Pencils
I last
saw you in October and you were still feathering your new nest. A single-story
house that would be much easier on your 90-year-old knees than the tri-level
house you’d live in for decades. It was in a great neighborhood within walking
distance – if it weren’t for the knees – of your favorite used bookstore and
coffee shop. Unpacked boxes stuffed the garage and an outbuilding, but parts
of the house were already taking on your flavor: the kitchen, dining and living
rooms, and of course, your office. A corner nook off the main entry with a
wrap-around desk and plenty of shelving, your snug mission control. A
collection of yellow pads, post its, printed emails, recipes, and personal cards
tumbled in minor disarray across the desktop as if to say, “We’ve only just
arrived, but already there are lovely and important things to keep within
eyeshot.”
The mail
brought excitement one day in the form of a new electric pencil sharpener in a
medium-sized box. After unpacking it, you wanted to try it out immediately. I
thought it a bit silly, with so much need to reduce possessions, what would make
you spend money on an electric pencil sharpener of all things? But then I remembered the marmalade jars of fat,
soft-lead pencils you strategically placed wherever one might need to write. One
jar sat on your desk to the left of the computer and another by the kitchen
phone for transcribing messages and taking careful notes from phone
conversations with your daughters so facts could later correctly be recounted to
Herman or others. These special pencils, you explained, were too wide to fit
into regular sharpeners and the electric sharpener you had for years had just
quit working. With optimism for the unquestioned need to keep sharp pencils at
hand, there was no doubting the equal need for another good sharpener. And so
there it was, shiny, plugged in, and ready to assist.
When I returned the following March, a week after you were already gone, I noticed you had sharpened all the pencils to equal points and distributed them tips up among the marmalade jars.
One must always be ready to write.
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