“It’s amazing
what a man
thought was important enough
to keep ten years ago.”
Cody made this
statement last Saturday as he threw a toolbox down in the yard in an effort to clean out his office. You would
think – after moving from Kansas to Oklahoma to Michigan to Indiana – he would
have sorted through the contents in his office over the last ten years,
several times.
I guess sometimes, amidst the spirit of a move, emotion allows us to easily
overlook the tossing, and encourages us transport everything to the next
“home”.
Beautiful
Economy, Indiana is the last place the pieces of CS' life stopped, and we
aligned our calendars to find a day that we were both actually home - on the same day - and
decided to sort.
Oh boy, did we sort.
Oh boy, did we sort.
Kansas City
Chiefs art from the early 1990’s
A Viking helment
File after file of things studied at Oklahoma State University
Angus Journals from 1999
A party cone hat - identical to the one below
First pay stubs
Registration papers from cows that first calved in 1994
Letters from gals
I’ve never had the pleasure of meeting…
All things important enough to keep ten years ago.
The next day, during the Super
Bowl I mentioned to Momma how we had spent our Saturday.
“Oh, was it
tough?” she asked, thinking of all the memories being tossed.
By the way:
(I know with
confidence (I texted her yesterday to confirm details) that Momma still has Laura’s
baby teeth wrapped in tissue paper inside a ceramic jar , a splinter that was plucked from Luke’s little
body after a furniture incident and my baby book. Granted, my book is still wrapped in plastic and hasn't been tainted with a dot of ink in thirty years, but she kept
it, nonetheless. Tossing doesn't come easy for Momma.)
I responded:
“No, it was
mostly Cody’s stuff so I had no problem tossing it,” said the helpful wife. “I
did find a box of my birthday cards in the file cabinet I had forgotten about.
I put them in plastic and moved them to the storage barn. I have no
idea where they’ll go when we decide to clean out the storage barn….”
My focus drifted to guacamole.
My focus drifted to guacamole.
Some things are pertinent to have around in order to get through particular stages in our life. I'm certain Cody couldn't have made it though undergrad or graduate school without a viking hat. But just as time changes paths, it changes priorities, too.
Ten years later, I’m not just speaking of “stuff” that may be kept around.
Ten years later, I’m not just speaking of “stuff” that may be kept around.
What about the
other things we had ten years ago that we’re still in possession of?
Ease.
Devotion.
Scars.
Ideas.
Goals.
Fear.
Resentment.
Love.
Beliefs.
Jealousy.
Faith.
Worry.
Excitement.
Bitterness.
Remorse.
Ten years ago,
which of these things
were you desperately keeping within you?
Which ones are
you still carrying, today?
Why?
Some things are
important enough to keep.
To store.
To preserve.
To still find among – or within – us ten years later, soliciting a memory.
To still find among – or within – us ten years later, soliciting a memory.
Anyone have a
burning desire to learn more about Prairie Chicken Management in Oklahoma?
No comments:
Post a Comment