Breakfast has always been the only meal where I look for consistency. I’ve had month-long runs of cereal and milk; green smoothies; poached eggs with salsa on corn tortillas; or toast with butter, jam, and salt. But now I am back to the basics of a fried egg on sourdough, a ritual that began during the first coronavirus spike.
Back then everything felt so barren. Plans were on hold and planes were grounded as a global pandemic spread. The uncertainty of life, what I have spent my life running from, became unavoidable.
As I clung to any sense of normalcy, I move up the coast to Oakland, closer to where I grew up. I also make a career change to the grocery industry, just as food was flying off the shelves. Me, the adventurous eater, who craves variety and hates sameness.
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I grounded myself each day with an egg prepared the same way as the days merge together. Having control over something, anything, feels assuring. In the humorous riddle that is life, the only time I ever got a double yolk was the one day I ventured to make an egg white omelette instead of my regular fried egg on toast.