I have it on good
authority (Ecclesiastes 5:15) that I arrived at Jamestown’s Jones Memorial
Hospital naked and without even a copy of Aquinas or Augustine. I expect to
depart better dressed than that but without Cardinal Newman bound in leather or
even a book of coupons for a church lottery. I'm trying now to give away the last of my
books, including such things as sturdy Library of America editions of five Faulkner
novels, four American poetry collections, even couple of Emerson plus
Grant's dandy autobiography.
When I told Sister
Bernard Lynch, O.P., about the vigorous downsizing in progress here at the home
of my daughter and son-in-law, Drs. Marie and Mark Veldman, she gave downsizing
her blessing. It keeps us on our toes, she said, something those of us with
gout cannot deny.
She spoke also about
the value of disposing of things. Jesus is good at this. Nowhere in scripture
is Jesus carrying a book bag, steadying a Dell on his lap or locking a
suitcase. The man who could have everything paid no excess baggage fees.
Sally and I sold our
house in Orlando a few years ago, but we had to give away the memories.
Memories that looked like pictures, or clocks, books. or dishes, were swept
away in sunny yard sales and too often in trash collection trucks, the storage
of last resort.
Then we moved into a
new century and a new address, a cheerful condo in suburban Chicago. Even the
neighbors were cheerful.
We were proudly
downsized when we left Orlando. Gone were drawers full of anonymous keys,
forgotten nails and toys for the cat. Gone were boots stored for the next
hurricane, which never came, and gone were the mouldy batteries from the same
storeroom, chisel-resistant dried-out shoe polish, belts too long or too short,
a cuffless suit from World War II. Any smugness we felt came from knowing we
had filled our drawers, cabinets and crawl spaces before the hoarders got
started.
My grandpa filled
cabinets with his collected treasures, Not many collectors could show off a dry
coconut brought back to Jamestown after one of the winters he operated a horse
car in Palm Beach. He worked at the original Breakers hotel, one
of Henry Flagler’s places. It burned down in 1903, a year before my mom was
born.
My dad was a
collector, too. He filled our dining room with a pipe organ he bought from a
church. Now I have my own collections, but the coconuts and pipe organs stop
here. So do the memories of William Sheldon Olmstead, horse car driver in Palm
Beach and streetcar motorman in Jamestown, enthusiastic reader of newspapers
wherever he was. I was allowed to look at them, but I had to leave no creases,
tears or smudges.
Now my own collections
must expire, the books and the trinkets displayed in my own cabinet. My long
experience with the Catholic Church prepares my head to celebrate my multiple
system atrophy, to decorate it and absorb its gifts of dizziness, aches and
tumbles. My long experience with the Episcopal Church reminds me that the
celebration should be dignified.
I don’t think one
answer satisfies all. The Eternal allows me three children and six
grandchildren, and each one is unique. Talents in music, games, math and
politics are not the same. Their purpose and character and good looks are
closer to the same.
My own purpose in
trying to unload things and memories of things begins in the most ordinary of
ways. We’re moving from a big house to a more modest one. I am moving in
expectation of simpler management of my life and time to explore some of the
hints of what looks like the impossible, a timeless future. I’m embarrassed by
the appearance of name-dropping, but the son of God is a mentor.
1 comment:
Wonderful blog, Ed. Love, Brenda
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