Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Secrets Untold Unfold

Yesterday, Day 9 of Laura Shovan's February Daily Poetry Project, led me to remember a secret that was untold until I was in grad school. Rachel Patton Toalson, yesterday's host chose the theme. secrets. She stated, "I've been thinking lately about how no matter how long you've known a person, there are still aspects of their lives that remain mysterious." A special story in my life unfolded when I was in grad school.

Secrets Untold Unfold

3rd grade lesson

where are you from

didn’t know so

I asked at homesge d


she did not tell

secret held close

others Irish

family French???


years later, secret

untold opened

mom rode boat to

America


from Italy

a little child

with her mother

father waiting


one family

together grew

American

lifestyle with friends


Italian 

speaking with grand

until age five

moving onward



during grad school

swirling with pride

tale unfolded

told with honor


dressed like old world

childhood stories

pizza fritta

joy provided


where am I from

nonnie and mom 

Rome New York- first

generation

©Carol Varsalona, 2026

Legacy from Nonnie
At a very young age, I learned how to bake in Nonnie's kitchen.
🍪🍪🍪

So you may have realized the secret. Now, I will tell you why there was a secret for so long. My Nonnie believed that her children should be Americanized once she arrived in America, around 2021. Since I was the oldest grandchild born in the United States, I needed to act like an American. That meant speaking English and graduating from college. Life was different in the 20th Century. I did not know that I was a first-generation child of Italian descent until I was an adult. Where are you from?


🍪🍪🍪🍪🍪

Join me as I share my Slice of Life with my Two Writing Teachers from across the globe. Click here.
🍪🍪🍪🍪🍪

3 comments:

  1. It sounds like you really have done a great job of blending your heritage. You keep Nonnie's cooking and honor her wish that you acclimate to American culture as well. Oh, that time in the kitchen and those cookies. Steals my heart.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Carol, I think what you say is so true of many families. Ancestors left their country for a new and better life in America and wanted their children and grandchildren to be full-fledged Americans that their country of origin was kept a secret. Yet, unless we are Native American, we all have a country of origin. My grandparents came from a part of Ukraine. You keep your Nonnie's memory alive with your baking and your passing it down to your own granddaughters as well. Bob

    ReplyDelete
  3. Carol, wow. What a secret to be kept from young children. It was a different time then, wasn't it? The melting pot has since turned into what I think is an improved potpourri of cultures. Let us celebrate all of them! Thank you for this post.

    ReplyDelete