Keepers
I grew up in the 40's/50's/60's with
practical parents. A mother, God
love her, who washed aluminum foil
after she cooked in it, then reused it.
She was the original recycle queen,
before they had a Name for it... A
father who was happier getting old
shoes fixed than buying new ones.   

Their marriage was good, their
dreams focused. Their best friends
lived barely a wave away. I can see
them now, Dad in trousers, tee shirt
and a hat and Mom in a house dress,
lawn mower in one hand, and
dish-towel in the other. It was the
time for fixing things. A curtain rod,
the kitchen radio, screen door, the
oven door, the hem in a dress Things
we keep.
 
It was a way of life, and sometimes it
made me crazy. All that re-fixing,
eating, renewing, I wanted just once
to be wasteful. Waste meant
affluence. Throwing things away
meant you knew there'd always be
more.
  
But then my mother died, and on
that clear summer's night, in the
warmth of the hospital room, I was
struck with the pain of learning that
sometimes there isn't any more.
   Sometimes, what we care about
most gets all used up and goes
away...never to return. So... While we
have it.. it's best we love it... And
care for it.... And fix it when it's
broken..... And heal it when it's sick.
 
This is true... For marriage.... And old
cars.... And children with bad report
cards..... Dogs and cats with bad
hips.... And aging parents.... And
grandparents. We keep them
because they are worth it, because
we are worth it. Some things we
keep. Like a best friend that moved
away or a classmate we grew up
with.
 
There are just some things that make
life important, like people we know
who are special.... And so, we keep
them close!
  
Author unknown

Music: "May the Good Lord Bless
and Keep You" - Jim Reeves