation he did, is presented as the driving force behind his actions. The narrative also touches on the evolution of fruit flavors and the selective breeding process, as well as the cultural practices around fruit consumption in Japan.

Opinions

  • The author initially perceived their father's bulk fruit purchases as wasteful.
  • After learning about their father's past, the author gained a deeper appreciation for his actions and the abundance he provided.
  • The author notes the change in strawberry flavor over time, attributing it to selective breeding.
  • The author shares personal preferences and family anecdotes about various fruits and their seasons.
  • The author expresses gratitude to Dr. Preeti Singh for the prompt that inspired the article and to others who have shared their own fruit-related experiences and insights.

Why My Father Used to Buy Fruits by a Whole Box

In response to Dancing Elephants prompt 23 of 52

Photo by Priscilla Du Preez on Unsplash

Fruits! I grew up with lots of fruits all year round!

Bright red strawberries in the spring were sour and I used to sprinkle sugar. Nowadays, most strawberries are so sweet that no sugar is needed. I guess the process of selective breeding has advanced so much in the last half a century.

Summer started with seedless grapes. Delaware cultivar was the most common. Did you know that people in Japan don’t eat the skin of grapes? And watermelons — my favorite! I could eat watermelons for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

Late summer to fall was fig season, although I didn’t care for it much… My tongue just doesn’t accept that texture. Persimmons followed figs. Our Pomeranian dog liked persimmons better than anyone else in our family. She could not stay still while my mother was pealing the skin.

Then apples and oranges in winter. My hands would turn orange by peeling the skins of so many oranges.

In our family, it was not my mother but my father who brought fruits home. Only four of us were in our family, my father, my mother, my younger brother, and me. But my father would always buy fruits in a whole box from the wholesaler. In a box, there were at least three dozen apples neatly lined up and stacked. We tried to eat them all before they went bad, or simply gave some away to neighbors.

When my father was not at home, I asked my mother why he was so wasteful. Granted, the wholesale price was better than retail, but if he bought only as much as we could consume comfortably, we would appreciate the taste much better than shoveling in.

Then my mother started.

“When your younger brother was born, your father didn’t look excited but rather worried. I asked him what was the matter, why he didn’t look as happy as when you were born.”

“Your father was afraid that now he had two children, those children would have to share one apple half. You know, your father had eight siblings. He never had an opportunity to eat the whole apple, but only one-eighth. Before your brother was born you used to have the whole apple. Your father was afraid he could only give you half from now on.”

My father was 6 years old when World War II ended. He grew up poor, not having enough even to eat.

Fortunately, my father could afford to buy a whole apple each for me and for my brother. And more. Maybe his urge to buy a whole box of fruits was a defensive reaction to his childhood trauma.

After my mother told me this story, I stopped criticizing my father as being wasteful. I simply thanked him for getting us abundant fruits.

Thank you, Dr. Preeti Singh, for your wonderful prompt. There is a reason why I chose the photo of an apple.

Thanks to Dr. Gabriella Korosi, for showing me Cocoa fruit. I’ve never seen it before.

I’m awed by GnanVi_Speaks’ full imagination. Wonderful!

Originally published at https://akemisagawa.com on March 7, 2023.

Dancingelephantspress
Fruits
Fathers
Life Stories
Childhood
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