Mr PitBull Stories@MrPitbull07
My grandmother always had a drawer full of flour. Always. It was a certainty, one of those things that never change. Then one day, she told me she can’t afford to bake anymore. She’s 83 and lives on a €900 monthly pension. And last week, almost in a whisper, she admitted that even flour has become too expensive.
She, who baked every birthday cake in the family for forty years. She, who taught me how to make shortcrust pastry when I was seven. The one who used to win prizes at the village fair. Today, she has an empty drawer—where once there were bags of flour for every recipe, for every occasion.
I found out by chance. I stopped by without warning and found her sitting at the table with a simple slice of toast. No butter. “It’s too expensive,” she told me with a soft smile. “I’m not really hungry anyway.” But that smile didn’t hide everything else.
I opened the cupboards: canned soup, a few crackers… and nothing more.
I went home with a knot in my throat I couldn’t untangle. The next day, I started doing the one thing she had taught me best: cooking. I began selling homemade cakes. Nothing fancy—just simple desserts for birthdays, graduations, small celebrations. Every euro I earned became her groceries.
She doesn’t know. Or rather, she doesn’t know the truth. I tell her I’ve found good deals, that I’m learning how to save better. Because I know that if she found out, she’d say it’s too much.
Last week I went back to her place with bags full of groceries. And I filled that drawer again. Flour of every kind, just like before. When she saw it, she started to cry. “It’s too much,” she whispered.
I also brought her small kitchen tools—wooden spoons, a few vintage measuring cups… those simple things that can still make her eyes light up.
And then something happened that I’ll never forget.
She started cooking again.
She bakes bread for the neighbors. She moves around the kitchen with a different light in her eyes. Yesterday, she asked me if I wanted to learn her secret cinnamon rolls recipe—the one she’s never written down anywhere. I took a day off just to be with her. Six hours together, laughing, flour everywhere. She kept saying, “I can’t believe I can do this again.”
My mother told me I’m spoiling her. I told her to leave.
Because this isn’t spoiling. It’s caring. It’s refusing to accept that someone should slowly fade away just because they can’t afford a bag of flour—and calling it old age.
This world forgets the elderly far too quickly. And it expects families to stay quiet.
I won’t.
That drawer will stay full. Even if I have to bake a thousand cakes.
Because she taught me everything that truly matters. And now that her hands tremble a little more, it’s my turn to make sure they never stop creating.
And maybe, in the end, I’m not just filling a drawer with flour. I’m restoring a piece of dignity, memory, and love that no price should ever be able to erase.