The Price of Our Past
by Jan Philpot
Not so long
ago, I wandered the aisles and rooms of an antique mall, gazing
with appreciation at the aged bits and pieces of long ago lives,
wondering at the circumstances that had torn them from a family
that now might not even remember they had ever been a part.
Nearby, two well-heeled matrons were having an animated
conversation over something one of them held in her hands, and
curious, I turned to see what was going on.
"Well it has a $40 price tag," stated the silver-haired lady, a
hint of something dubious in her manner.
"I think it is well worth that," replied her companion, "I once
saw one like it auctioned and going for a good deal more."
Suddenly I recognized exactly what it was that had captured the
ladies' attention, and before I could think what I was doing, the
words popped out, "Oh! I have one exactly like that! I never saw
another!"
The two matrons turned immediately in my direction, and one's eyes
narrowed speculatively. "You have one of these?" she asked,
holding up the tiny oil burning lamp, with the word "Handy" raised
on the bowl of its surface.
"Yes," I replied, "It was my father's when he was a little boy. I
am told it rested on a table beside his bed at night, and that he
used it to find his way to the outhouse after dark."
In my mind's eye, I saw a picture I had long envisioned. It was a
summer night in a place I knew well, where lightning bugs lit tiny
quick stabs in the darkness, and whippoorwills called mournfully.
A little boy slipped barefoot through the night with only a tiny
lantern to light his way, gazing a bit fearfully this way and
that, but struggling to be brave and a "big boy."
"What would you take for it?" the lady continued, far less
interested in my story than in the fact that there was indeed
another like it in the world and if at all possible, she intended
to have it.
It was the story behind the lamp that was important to me, and I
was upset at the realization that this lady wanted to place a
price tag on it. I was dismayed, and wishing very much I had
thought before speaking. "Oh, I couldn't sell it," I replied and
had to repeat again and again when pressed, before I quietly
slipped out the door and back to my car.
I realized my mistake, of course -- impulsive speaking. I had,
after all, been in an antique mall where pieces of the past were
for sale, and where I myself had purchased such before and would
again. What the ladies had asked was quite reasonable in terms of
where I had been and the information I had volunteered. Perhaps
one of the ladies actually was trying to do what I myself had done
before -- purchase back a piece of her own past that had been
lost, but which she remembered as my father had, resting beside
her bed on long ago nights. For lack of the actual piece, she
searched for another like it. And I considered those pieces "lost"
to our families, and what they meant when they had never been
"lost."
I really did not care what the tiny lamp was worth in terms of
cash, had never even considered that aspect, and no amount of
money could have purchased it, not $40 and not $400. The lamp was
an investment all right, and an investment I was saving for my
children, but I figured the dividends not in cash, which is here
today and spent tomorrow for things we little remember in years to
come, but in terms of the heart and in terms of roots.
Roots are both here today and here tomorrow, stories to be told
and retold, imprinting upon succeeding generations their family of
the past they never had the opportunity to know or to love. There
were folks I wanted my children and grandchildren to have a bit
of, a memory of, and a tiny lamp was the very vehicle for opening
the door to questions. Questions were really invitations to tell
the stories and stories are priceless.
About the Author
Jan Philpot also shares her writing each week through her Sunday
Afternoon Rocking columns which are distributed on the list Sunday
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