Saving
Love
for Nana
"Precious treasure and oil are in a wise man’s
dwelling,
but a foolish man devours it." – Proverbs 21:
20
I would sneak in there
because I wasn’t supposed to,
At least it seemed that way
to a me, a child: the room
Your grandparents slept in,
where all their stuff was.
It had a certain darkness
and hiddenness, the secret
Adult world kids no nothing
about, so hold in awe.
It sat on her dresser, like
a treasure chest, holding
Her jewelry, but I didn’t seek
the treasure in stones
Or precious metals. What I sought
was the little key,
That when turned broke the
silence with little clicks
As it turned winding the
notes of its music inside.
I would wind and wind, and
not let any note escape,
Mostly because I didn’t want
to get caught, and she
Might hear if I let some go.
She couldn’t ever prove
It was me, if she never
caught me, and she never did.
The last few clicks were always
the hardest to conceal,
Tighter and louder, letting
me know I was near done.
I’d close the lid, leaving
the music there inside for her
To find. I don’t know when I
first did it, but I always
Would sneak in there when we
visited and wind it.
I don’t even remember when the
secret became
A talked about thing, with
me never owning up to it,
And her never coming right out
and accusing me,
But each knowing, heart to
heart what it was.
You see, she would save it, opening
her jewelry box,
Only for a second,
treasuring the captured notes,
Her notes, like they were
from me to her, erasing
The miles and the time between
us, one note
At a time. They say that a
melody is made up of
Different notes played in sequence,
but the song
She heard meant more, played
one note at a time,
Stretching it out for as
long as she could, saving
Each treasured note and what
it meant. I hope
There weren’t many times
when she would open
Silence, but I’m sure there
were. The truth in the
Silence is all too true of Grandparents,
and there
Just never being enough time
to visit enough.
Love like that knows no such
thing as enough,
Only what is. You learn such
truth as you get older
Because you’ve lost enough
to see it differently
And value each moment more. Like
I’m not sure
When I started doing it, I’m
also not sure when,
Upon learning that she saved
the music, I came
To know what it meant, but I
can’t think of any
More important lesson for
her to teach me
Now that I know: There just
aren’t enough ways
In this world for us to show
our love to each other,
But when we find one it’s
worth doing and saving.
I wish I had turned that key more times in these
I wish I had turned that key more times in these
Last few years. I wish I
could’ve given her more
To save. I wish I could let
her know I valued love
As much as she did. But I
will never wind nor
Hear a music box again
without remembering
The precious treasure she
has given to me.