He wrote that the biggest lesson he has learned this summer was something that happened about ten days before the end of the break. He was helping his grandmother to make him a turkey sandwich and cut a side of his left palm with the very point of the knife. It bled a little. Grandmother went to her room and by the sad, sweet smell that has reached his nostrils he knew she has opened her medicine drawer. A tiny, stunningly beautiful oxblood dome was slowly growing just below his little finger. Grandmother has aimed a band-aid's soft insides at the dome, and it was slowly sucked in by the soft velvety material. She's adjusted the sticky straps to the both sides of his palm and told him to make a fist two or three times so that the glue will settle properly. He did. Later, when he went out, a turkey sandwich in his cut hand, a cell phone in the his good one, he decided to take a pic of the wound and text it to Janney. The sandwich made this whole task pretty complicated, and at some point he had dropped the band-aid. It made a soft sound hitting a wet mess of the old autumn leafs. When he finished uploading a photo and looked down, at least ten ants were walking, pulling, sniffing, feeding off the brown stuff in the velvety middle of that band-aid. “Two minutes”, - he wrote in his essay, - “Believe it or not, teacher, but two minutes are all it takes them when it's time”.
(c) Linor Goralik