Childhood
By rosaliekempthorne
- 404 reads
My grandmother was eighty-four when she gave me the box.
It was musty and dog-eared, and held together with masking tape. And in it: a collection of toys. Plastic farm animals. A doll with eyes that moved in her head. A doll who had eyelashes, eyelids that closed. A blind teddy-bear. A couple of swirly balls. Some tattered old books.
And I took them solemnly. This room, these people, the hospital bed: it all called for solemnity.
“This is my childhood, take care of it for me.”
#
I’m eighty-four now. The box has seen additions: A little doll who speaks when you pull her feet – I’ve lost my head over you – here comes my bodyyyyyy – a couple of dresses I once sewed myself for the blinking-eye doll; a once-trendy angel toy; a little figurine of a ballerina that, in truth, I stole once from a stranger’s bookshelf. A diary unwritten in.
I lean over at a little girl who’s all wild brown curls and freckles, who is never still for a moment. A girl who is really nothing like the girl I was. But still I hold the box out, against a backdrop of sterile hospital white.
“This is my childhood, take care of it for me.”
Picture credit/discredit: author's own work
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Comments
... and again! The
... and again! The illustration for this one is wonderful too
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I very much enjoyed reading
I very much enjoyed reading your story.
Jenny.
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