Save a grocery list
“The palest
ink is better than the sharpest memory.” Chinese proverb
This
luggage tag is what I have left of the ways in which my father’s hands moved
and how he grasped his pen, always that blue plastic one with “Modern Barber
Shop” on one side and his name on the other as Owner.
Sure.
This simple, gray plastic luggage tag—ironically, an accidental icon of a man
who never got to travel—surfaced in an attic box recently, all unannounced, pushing
the air straight out of my lungs like I was practicing some sort of elaborate Breath
Elimination Ritual. I got that little tinny taste you get in your mouth when
you accidentally bite into aluminum foil after unwrapping your baked potato.
That feeling of nausea and shakiness, a bodily recognition of ache, that.
And
what I realized as I remembered to breathe again was this: I need to also write
things in my own hand, not just type here at my obsessive machine, but stop and
pull out real paper and a nice fountain pen and make note of my passage through
this world in my own handwriting, those curves of letters and angular bits that
don’t seem distinctive to me because I’m in it, but does look like me to
others, just as I would have recognized my father’s hand even if he hadn’t been
writing down his own name, that odd combination of little and big letters, caps
and caplets mixed together, that “l” in “Melvin” never capitalized, that “E”
and N” always so, that turned-back loop at the bottom of his “5s” and the small
“g” always hovering above the line of other letters.
So
I have him back, the part beyond a static photograph, the part where he’s actually
made something of his own volition—a grocery list, an identification tag for
all those trips he and I planned to take someday. (Now if I could only get his
voice back). My daughters have mainly these typed images of me, the ones you
see in front of you, not swoops and odd dots and strong “Ts.” In this typed
text, they have scratches that could be anyone’s, not just mine.
Several
years ago just after my first book came out (I gave copies to family and
friends with small red plastic magnifying glasses attached to the spine, my
name was so small on it), someone asked my older daughter, Emma, what her Mommy
did for a living. Emma was seven at the time. “She’s a typer,” I heard her
reply. “She types.” I didn’t even bother to elaborate or qualify it or make it
nicer or more impressive. “Yes,” I said quietly. “I type. I’m a typer.” What
happened to being a writer, that magnificent obsession with paper and pens?
My
husband, John, loves old manuscripts. He appreciates them and cares for them and brings them home to save them.
There is a beauty in the handwriting of years past that I fear we’ve lost, our
speed to communicate in bits and bytes diminishing those swirls to antiseptic
serifs, our utilitarian approach to communication erasing the flourish of our
ancestors, our instantaneous responses negating that moment of pensive thought,
that thoughtful pause where the right word will arise from the mist of
mindfulness. Writing was art; now no longer beautiful in the same way, it is
just really, really fast. If it’s fast enough, shooting into our email box like
pellets, maybe we won’t notice the loss of art part.
The
package contained two glass birds from Mrs. Smith’s house, one for each of my
daughters so they can carry forth into their lives the memory of this
extraordinary woman. And, also, the most precious gift: a bundle of every
letter and holiday card and little scrap of paper that I had ever sent Mrs.
Smith in those 30 years of our love for one another. Included, of course, were not
only samples of my fourth grade cursive, but her distinctive handwriting, too,
that beautiful style that was her signature. Opening that package, it was as if
she came back; though, of course, she never left, as Daddy never did.
Wonderful! As I sit to write (type) later this weekend, this posting will be front and center. Thanks for the inspiration!
Posted by: Steve Sherlock | 17 September 2005 at 12:46
Steve - thanks for your very kind words which are themselves an inspiration for me to sit down again and write and type...thank you.
Posted by: patti digh | 17 September 2005 at 21:17
This is a great post. Thanks for taking the time to share it with us.
What changed my appreciation for the written word was receiving a fountain pen as a gift from my wife on Valentine's day.
Ever since then, I've been collecting and using fountain pens to write instead of type.
I enjoy them so much that I decided to sell them myself... hopefully inspiring others to start writing again, too.
Posted by: Judland | 18 September 2005 at 00:34
ah....you've touched a nerve...I love fountain pens, too. Thanks for your nice words - and the reminder to pull out my favorite fountain pens...!
Posted by: patti digh | 18 September 2005 at 09:32
Check out the mini fountain pen at JetPens
Posted by: chad | 19 October 2005 at 23:49
chad - ah, those are some nice little fountain pens...thanks for the new addiction! http://www.jetpens.com/advanced_search_result.php?keywords=fountain&x=0&y=0
Posted by: patti digh | 21 October 2005 at 19:25
I am just now making my way through your essays. Your blog is a recent discovery and I am inspired by every word. This one had me in tears and smiling, both at the same time. There are letters I should write, letters that I should re-open, and there are grocery lists I should hang on to. Thank you, Patti.
Posted by: Ruth | 04 December 2007 at 16:20
I used to write letters constantly. When did that stop? Well,it's going to start again. I'm going to write love letters to my husband and memoirs to my daughter. Thank you for this. (I have also saved a note from my dad, my mom and my grandmother.)
Posted by: Becky | 13 May 2008 at 21:53
i feel so deeply connected to you thru the loss you share. i can barely speak of my loss which is why i am so comforted when you speak for me.
i also treasure the hand written bits of her that are stashed everywhere...finding them unexpectedly tears off the scab and the wound is deep and raw again. does that contribute to the healing?
Posted by: Carrie K | 14 May 2008 at 02:58
I am returning to your site after many months of being out of the country. Every time I read your site (and today in particular the poem about the gravy bowl), life fills my throat and stings my eyes. Thank you.
Posted by: Holly Herr | 10 April 2009 at 08:42