June Morrison set her coffee cup on the side table, two sugars with a splash of cream, same as always, and opened her tablet. The morning light at Lake Norman slanted through the curtains, catching the dust motes that floated like memories themselves. At eighty-seven, June had learned that mornings were for remembering, and her family had given her a new way to do it.
The notification blinked: "Sophie added a new entry."
She touched the screen, and there was little Emma, covered in flour, tongue stuck out in concentration just like Michael used to at that age, rolling dough with the marble pin Robert had given June for their tenth anniversary. Sophie's caption read:
Three generations of Morrison women have used this rolling pin. Emma's attempting GG's beaten biscuits. Pray for us.
June laughed, really laughed, the kind that made her eyes water. She reached for the phone.
"Sophie, honey? Tell Emma the secret is to beat them exactly one hundred times. Not ninety-nine, not one-oh-one. Your great-grandmother Morrison was very particular about that."
Three months earlier, none of this existed. No tablet ritual. No entries. Just boxes of photographs threatening to fade in the attic, and stories scattered like loose pages waiting to be lost.
It was Easter dinner when everything changed. The dishes were drying, conversation winding down, when little Emma looked up at her grandmother and asked, "GG, why do we hide eggs?"
June's eyes lit up. Michael, her son, had seen it before: the way his mother transformed when she had a story to tell. One moment she was an elderly widow who sometimes misplaced her glasses; the next she was the master storyteller who raised him on tales of floods and farms, love and loss.
"Well, sugar, let me tell you about Easter 1943..."
She described her mama hiding real eggs because candy was rationed, and how one forgotten egg rotted under the porch till July. Emma was transfixed. Even Michael, who'd heard the story a dozen times, felt something new: the weight of what would vanish when that voice went quiet.
That night Michael sat at his laptop, restless, unable to sleep. Sophie, his wife, found him at 2 a.m., searching "family memory preservation" like it was a problem he could solve with a spreadsheet.
"We're losing her stories," he whispered. "Every day, we're losing them."
Sophie placed a hand on his shoulder. "Then let's save them."
The first entry was Sophie's idea: a picture of June in her garden, inspecting her roses.
June says the secret to roses is coffee grounds and conversation. She talks to them every morning.
Susan, the younger of June's two children and a practical nurse by profession, was skeptical when she called. "Mama says she can see some pictures y'all set up? Some computer thing?"
"It's our Family Journal," Michael explained. "We can all write in it. From anywhere."
Susan's first post was clinical but loving: a photo of June's blood pressure reading.
120/70. Nurse Susan reporting perfect numbers as always. Max (our golden) supervised the entire checkup. Celebrated with moose tracks ice cream, and yes, he got to lick the spoon.
David Thompson, Susan's husband and a contractor by trade, joined reluctantly, but soon his posts became some of the richest. Fixing June's ceiling, he snapped a photo. When June saw it, she told him: "Michael's daddy tried to fix that himself in '82. Lord, I thought Robert would fall clean through. Finally had to call my brother Samuel to rescue him." David typed her words into the caption. Each photo unlocked another story, and quiet David began staying longer, sweet tea in hand, preserving June's memories one entry at a time.
Not every entry made them laugh. One Tuesday, Sophie posted an old photograph found tucked in a cookbook: June and Robert dancing in the kitchen, June's head thrown back in laughter. When Sophie showed June the photo, her response broke them all:
"That song was 'Stand By Me.' Robert couldn't carry a tune in a bucket, but Lord, that man could dance. Some mornings I still reach for him, forgetting he's gone. Then I see this, and he's right here, spinning me around our kitchen forever."
Michael closed his office door as the tears welled up. Susan ducked into a hospital supply closet. David pulled his truck over, his construction crew waiting, just to breathe. Sophie, an elementary school teacher, told her third-graders about the importance of family memories, her voice breaking only once.
The journal gave June purpose. She began making lists for her children: "Add the story about the ice storm of '78. Did Michael post Harold's watermelon picture yet?" When Susan teased, "Mama, you're getting good at this technology stuff," June waved her off.
"It's not technology, honey. It's family. I just touch the screen, and there y'all are."
Outside her window, a cardinal landed on the feeder. Robert, her late husband, always said cardinals were God's punctuation marks. June thought about taking a picture but decided to simply watch. Some moments were for keeping. Others were for sharing. The blessing was knowing the difference.
Tomorrow morning she'd open the tablet again, coffee in hand, ready to see what stories her family had added while she slept. It had become her favorite part of the day.
And in twenty years, when Emma opens the journal with her own children, she will hear GG's voice as clear as morning, teaching them about beaten biscuits and forgotten eggs, about dancing in kitchens and cardinals as punctuation marks. Stories passed down like rolling pins and recipes, growing richer with each generation.
Every family has a June. Every family has stories worth saving.
Tomorrow's memories begin today.
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