I don’t
remember the day or the year, but I remember the moment.
It was a
moment I have thought of often because it was the moment I decided to change
from being a shell collector to being a shell leaver.
OK, so
“leaver” is not maybe a proper word. But it fits because it describes a person
who might put something back where it was found (even if it is loved) or maybe
even not disturb it at all in the first place.
I was
walking on a beach in northern Oregon that doesn’t often offer up shells and
when it does, they are most likely to be imperfect.
Broken
shells are OK for me. It was even more years ago that I discovered that broken
shells are just as beautiful as perfect ones. They still had color and form;
they’d just had a rougher life. They deserved to be loved and so I loved them.
The
collections of shells you will see around my house are just as likely to hold imperfect
shells as perfect ones.
But at
this one moment I am remembering now, I came upon a perfect shell. It was a
surprise. A gift.
I picked it up and put it in my
pocket and walked with it for a bit.
And then
I remembered the other shells I have at home.
And then I heard a little family
walking behind me.
And then
I surreptitiously put the shell back on the sand and kept walking, only
glancing back much later to ensure that the little family had found the little
shell.
They did.
I’m old
now. Old enough to be done collecting and be more interested in seeing the joy
others have when they do.
Not that
every aspect of my life is free of collections. I still find myself in the adding-one-more-treasure
mode far too often.
And not that
I have any problem at all with people collecting shells. They are a perfect
beach souvenir and a happy reminder of days on the sand -- all the better when
they are found in your path – so please, please collect shells. Until you have
enough.
I have
enough. I want someone else to have enough. So while I might snap a photo, the
shells no longer make it to my pocket.
Though
I’ve been tempted.
It was
after a storm that I was walking on a beach in Southern California and saw the
biggest shells I’d ever seen outside a gift shop.
I was the
only one walking this time, but I stuck with my vow.
Maybe
someone else would find and love them. Maybe they’ll get washed back to sea.
My collection is complete.
There was
something else I noticed along that beach in that cute little beach town after that
storm.
And it
wasn’t cute.
It was garbage. Ropes, lids,
gloves, bottle-tops. So I came back the next day with gloves and a bag and
picked up as much as I had the stomach for.
It wasn’t
a collection I kept, but a collection that still felt meaningful.
Beautiful
shells and abandoned bottle-caps are teeny tiny in the scope of the world.
Can taking or leaving them make a
difference?
Do any of
our teeny tiny actions matter at all?
Yes and
yes, I like to think.
What we
do, what we say, what we take, what we leave, what we write, matter.
It might
be teeny tiny.
But for
those walking behind you, those starting out their collections, those walking
on a debris-strewn beach after a storm, it matters.
Let’s do
what matters.