Skip to main content

Put Yourself in My Shoes

My children don't understand the concept of money.  I like to break it down for them by saying "I had to work 'x' hours to be able to afford those shoes for you!"  Or, "Why did you leave this out in the rain?  I worked 2 days in order to buy that for you!"  I'm pretty sure this technique doesn't work.  My daughter asked me where I was going one morning.  I told her I had to go to work.  "So you can buy me those two Disney princesses?"  Ugh.  Children are self-centered wallet suckers.  I like to heap the guilt on them but my husband just wants them to have all the things he didn't have as a child.  When our daughter loses 3 sets of Monster High doll hands, he simply buys her new dolls.  Although he doesn't agree with her lack of reverence for small doll parts, it makes him happy to spend his money on his girl.


When I was in college in Athens, Ohio, I worked at a bookstore.  My boyfriend (now husband) didn't like that I had to work to be able to afford hairspray, books and beer.  He said he would help me through college if I quit my job and just focused on my schoolwork.  I graciously accepted.


He worked a blue collar job at an iron foundry, but every quarter, he bought my groceries, incidentals, and my books.  He handed me $200 at the beginning of one the quarters, just for books.  $200 to me could buy so much more than a cardboard bound stack of papers; but I needed those books.  I was grudgingly walking toward the bookstore when a head shop caught my eye.  I thought to myself that I could splurge a little and buy some Nag Champa incense.  I walked down the dark staircase and through the beaded curtain to the land of Grateful Dead t-shirts and one-hitters.  Then I saw them:  a leather pair of Doc Martens shoes.  The price tag read $149.  I couldn't afford them, but I had to have them.  After a 30 second internal struggle, I grabbed the size 6.5, slid it out from underneath the stack of the rest, and laid it on the counter.  Moonbeam rang it up and I effortlessly let the two one hundred dollar bills slide from my hand to hers.


I couldn't wait to show my roommates my shoes.  Their response was not what I had anticipated.  They weren't in awe of my shoes.  Their lips were pursed.  They didn't even want to see me take one more catwalk down the living room floor.  Their response was cold, heartless, and...responsible.  They sat me down and asked if I knew how hard my boyfriend has to work to afford the things I need. 
  
Later that evening, my boyfriend asked if I got my books.  "Not exactly" didn't go over well with him.  What really drove him around the bend was that I bought shoes with his money.  A few days later, he drove up to Athens to see me.  He took me to dinner and to quarter draft beer night.  In the morning, he put on his steel-toed boots and holey jeans.  While I was sleeping soundly, he was driving 1 1/2 hours to work.  While I was scrubbing my hand stamp ink off, he was punching his timecard.  When I was putting my empty backpack on my shoulders, he was putting iron castings on an assembly line.


On the kitchen counter he had left an envelope with my name on it.  Inside the envelope was $200.      

Comments

  1. Atta boy Chris! Gotta have some respect for those who have it in their nature to provide.

    ReplyDelete
  2. His love for you is amazing! And he wanted to provide for you as well.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Open Letter to the Man Who Sleeps in Our Stairwell

You startled me.  When I turned to walk up the parking garage stairway and saw you lying over in the corner, you startled me.  You didn't mean to, I know.  It's just that I'm not used to seeing anything over in that corner of the Washington Park Garage , let alone a body.   I took a few steps forward and my hand took hold of the stair rail as if to begin my ascent.  But I couldn't.  I had to pause for a moment to get a good look at you.  You were lying on your stomach, using your bag as a pillow.  My body took a chill when I thought of yours pressed against the cold, cold concrete.  Your coat was decorated with black scuff marks, dirt, and stains.  It wasn't a proper winter coat. As one would do for a cranky toddler, I began to rummage through my purse looking for something, anything, to give you.  I cupped the contents of the bottom of my purse for anything packaged, edible.  I sifted through the lip gloss, ...

Cold Hands, Warm Heart

My son, Holden, strapped his GoPro to our dog, Tucker, and we let him run around the park. We joked about the lame footage that would be on the camera once we reviewed it: Tucker biting at my son's bike tires and eating clumps of snow. When we got to the top of the hill, a young boy seemed to appear out of nowhere. He called out to us, asking if Tucker was a German Shepherd. I asked if he wanted to meet him. He quickly said yes and ran over to us. As he got closer, I noticed that he was just wearing tennis shoes and the snow was already thickly caked onto his laces.   On his upper body, he simply  wore a thin rain jacket and a puffy vest. When he removed his hands from his pockets he wasn't wearing any gloves. He asked to throw Tucker's snowy ball anyway. The icy ball stung his fingers and he shook them for the warmth to return.  I asked him where his gloves were.  He said his mom still needed to buy him some.  He said he just keeps his hands in his pocke...

You Messed It Up Again.

Our son, Holden, recently signed up for a lifeguard course.  I was certain that the amount of hours he would have to commit to the course would turn him away.  Not to mention that it was being held during the most glorious weekend weather we'd had in months.  From 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day, his mind was not on Instagram or You Tube video of BMX stunts. No, there was no time for that.  He had to be hyper-focused on compressions and breaths and making sure he called out the "tweet-tweet-tweet" of the whistle during his drowning victim scenarios. Each evening, Holden came home exhausted.  We watched him use just enough energy to eat dinner and share a little bit about that day's lesson.  He was showered and nestled in his covers earlier than in his toddler years.  Part of us felt badly for him.  He was missing movie nights, favorite restaurant breakfasts, and the spring-like weather.  He would mention it in passing, "It sucks that I can't be r...