![]() |
"Snow, Snow, and More Snow", oil, by Rene PleinAir |
This
morning, because I carelessly washed my jeans with my wallet in the back
pocket, I have set out the wallet’s contents across the dining room table to
dry, and it’s caused me to wonder if something similar should be done with my
whole life. As I’m typing this at the table, I see before me the special cards
and ID’s that say a little something about my life, but where’s the rest of my
life? What if it were possible to spread out all of my life on a table and then sit back and study it? What if,
instead of licenses and cash, the more transcendent aspects of my life were
here in front of me, laid out and looking at me, making themselves as clear as
the credit cards on the table? Of course, the table would have to be huge to
hold all the wonderful items in the “wallet” of my life. There before me would
be my wife, my family, my friends, my students, and the other multitudes who
have helped make my life an inestimable story of windfalls and gladness. But
there would also be the lesser and less-noticed aspects of my life, like the
layer of snow that’s lying in a lovely way across our town today, or like the
soothing sound of the furnace that just came on in the cellar. On this endless
table would be the talk of kind people who have cared for me, plus the smiles
that have shaken out my spirits in times of sorrow, plus the kind glances that
have given me, over and over again, the gift of encouragement. The table would
be big enough to hold even the smallest and most disregarded items in my life
-- an orange in a brown bowl in our kitchen, the ice that shines these days on
our front steps, the white sky I see in the distance as I type, the look of
lamplight on the golden table cloth beneath my laptop, the little hairs on my
hands in the lamplight, the silvery shine of the laptop. All of this, and all of the rest of the vast
life I’ve been lucky to live, would be laid out in an orderly way on this
endless table, like the cards and cash from my wet wallet. It would be a wonder
to sit back and study it all – to let the specialness of one life lived for 71 high-class
years become real and clear before my eyes.
No comments:
Post a Comment