Sunday, August 8, 2010

Treasure



This week something precious showed up at our house. While moving from California to Louisville, Kentucky, my nephew Jesse stopped for an overnight visit. He delivered a piece of furniture that has belonged to our family since before my birth. Someday I’ll probably write more about Jesse, since he’s a young man destined for an interesting and meaningful life. This post, however, is about the small table that shared the front seat of his truck for a couple thousand miles.



Ten years ago, I sold a piece about this table to Mature Years magazine. If you’ve never read any of my published works, here’s your chance. “Treasure” was published in the Winter 2001-2002 issue.



If your eyes are better than mine, you might be able to read my article from the copy below. But for those of us with older/weaker vision, I’ve reproduced it in larger print below the magazine copy.





TREASURE



My sister and brother and I had gathered to clean out our childhood home. As we sorted through possessions collected over a period of decades, one item stood out as the treasure each of us most wanted.


While stationed in India during World War II, our father had bought a small round table, made of beautiful wood. Each of its three legs is shaped like the head of an elephant, with large ears and trunk. The table top’s inlaid ivory creates an intricate mosaic of the Taj Mahal. Though it has monetary worth, for family members, its real value is sentimental.


For each of us, the “India table” was one of our earliest and most constant memories. We’d crawled around it and explored the legs with baby hands. As older children, we showed it to our friends and wondered about the far away place where Daddy had found this wonderful, exotic piece of furniture. As teenagers, we dusted it; as young adults we protected it from our own curious offspring. Each of us loved the table with a passion. Each of us would treasure it forever.

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For days, as we divided the belongings among us, we laughed and teased each other, saying, "Remember, nothing in this house is more valuable than our good relationship with each other--except, of course, the India table!"


Throughout our lives, the three of us have shared tables. Child-sized tables and dinner tables. Picnic tables and card tables. Wedding reception tables and church communion tables. Around tables we’ve shared stories, games, family celebrations, complaints about homework, and anguished conferences about Mom’s decline and need for care.


Eventually, we agreed upon a plan for sharing the India table as well. Each of us will have custody of the cherished table for five years at a time, passing it among ourselves until only one of us is left. We are reaffirming what we already knew: nothing in that house could ever be more valuable than our love for each other. Not even the India table.

*****


Thanks, Jesse, for helping your dad and your aunts keep a promise. I hope you know that you are far more precious to us than the India table. And that’s saying a lot!



4 comments:

Anonymous said...
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Anonymous said...

That is such a wonderful story! I'm so glad you have the table now. It represents so much more than the wood it is made of.

Oklahoma Granny said...

A beautiful table with lots of precious memories. Even more beautiful is the love shared between its owners.

Marla said...

Love the article and what a pretty family heirloom.