The Taste of Salt
My grandmother kept a small glass dish of salt on her windowsill. Not the kind you shake over food. This salt was grey and coarse, the colour of Baltic fog, and she never explained it except once, when I was about seven, when she pressed three grains into my palm and said, ‘Taste. That’s what the sea remembers.’
I didn’t know then that this was theology. I only knew that she said it in the same tone she used for practical things — how to tell if jam had sealed properly, how to fold linen so it would lie flat in the cupboard, how to spot rain before it showed itself. The sacred, in her kitchen, never arrived with ceremony. It came disguised as instruction.
She was not, by any formal measure, a religious woman. She did not attend church. She did not pray aloud. She crossed herself occasionally when a siren passed — reflexively, the way you blink — and she kept a small icon of the Theotokos in the kitchen cupboard behind the flour, hidden as if she were protecting it from dust, or perhaps protecting herself from explanation. But she handled the salt with a deliberateness that I now recognise as ritual. Each Friday morning she would empty the dish, rinse it, dry it carefully with the corner of a tea towel, and refill it from a cloth bag she kept in the drawer beneath the stove. Her hands moved slowly. She was attending to something.
I am thinking about this now because I am living in a city where I do not speak the language gracefully, and last Tuesday I found myself standing in a supermarket aisle holding a canister of sea salt for longer than any purchase warrants. The label was in Danish. The salt was from the Limfjord. Around me people moved with the briskness of people who know exactly what they need, and I stood still as if I had been asked a question. I did not buy it. I stood there until my arm ached, and then I put it back and went home and sat on the floor of my kitchen for a while.
I am not sure what I was doing there on the floor. It was not praying, exactly. It was something closer to waiting, or listening, or trying not to look away from a feeling that had arrived without warning. Which may be the same thing.
My grandmother came from a village on the Black Sea coast. I have seen photographs: white stone, fig trees, laundry caught in sea-wind, the water behind everything like a held breath. She left as a young woman and spent the rest of her life in a landlocked city, which I think is a specific kind of exile that has no proper name. She spoke of the sea rarely, and when she did it was almost always in practical terms — the damp that ruined cupboards, the fish scales underfoot in the market, the taste of tomatoes grown near salt air. But once, late in her life, when memory had begun to loosen and drift, she said, very softly, ‘You never stop missing a horizon.’
When she died, the glass dish and the icon behind the flour were the only things I asked for. The icon I can explain — it is beautiful, its gold worn thin at the Madonna’s cheek from decades of being touched or almost touched, of being kept close. The salt dish I cannot explain. I took it because it felt necessary in the way that certain objects become necessary: not for what they are but for what they have witnessed. It still has a tiny bubble in the glass near the rim, an imperfection you can feel with your thumb if you know where to find it.
There is a tradition in some Orthodox households of blessing salt and keeping it as a protection, a sanctification of the ordinary. I learned this years after her death, in a book about domestic religious practice in Eastern Europe. I read the passage three times, quietly, alone, feeling something I would not yet call grief and would not yet call recognition, but which was some compound of both. She may have known this tradition. She may have inherited it from her own grandmother without knowing its origin story. She may have simply liked the ceremony of it — the weekly emptying, the rinsing, the refilling — as a rhythm that held time in place when other things would not hold.
Or she may have known precisely what she was doing and chosen not to explain it, because some things are explained by being done and not by being said. She was like that with other kinds of love as well. She never told us she worried; she sent us home with extra food. She never said she forgave anyone; she set another plate at the table. She never announced belief. She made room for it.
I have been thinking about what it means to carry a practice without carrying its doctrine. My grandmother’s salt was sacred — I am certain of this, though I cannot entirely say why — but it was not doctrinal in any neat sense. It did not belong to a theology she could have laid out in propositions. It belonged to her hands, her window, her Friday mornings, the particular slant of winter light in that kitchen. It was the shape that whatever she believed took in the world.
I find myself doing something similar and being uncertain whether to call it faith. I light a candle before I write. Not always, but when I need something to feel different from an ordinary task. I make tea slowly, measuring it out with more care than the situation demands. I keep a stone from a beach in Jutland on my desk — not a pretty stone, just a grey one, rounded and unremarkable — because I picked it up on the day I understood that I was going to stay in this country. That day needed marking. The stone became the mark.
None of this is prayer in any sense I was taught. But it rhymes with prayer, the way a shadow rhymes with the thing that casts it. It asks for attention. It makes a small clearing in the day. It says: this mattered; stay here a moment; do not rush past what is trying to become visible.
In the supermarket, holding the salt, I think I was trying to locate something my grandmother never lost and I have never had cleanly: a sense that ordinary matter can be inhabited by something beyond itself. That a dish on a windowsill can be a threshold. That the grey, coarse, fog-coloured salt of the Baltic is not different in kind from the salt she carried in a cloth bag from a village beside a sea she was never going to see again.
I think, too, that I was lonelier than I had admitted. Loneliness has a way of disguising itself as distraction, as tiredness, as the inability to decide which brand of salt to buy. In a country where even small transactions can leave me feeling slightly misplaced, I have begun to understand how much of belonging is made of repeated gestures: the cup placed on the same shelf, the scarf hung on the same hook, the hand reaching for the same ingredient. Ritual is not always a ladder to heaven. Sometimes it is just the thing that teaches the body it is safe to remain where it is.
She tasted the world and found it sacred — not in spite of its weight but because of it. The salinity of things. The way loss is held in matter. The way a dead woman’s hands can still instruct you, twenty years later, in a kitchen in a country she never imagined, when you are sitting on the floor for reasons you cannot explain, waiting for your breathing to slow, waiting for the room to become itself again.
I ordered the salt from the Limfjord online that evening. It arrived two days later in a brown paper bag folded neatly at the top. I poured some into the glass dish and set it on the windowsill. For a moment nothing happened, which is to say everything happened exactly as it usually does: the kettle clicked off, a bus sighed at the corner, someone laughed in the courtyard below. But the room felt fractionally altered, as if a note I could not hear had begun to sound again.
I have not yet emptied it and rinsed it and refilled it. I have, however, touched it in passing. I have stood by the window with my coffee and looked at it as if expecting instruction. It is Friday morning now, and the dish is catching a thin band of light. I think of my grandmother’s hands, dry and capable, and of the sentence she pressed into my palm with those three grains all those years ago. Taste. That’s what the sea remembers.
Maybe that is all a ritual ever does: teach remembrance to the body. Teach us that some things can be held without being solved. That grief does not always ask for language. That the sacred may enter not as revelation but as repetition — a dish, a window, a handful of salt, a life made bearable by the small faithful acts we continue, even when we are no longer certain who first taught them to us, or why.
Dale Phillips is a certified mindfulness instructor and interfaith chaplain in Denver, Colorado, where he facilitates contemplative practices in healthcare settings.