Tad Brown
McElveen
American Literature
12 August, 13
My Grandmothers Chain
My whole life
revolves around one thing. Not a sport, not a color, not even my favorite place
to be. What my life revolves around is a rusty old chain. This chain has been
passed on for generations, now it belongs to my grandmother. This chain has
three charms, a cross, a treasure chest, and a picture from my great great
grandfather. You can hardly make out what each charm is, but my family will
always know. The cross is a copper charm with an engraving of Jesus Christ with
the word “sacrifice” written on in. The cross is also the biggest charm on the
chain because it is the most important to my family. Next, you might be
wondering what a treasure chest is doing on our family chain, but every family
member receives a small wooden treasure chest when they are born. Each year
that person puts one significant item from that past year to remember it by.
Lastly, hangs a portrait of my great, great grandfather. It is a picture of him looking dapper in his sear
sucker suit with an unlighted Cuban cigar.
Everything is on the old chain for more than just the look of it. As I
browse through the charms I see the deeper meaning, which is kept closely to my
family.
Looking at these
symbols not only remind me of what they are, but why they are there. The cross
is not there just to stand for the major role religion plays in our family, but
it represents the miracles that we have experienced in our life. For example,
in 2008 my oldest sister was driving on I-10 on the way home from a regular day
at school. I was at football practice, and my other sister was at play
practice. My mom was 2 hours late to pick us up only to tell us the tragic
news. My sister was involved in a probably fatal car accident, and she remains
in critical condition in the emergency room. As the painful days grew longer,
we finally received the news we have been waiting for, that my sister will be
ok. Jane Lloyd ended up fine besides a
month’s sentence to be on crutches with broken femur. This miracle has and will
stick with me forever. Every time I see that cross, it reminds me to never take
anything for granted, and to cherish every moment you remain to have in this
world.
The treasure chest
is just a few boards and some nails with some mementos including in it.
Although I see my childhood, my future, and my past, sometimes when I have a
bad day or am sad about something, I go to my treasure chest, open it, and
rummage through the items in it. It is like I am watching a movie of my life
ever since I was born. This brings me great joy and makes me forget what I was
even said about. Without my, “memory
lane chest” I don not know how I could get through some I the dark times I have
been through. The treasurer chest stands for something even more than my life.
Each year at thanksgiving, my whole family shares what they collected from this
past year and what they hope to collect for next year. The chest’s are a symbol
of togetherness in my family that I believe makes us so much closer then we would
have been without it.
Lastly
the picture of my great great-grandfather is mostly charred up around the edges
because of the fire. He was the greatest man anyone could ever meat,
unfortunately I never knew him, but by looking at the picture I feel like I have
known him for years. It is a connection I have without any stories,
description, or records of my great great-grandfather that is special to me. This picture has a deeper meaning to my
grandmother because she knew him so well. Every time my grandmother looks at
the portrait she gets this mysterious lugubrious face. I ask what is wrong, but
she will never tell me. She just closes her eyes and says “ lets just put the
chain back up now”. I am not to happy
when she says that because I want to know the even deeper meaning. Although
having that mystery makes me appreciate the portrait that much more.
These three
symbols have guided me to the person I am today, along with the person I am
hoping to become. I am always found rummaging through my grandmothers attic to
find more treasures, more things that I can care about. Although writing this
paper has emphasized that my grandmother’s chain is all I need. It may be a
rusty old piece of scrap metal to an onlooker, but to me, it is my life.
Overall your blog was very well written, Tad. I love how it didn't only tell the story of your life, but also how it relates to your family.
ReplyDeleteThere are just a few misspelled words that you may want to go back and read and you should catch them.
Other than that it was a great story and those symbols were really good choices for this topic. Plus, I learned something that I did not know about you.
Good job(: