Forty jars with dates
In Liam's kitchen there are between forty and fifty preserve jars on the open shelves. Each one has a handwritten label with the date, origin, and contents. Sourwood jam from last fall. Pickles from two summers ago. Seasonal berry compote. Each jar with its story and its date. He never opens them.
They haven't been forgotten. They're there, organized, with their readable dates, and Liam looks at them from time to time the way you look over a collection you don't plan to use. The act of preserving matters more to him than the act of consuming. The sourwood jam is still perfect, the hermetic seal holds, the label says October 14th. He could open it tomorrow. He won't.
Something similar happens with the recipes he notes in his notebook, with the beers he keeps for the cold months, with the voice memos he sometimes replays two or three times before answering. Liam keeps the things that matter to him. He organizes them. He labels them. And then he doesn't touch them, as if the order were enough.







