“Sentimental.”
One example is of my overnight
camp years. Having attended Camp Matoaka for 10 summers as a camper and a
counselor, I have accumulated memories and friendships that will last a
lifetime. Fortunately, there are many others who are just as eager to relive
those days, and it doesn’t take but a photo of a loon on Facebook to trigger a
slew of memories. Now that my children
bleed camp (Tel Noar), I can experience the excitement first hand once again.
I am also sentimental when it comes to my children, who are now 15 and
12 years old. They are old enough to have memories of when “they were little,” as
they say. We have more than a dozen movies of their childhood which we still
love to watch. Although I didn’t keep every bib or blanket, there are a few
items which are difficult for me to part with.
There is one item which I know I have kept too long. It didn’t really
match the décor, and I haven’t used in a many years, but that sentimental value
was overpowering.
The item is a white glider rocking chair.
That rocking chair accompanied me through midnight and daily feedings,
hours of storytime, giving medicine and cuddling away sadness. I used to sing a
song to each of the kids before bed, which recounted what they did during the
day. We took pictures of the kids on
that chair. Then they used to climb on it to read a book once in a while too.
Have I sat in said rocking chair in the last two years? Five years? No.
But it was there and represented a time in my life which I didn’t want to give
up easily. I think Brad would have given it up years ago, but he knows me well
enough to even ask. So when I recently told him I wanted to give it to any of
the several people in my office who recently had a baby or are going to have
one soon, he said calmly, “That would be nice.” What he was really thinking
was, “It’s about time.”
When I asked one man in my office, who recently became the father of
twins, if he would like the chair, he responded with a resounding “Yes!” almost
before I finished asking. Then and there I knew this was the right choice. He
picked it up yesterday.
Why am I now able to give away this sentimental piece of furniture?
Although I will never forget the past, and I might even dwell in it too long
sometimes, I know there is so much for us in the future. I am on the verge of aging into a new decade.
The kids are growing into amazing adults. I have a terrific husband. We still
have both sets of parents and lots in the way of family and friends. I love my job, and I can still wield a tennis
racquet better than the average bear. My present tense is “rockin’.”
There is a void in the corner of my bedroom, and I will think of that rocker for a
few more days. But I can also picture my friend feeding his children, reading
stories and making wonderful memories, just like I did.
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