Madison Magazine April 2023 Publication

Goodbye, Black Licorice

My dad was a dentist who kept a private candy drawer. I knew he had it. He knew I knew he had it. We never spoke of it.

Throughout my young life and into adulthood, I would find my father during the night, droopy and snoring in his favorite chair, deep in REM sleep, a halo of light gently hovering over his salt-and-pepper hair, a tattered novel or newspaper balancing precariously atop his belly.

Strewn about, hiding in armpit crevices and scattered all over the floor, were crumpled wrappers from sour balls and Swedish licorice drops.

One of my favorite memories of this mediocre sugar stealth was the time I came home late from a night out during high school. I found my dad in his spot, eyes aflutter, head topsy-turvy. I sat next to him so I could finish the TV show he was not watching before I got tired and went to bed.

He must have sensed my presence and woke up. He turned his head to look at me and it was so obvious he had a piece of candy in his mouth, like a squirrel harboring an acorn. He then pretended to continue reading, ever so slightly sucking on the licorice or sour ball.

Years and years later, while visiting my dad in his new condo in Naples, Florida, I found my 5-year-old daughter and my father snuggling together in his chair, sharing a piece of candy from the secret drawer. I sat down next to them as inconspicuously and gently as I could so as not to scare away the moment. My dad leaned over, slipped me a Swedish licorice ball, and smiled. We did not speak, only chewed.

It had taken 31 years and a grandchild, but he’d finally acknowledged — and shared — his bounty.

This summer, I was diagnosed with high blood pressure after a year of marathon doctor visits — testing, measuring, checking and questioning. Finally, a hypertension specialist concluded her interrogation with a single question that shook me to my core: “Jessie,” she said, “do you by chance eat black licorice?”

Did I eat black licorice?

What she didn’t know is that my dad had died on Oct. 19, 2015. I still remember where I was sitting when I got the news. How the air felt on my skin, how numb my feet felt when I tried to get up to walk. In the floating haze of my grief, one thing that kept me grounded was the taste and smell of black licorice.

Once a month, my best friend’s father would mail me a huge bag of black licorice from Bulk Nation, the store in Florida where Dad bought his coveted supply. I’d squirrel it away into the freezer to hide from my family. Every night before bed, I’d slip two or three pieces of this candied ebony root into my mouth. These savory, sticky moments instantly transported me back to his chair — his quirks, his need for privacy, his humor. I missed him so much. For this one brief moment each night, licorice gave my dad back to me.

There, on the second floor of the UW Health Preventive Cardiology Clinic, my eyes flooded with tears as I confessed to the doctor that yes, I ate black licorice every night.

“No more black licorice for you,” she said, tender but firm.

I’d of course known that eating candy every night might be bad for my teeth — I was a dentist’s daughter, after all. But it had never occurred to me that there were other health problems associated with eating too much licorice. It turns out that black licorice contains glycyrrhizic acid, which can cause swelling and high blood pressure while depleting electrolytes, disrupting heart rhythm and causing other damage. It is recommended that at-risk hypertension patients like me should just avoid this candy altogether. The FDA warned that ingesting more than two ounces per day for two weeks could cause an irregular heart rhythm, and I was definitely eating more than that. From that moment on, I’d have to find another way to keep my memories of my dad close.

In Judaism, the anniversary of a death is called a “yahrzeit.” This past fall, as my father’s yahrzeit approached, I sat patiently with my new wireless at-home blood pressure monitor on my left upper arm, awaiting my daily diastolic and systolic summary, missing licorice — when I heard my father’s voice in my head: “Jessie! Acccchhh, feh! Who needs to have everything all the time, every day?” I laughed, remembering another one of his common phrases: “Everything in moderation.” It was as if he’d come back to parent me once again. Who needs black licorice every day and in excess amounts? Apparently, not me. But I did need to feel connected to him.

Memories of those we love come back when we least expect it, sometimes taking our breath away and stopping us in our tracks. Every human connection is unique. I still had the sour balls — hopefully medical research leaves those alone — but the loss of this licorice connection to my father left me feeling untethered, dangling between the past and the unknown.

So I found new tactile reminders of him. Now I pull out the handful of wrapped Macanudo cigars that were found in his belongings and give them a good sniff. I put on one of his favorite records, Billy Joel’s “The Stranger.” Then I unwrap a sour ball, close my eyes and think of him.

May we all find a way back to those we miss.

Jessie Loeb is a postpartum infant and maternal care specialist, and a licensed secondary childbirth and parenting educator at Capital High in Madison. Her new parenting memoir, “Puddle Splashing,” is available at jessieloebdoula.com and area bookstores.

R.I.P. Barbie

Seems like nobody is talking about the Barbie movie so I thought I’d start the conversation. 

I jest!

In all seriousness, this past week has been full of personal participation in and/or observation of many messages and conversations between friends and family regarding this film. People I love, adore, and respect all have a mix of sentiments about the theme, main synopsis, basic interest, indifference, obsession, etc. with Greta Gerwig’s take on all things pink and Mattel! 

Spoiler – this essay is not going to include my intimate individual or private Warner Bros. Production analysis. There is no way I could even try to keep up with the social media outpour of viewpoints in connection to Robbie, Gosling, patriarchy, flat feet, and Weird Barbie. I can only write about the tears that pooled out of my eyeholes after this film was over. All I could think about on the ride home was my own experience with this doll and all the whys and hows of how having this doll and her buddies possibly kept my 7-year-old body from crumbling into a million pieces. After hearing and reading a lot of the commentary that is out there I can already hear the judgment or support – either way doesn’t matter, this is my memory and my experience. 

After we lost my mom I would go into my room and shut the door and bury Barbie! I buried her A LOT! I buried her in my closet, under my bedspread, in my shoes, in my drawers, in my pillowcase, and under a plethora of stuffed animals. Sometimes my dad or my aunt would peek into my room, see the extensive funeral arrangements, and then awkwardly shut the door. I buried Barbie for quite a long time. I knew I recovered somewhat or at least crawled out from my chrysalis of despair when I decided to curl Barbie’s hair, became distracted, and melted her face off! 

I did not understand at age seven how death worked or why it exploded into my life;  all I understood was my mom was gone. I did get that. So I was given the space and privacy to grieve and be absolutely alone in my sadness and, from an observer’s eye, my shady and cryptic routine. No one tried to stop me from burying Barbie; no one tried to play Bury Barbie with me; I did not have to explain myself or listen to anyone tell me how to find closure with Barbie. When I shut the door it was only us – plastics and purgatory.  Jeez, this would definitely make Robbie’s Barbie cry – if I’m not careful this will turn into a scrutiny of the film – let’s get outta here!

I can not tell you how to feel, BUT do not feel I am saying one needs time with a Barbie to work through mental health issues – I am NOT saying that; However, the point I am trying to make is that I had privacy in my pain and the solace in which to grieve. I think of my kids and my students. Do our children have space to feel authentically in a world of noise and phones and social media posts that may inevitably cause conflict in comparisons? As a mom and teacher, I sometimes have this guttural instinct to want to fix the problems of those I love and for whom I care and support. Like most of us, I too see the world healing and celebrating, grieving and suffering through the spinning wheels that are our Instagram and Snapchat accounts. It has become completely normalized that we critique ourselves and our progress in life to those around us. After some hours alone in my room daylight may have turned into night, but the sunset is the only thing I saw. We had one landline with a thousand-foot cord attached to a wall and it was always busy anyway. No one knew what I was up to and I do not remember feeling as if I was in a race to get better. I just missed her and needed time to forgive the world for making mine messy.

Creativity in closed spaces is where I land; creativity doesn’t have to look pretty or poised. It can look like a Barbie funeral freak show as long as we are the directors of our own script. 

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If you want to read more essays like this  Puddle Splashing is coming up on its one-year launch anniversary – you can order & purchase copies through my website and find books to purchase on Amazon and all local Madison bookstores. 

Essay Photo by Lillian Grace on Unsplash