27. May 2026
Food, Memory, and the Way Healing Keeps Finding Me
I have always believed food carries more than flavor.
A recipe can hold a memory. A smell can take you back years before you have time to prepare yourself. A warm loaf of bread, a pan of cinnamon rolls, a meal shared at the table—these things have a way of reaching places words do not always reach.
For me, baking and cooking have become part of how I understand healing.
Not because food fixes everything. It doesn’t. But food does create moments. It gives people a reason to pause, gather, receive, and remember that life can still be gentle.
My own journey has taught me that people carry a lot quietly. Grief, stress, old wounds, disappointment, exhaustion—most of it does not announce itself. It shows up in the body, in the nervous system, in the way people brace for life without even realizing they are doing it.
That is part of why food matters to me.
There is something deeply human about offering someone something made with care. It does not have to be dramatic or complicated. Sometimes it is as simple as handing someone a warm roll, bringing bread to a table, or making something beautiful out of ordinary ingredients.
It says, in a quiet way, you are worth caring for.
That is the heart behind The Resting Spoon.
This business is not only about baked goods. It is about creating small moments of comfort in a world that often feels rushed, heavy, and disconnected. It is about the kind of nourishment that reaches beyond hunger. It is about memory, hospitality, and the simple act of giving something good.
I think many of us are trying to build better memories out of what we have been through. We are learning how to soften again. How to receive. How to create homes, tables, traditions, and ordinary moments that feel safer than what we may have known before.
Food has become one of the ways I do that.
Every batch, every loaf, every pan of rolls feels connected to something bigger than the product itself. It is connected to the people who will share it, the conversations it may sit beside, the quiet mornings it may become part of, or the family table where it may be remembered later.
That is what keeps drawing me back.
The work of baking is practical. It is measuring, mixing, shaping, waiting, cleaning, starting over, trying again. But underneath all of that, it has become something personal to me. It has become a way to give from the places I have been healed, and sometimes from the places still healing.
Maybe that is why I love it so much.
Because food lets me take something simple and turn it into care.
And in my life, that has become a kind of calling.
