When No One Remembers

8 thoughts on “When No One Remembers

  1. David, I wonder the same thing. After I got terminated from the last church I served — just shy of 19 years — those folks made sure they smeared me and trash talked me as much as they could. I’ve not faded from their memory I’ve been violently excised.

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  2. Beautiful, David. I feel a little that way sometimes, we are always just one turn of the great wheel of time away from being closer to that place. We have an old piano that makes me feel this way. It has been sitting idle because no one plays it, the kids have grown up and gone, and I have forgotten how. It is terribly out of tune and not unsightly, but no longer beautiful and grand like it no doubt once was. You can’t beg people to take them, no one wants an old upright piano, especially one that needs work. We recently have made the decision that the piano must go, and I have been sick about it, feeling (quite rightly) that I have neglected it. Just yesterday, as the time for it to hefted out of the house approaches, I panicked, furiously googling things to do with it. My hubby was unimpressed, but patiently agreed to have it rolled unto the deck where (mostly he) we can disassemble it, saving the keys that are surely ivory due to the colour and the ebony ones. We can save the wood and the carvings, the columns. The brass plate can be recycled. It will take forever, but I cannot see it be forgotten and discarded like an empty beer can. It brought joy to our home, and at least a couple of others, I suspect. It has been an impromptu art stand and furniture piece, it has made great seating when the chairs were all occupied around the table (it has an old bench seat). It has been incorporated into makeshift forts with blankets draped over it, when little feet pounded the floors. It deserves better, and so did your aging pastor. Your story is instructive and provides a teachable moment for us all. Appreciate whose shoulders we are now standing on. A new splashy antique cabinet, long coveted, is scheduled to arrive that is destined to occupy the space where the piano still sits, but I think I will always see the ghost of it there.

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    1. I love those old uprights. They weigh over 800 lbs but they contain the workings and the resonance of a grand piano. I had one for a while. A church gave it to me, because they needed to get rid of it. I learned to tune a piano with it (although it was a continual process, and I wasn’t very good at it). We couldn’t keep it, as we moved so many times.

      It seems like you’re finding a way to let it go and still honor the memory of your piano, and that makes me glad. I hope we can do that with the people in our lives, too.

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  3. Thank you so much, David!

    I’ve been thinking a lot about this during the past several years, given my husband’s and my ages, 91 and 87. It’s endlessly fascinating thinking about change — from clouds to the I Ching : )

    Process Philosophy & Theology have an interesting view, I’ve discovered — everything about us becomes part of “God” and so is eternally preserved along with everything that is. I am agnostic, but I enjoy puzzling over this : )

    I’m so happy about your new work — newest expression of your lifetime of compassion and service. So thankful for you, wishing you well!!!

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