Of Rings and Things
For years Mom wore her "mother's-ring," which her children had given her, on the same
finger as her wedding band. The mother's-ring
and wedding band had been connected by a jeweler (for the rest of this written
story, I'll call these two connected rings her "ring"). She wore her
ring as if it were her wedding ring.
After her father's near-fatal car accident in 1995, she continued
wearing the ring on her left-hand ring-ringer and added her grandfather's
wedding band to her right middle finger. Her father had allowed Mom to give her
grandfather's wedding band to David at their wedding. A ring on each hand, her
wedding/mother's-ring on the left and grandfather's ring on the right
symbolized the most important things in her life.
One day (around 2010 or 2011) she was at Fred & Cherilynn's
home giving piano lessons. As she was visiting in their kitchen, before saying
goodbye, she heard a tinkling sound. Startled, she realized that both the ring
and grandfather's wedding band had slipped off her hands. She was so
grateful to easily find the rings and that they hadn't slipped off outside or
somewhere where they couldn't be found. She was especially surprised that they
had both fallen off separate hands at the same instant.
When
she realized how loose the rings were on her fingers,
she regularly removed the rings and put them in a safe place when she did things that she felt she might increase the chances of them being lost. She
had very specific places in the house where she kept them when she was not
wearing them. One morning when she went to put them on, the rings were not
where she expected to find them. She quickly looked in the other places she typically
kept them, but the rings were not there.
She began frantically searching the house, looking for
anywhere else she might have put them. During the following weeks, she enlisted
the help of family members in the search, with no luck. For years, she was
unable to find the rings and began to wonder if, perhaps, they had been stolen.
Her heart ached, knowing that her grandfather's wedding band, her
mother's-ring, and her second wedding band were all gone. She tried to
comfort herself by acknowledging that they were only "things," and
that "things" weren't that important.
Around 5 years later, in April of 2016, preparatory to a change
for Greg to teach in Marsh Valley School District (he had been teaching in
Montpelier), Greg and Sherilynn moved into Mom and Dad's home. The intent was that
perhaps they could be a help and support to Mom and Dad, as Dad had been
struggling with his health.
Greg and Sherilynn needed room for their things, especially in the
basement. Somehow the two families needed to remove or re-arrange furniture and
other items to have a home that could be comfortable for both families.
When I was age 9 and my family moved into the home, one room was
given to my mother. It served as a laundry, sewing, craft, and multi-purpose
room--filled with a wide variety of my mother's things. After Greg and
Sherilynn moved into the home, Sherilynn suggested that this laundry room could
become a "changing room" for their family where all their children's
clothing could be kept. Because Greg and Sherilynn needed extra space, Mom and
Sherilynn discussed going through this room together.
The next day, Mom was surprised as she stepped into the laundry room.
It had been reorganized. Most of the fabric was neatly placed on the top shelf.
Contents from the other shelves and dressers were placed in large black garbage
bags. Sherilynn had "cleaned the room" and prepared it for their
family's use.
Mom wanted to go through the bags to ensure that her important
items weren't given to Deseret Industries (a thrift store), or thrown away. Mom
attempted to pick a bag up and take it upstairs to sort, but it was too heavy.
She looked around the room and found a white, half-full, tall-kitchen bag, with
orange tie straps (such bags were very new to Mom's home). Discouraged and disappointed, Mom
took the small bag upstairs and began sorting through it. Because of
interruptions with phone calls and visitors, the task took several days. Most
of the bag was trash--to be thrown away, although she did find a few useful
items, she worried about the contents of the other bags that were being
disposed of.
After sorting through the bag, Mom went to use the bag for a
garbage bag in the kitchen garbage container. She noticed that the bag had a
hole in the bottom. She visualized the bag being filled with kitchen items and
then being carried out to the garbage. Stinky food and liquids might leak
through the holes and spill across the room as it was carried to the garbage
dumpster. That would not work, so she placed the bag into the garbage.
As she saw the bag in the garbage can, she realized, "If I
leave that bag there, David will think the bag is fine and will certainly pull
it out and use it as a garbage bag" and then the imagined mess would undoubtedly
come to pass.
| Mom wearing her scouting lanyard and pins |
Sometime later, Clark came to their home with a Mother's Day gift.
It was a lanyard on which Mom could display mother's pins recognizing her eight
sons' Eagle Scout awards. He had also purchased tiny eagle pins to represent
the Eagle awards of her grandsons. Clark excitedly ask her to find all of
her "Mother's Pins" from scouting so they could place them on the
lanyard. When Mom returned with her Mother's pins and Clark began organizing
the lanyard, they realized they had a problem. How would they show Kathy's son,
Dallas' Eagle award? Mom went back into her drawer and retrieved some small
piano pins that she had used as awards for her students. They were about the
same size as the Mother's Eagle pins, the piano pins were used to represent her
daughters' great accomplishments.
Dad observed quietly and enjoyed watching this process. He suddenly
arose and left the room. He returned with something in his hand. He was very
pleased and said "Maybe these will help." He then handed her two
rings--
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| "THE RING" |
Dad has been struggling with early onset dementia for several years.
He couldn't remember where the rings were found, only that he needed to give
them to her. Later, he remembered that a little girl had given them to him.
Something Becky had said about Emma's visit with Alison while Mom
was in Utah prompted Mom to ask Alison if it were she who had found the rings
and given them to Grandpa. She acknowledged that she had, but when Mom
asked where she had found the rings, Alison seemed confused. Suddenly, Alison
remembered that, as she taking the white tall-kitchen bag with the orange
handles out to the garage, she was swinging it around. As she swung the bag,
she heard a tinkling sound. Something had fallen out of the bag. She then
climbed around in the large two-car garage that was nearly wall-to-wall with
Dad's collections as well as Greg and Sherilynn's things from their large home
and garage. After some searching, she found the source of the tinkling...
"the ring" and Mom's Grandfather's wedding band!
_______________________
Some additional history (probably boring, but very special to
me):
When I was in High School, Mom explained to me that when she had
gotten married she chose to have a simple gold band, instead of a ring with a
diamond on it. She chose a simple gold band because older couples, who had been
married for decades, had only a simple band. She felt that it symbolized a long
marriage and life of happiness. She then sadly stated that her wedding ring had
been stolen years before I was born. A new gold band was later purchased to
replace it.
I asked if she'd ever wished she had a wedding ring with diamonds.
She explained that at times she had. Now that she'd been married for years, she
wasn't interested in a new wedding ring, she would prefer a mother's-ring,
containing a birthstone for each of her children.
I'd never heard of a mother's-ring so I asked deeper questions. She
shared an idea of how she might like the ring to look. I sketched several
possible ways the ring could look. It was fun to dream with her and learn more
about my mother.
After this visit, I felt an urge to make her dream a reality. I
started looking for mother's-rings at various jewelry stores. None of the
stores had a ring that could fit ten birth stones and still be shaped as we'd
envisioned. She wanted the ring to have character, all the stores could provide
was a straight line of birth stones.
Finally, Jensen's Jewelers, in Idaho Falls, told me that they
could make a ring to fit Mom's interests. They had a large ring where smaller
birthstones could be added. While it wasn't a mother's-ring, it could be made
into one.
I contacted each of my siblings about the possibility of helping
to pay for this special ring. Eventually her ring was completed and presented
to her. Mom loved her specially designed and crafted mother's-ring.
The ring was designed with the following thought:
Mom's birthstone, blue topaz, in the center with two small
diamonds on each side of it representing Dad & Mom's marriage. Moving out
from there are ten birth stones, one for each child. Everything circles around
the main setting (representing eternity/no end) and makes a heart shape
(representing love).
She often wore it on the same finger as her replacement wedding
band. Later, when some of the gold had begun to wear, she had a jeweler connect
the two rings.
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| "The Ring" and the Ring Dean gave Mom |
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| The ring Dean gave Mom |
Several years after Mom's "ring" disappeared, Dean
was asked by a divorced mother to help her sell her wedding ring because she
didn't want it and she needed money. He could not find a buyer other than
a Jeweler, who offered to pay only a very low salvage price, less than a tenth
of original purchase price. After determining how much money the young mother
needed, he purchased her ring for the amount she needed, several times the
amount she could get from the jeweler. The ring has a large marquise
center diamond with 3 sets of two small diamonds on each side. He gave
the ring to Mom to help take the place of her lost rings. Mom continues to wear
both rings, one on the left hand, the other on the right.
One special bonus (for anyone who reads this long post). In the
photo of Mom wearing the lanyard that Clark gave Mom, if you look closely, you
can see she is wearing "The Ring" as well as her grandfather's wedding band.



Mom sent this to me through email after I posted this story:
ReplyDeleteThanks, Wayne. I just realized that it may not be clear why I am not wearing my grandfather's ring and you may not know. I chose not to have that ring changed... it too large to safely stay on any of my fingers. M