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I do not collect owls

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For the record, I do not collect owls.  The iron owls on my sideboard, the ceramic owl on my kitchen sill, the owl journal propped against the bulletin board — these are not a collection. They are a random confluence of owls.  Which I may curate.  By myself.

I make this clear because where one or two owls are gathered, danger lurks.  Soon you may find yourself awash in owls, porcelain, pottery, leather, macrame, puffy paint, glass, earrings, pots, plates, and posters.  It could get ugly.  I have an assemblage of tea cups that came to me all at once and present the loveliest picture of tea cupage.  I now keep them high on a shelf in the corner of my living room behind the couch where no one can admire them because very soon after their arrival I found myself the recipient of more tea cups, none of which had a word to say to the initial crew.  They ended up stuffed in amongst the books until our bookshelves looked like an English tea shop.  At which point I got rid of a whole lot of them.  It had to be done.

We have a doctor friend who loves pigs.  This is fine and well.  Pigs are, I’ve heard, very clean creatures with a fine sense of how a sty should really look.  Our friend’s house is, you’ll pardon, littered with pigs.  She must have quite the bedside manner, and her home bears witness of thanks for that in every corner.  And really these hundreds of pigs are quite charming, but I do wonder if she every feels like posting a Lot on Ebay.

So I do not collect owls.  Natasha has taken to thrifting really stunning owl items and displaying them prominently about her house, lying in wait for my exclamation — “oh my WORD, that’s a cute owl” — whereupon she reminds me, mournfully,  “But you don’t collect owls.”  She’s quite a riot, that Natasha.  And don’t think I didn’t notice that both she and Melissa gave me an owl item for Christmas:  Melissa, the very charming owl journal and Natasha an owl t-shirt that says “Hoo’s your momma?”  Their blantant disregard for my wishes is really quite touching.  Don’t the rest of you get any ideas though.  Because I do not collect owls.

I do have a collection though.  It’s really the perfect collection:  deeply  meaningful, easy to store, and free.  I collect barrettes.  The cheap plastic kind you can buy at Meijer $1.99 for 20.  The kind that African-American girls wear at the end of so many pigtails or braids like the most charming, lively hat.

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I started collecting barrettes when the kids were little and we spent some of every sunny day at a park.  I’m not the kind of mother who runs about and makes up lovely games for children at the park.  That’s why we’re at the park after all.  With swings and slides and such.  I would use my time to stare blankly about, thinking thoughts.  You know, thoughts.  And one day my eye caught on a spark of pastel among the mulch, like a Jordan Almond in among the walnuts. My first barrette.  I can’t remember which one it was, but I was so delighted that I called to the kids to share it.  And their magpie natures were ignited.  We found four or five more on that trip to the park, each one a different design or color.

This became a custom.  The kids and I would inspect each playground we went to.  There are lots of African American families between our neighborhood and  the kids’ school and our favorite local playgrounds never failed to turn up a treasure.  Heads ducked, eyes scanning the ground, we’d look for the glint of color among the brown, casting aside bits of balloon, chips bags, cracked lighters, ragged ponytail holders, waiting for that flower or butterfly or bunny shape in some Carribean shade of pink or green.  Shouts of delight for every single one, especially if we’d never seen one like it before.  Like the hot pink poodle.  Or the black flower.  Or the one that says “Jesus Loves You.”   I’d take them home, throw them in the dishwasher, and then display them on the kitchen window sill until I had so many I had to put them in a jam jar.  Now I’ve got them in an industrial-sized mayo jar and I think at last count we had over 160.  Lucy took them to 100’s day in kindergarten last year and had to leave a large batch at home [collections had to number 100 of course].

And this is what makes those barrettes so meaningful for me:  my kids are collecting barrettes for me.  It’s my collection.  Somehow, they never co-opted it.  Every single time  they found a barrette, they ran it over to me in triumph:  “For your collection, Mom!”  I’ll never forget the first time Ben came home from school, dug in his pocket, and pulled out a barrette: “Look Mom, I found it on the playground for you.”  Both Ben and Lucy have done that more than once, and sometimes they’ll present me with one and say “This is from Vera!”  or “Noah found this for you!”  My kids’ friends are sending me little offerings.  You can imagine this makes me puddle about on the floor.  I was once explaining this to a group of mothers gathered on a playground and one of the mothers said “Gross.”  You can imagine she and I never struck up a friendship.

We don’t do as much barrette hunting as we used to of course.  With both kids in school, our playground time is limited and, as the kids have become independent, we don’t need to find a playground quite as desperately as we used to.  Lucy rides her bike around the block by herself now and Ben can bike around the school with a friend as long they check in after every lap.  This huge jar of barrettes is teeming with memories now, fleeting ones.  Very bittersweet. I’m puddling again.

So, I’m a collector of barrettes only.  They have to be plastic, they can be broken and dirty, they must be found.  I prefer those offered by children. If you find one in the shape of an owl, I promise it will find a place of honor.

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9 Comments

  1. tracy wrote:

    beautiful, sara. so beautiful.

    Friday, February 13, 2009 at 1:45 pm | Permalink
  2. emily grix wrote:

    The pictures made me happy 🙂

    Saturday, February 14, 2009 at 7:05 am | Permalink
  3. Debbi wrote:

    I used to have quite an assortment when I was a little girl! I matched my barrettes to each outfit. I kept then in a sectioned tupperware container; sorted by color. My students are constantly presenting me with lost barrettes found on the playground or floor. At least twice a day I am reattaching them to the end of a little girl’s braid. From now on, when I do this endless tasks, I will think of you and smile!

    Saturday, February 14, 2009 at 5:20 pm | Permalink
  4. nicole wrote:

    Sara, dear…
    I bought a pack of these about a week into my pregnancy with Dashiell, a promise that if it was a girl, she could wear as many of these as she wanted all at once. I was limited to one at a time and only IN THE HOUSe. Judi thought they were tacky. I LOVED them. Your collection is impressive–the way it was born even more lovely. Thank you for writing.

    Saturday, February 14, 2009 at 8:51 pm | Permalink
  5. nicole wrote:

    BTW, Dash is more than welcome to wear them if he so desires as well!

    Saturday, February 14, 2009 at 8:52 pm | Permalink
  6. Rebecca wrote:

    Finally! You wrote about The Barrettes. I never noticed the owls…

    Sunday, February 15, 2009 at 9:14 am | Permalink
  7. Tash wrote:

    See, I knew you didn’t collect owls!

    Sunday, February 15, 2009 at 12:50 pm | Permalink
  8. Natalie wrote:

    The love birds one is so sweet — I’ve never seen that one before. Thanks for (finally) posting on the barettes.

    Monday, February 16, 2009 at 6:41 am | Permalink
  9. Melissa wrote:

    What does 269 mean? Is it satanic??

    Also, I just spent 15 minutes learning how to post, so I have to make three other blog responses here rather than where they belong:

    1. I remember your spiral haircut, and it was awesome.
    2. It’s Axl Rose. Not Axel.
    3. When you said Karl had a cat named after him, I was imagining a cat with more freedom. Like a cat hanging from the living room curtains. Not a cat in a cardboard box.

    Friday, February 20, 2009 at 11:41 am | Permalink

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