The Winds of Change
Cha-Ching!
by
Courtney Pierce
A thirty-four-year ritual in our house will soon begin: The
annual counting of the change. My husband and I amass these little discs of dreams
throughout the year. The holiday rite takes place, without fail, on Christmas Eve while watching A Christmas Carol
(the version with Alistair Sim). Like two Ebenezer Scrooges, we hunch over the
piles of quarters, nickels, dimes, pennies, and the occasional paper clip that
found its way in the bowl. Bets are made on the total haul in our quest to beat
last year’s number. We don our rubber gloves to roll and roll as tears stream
down our faces when Scrooge’s heart is made whole.
For twelve months of the year we pay for small items with
only paper money, as long as the price is in uneven pennies. Return change is then
thrown into a bowl, or three, on the bureau. The spoils are split fifty-fifty
to spend however we choose. Race to the finish with a dollar purchase of mints,
gum, or a package of Ramen. Yes! Three quarters back!
The meaning of the ritual changed over the years.
In 1980 we played this game out of necessity. An extra
hundred bucks at the end of the year was a welcome windfall. We were always
broke; student loan payments left us with nothing to do something fun and
indulgent. Do we buy a vacuum cleaner or go out to dinner?
A few years later, having nabbed decent jobs, we spent our
change booty at Tower Records in San
Francisco . We’d come home with armloads of albums and beta
hi-fi video tapes (superior technology to VHS, per my husband) with concert
footage of our favorite bands. Completely indulgent.
Our careers grew, and so did the change kitty. In the
nineties, we were told by our CPA to create a budget and save. So we did. The
change went in the bank. We moved four times to grab the swinging ring of a
promotion. Our change pool contributed to the renovation and decorative touches
of each house. It helped to build equity and security.
The millennium approached, and our change contributed to a
travel savings fund. We’d never taken a vacation—a
real vacation. Time to see the world
every fall: Switzerland , Britain , Italy ,
and Spain .
It didn't get any better than walking the ruins of castles on the Isle of Skye , paid for in part by change.
Photo by Vlado
In 2001, the winds of our change blew toward others with a
donation to help victims of 9/11. The wind started to blow closer to home. We
lived in Houston
at the time, so Hurricane Katrina’s recovery efforts received our change in 2005. In 2008, we helped
our neighbors put their lives back together after another whirling dervish,
Hurricane Ike. This felt good and right.
Something started to happen, though, as we made more money
and bought more gadgets. Our change spoils decreased. We’d finished rolling our
coins even before Scrooge declared: “I haven’t lost my senses, Bob. I've come
to them.” We had changed, and so did the change. We don’t use cash anymore. Instead,
we debit, credit, auto-pay, and reward ourselves with loyalty points to make
purchases in cyberspace. What happened to our change? We miss the plentiful
jingle that comes with a personal smile. Thank goodness for emoticons.
But one thing didn't change. We continue to collect our coins
and combine them with the donations we make to our favorite local causes. It is,
after all, a tradition. We have what we need—more
than what we need—but many
don’t. Coins can go a long way to help our two- and four-legged friends. My husband rescued a baby owl and paid for its rehabilitation, so some of our recipients even sport wings.
Photo by Anakmll
As long as we have change, we’ll promote change.
Happy Holidays!
Courtney Pierce is a fiction writer and lives in Milwaukie , Oregon ,
with her husband of thirty-four years and bossy cat. After a twenty-year career
as an executive in the Broadway entertainment industry, she moved home to
finally write the stories that were rolling around in her head. Courtney is
currently completing a trilogy of mystery and magical realism about two Baby Boomers whose lives are forever changed by a magical artifact found at an estate sale. She is in the
Hawthorne Fellows program at the Attic Institute and will be Vice President and
board member of the Northwest Independent Writers Association in 2014.
Follow
her series on her blog: www.stitchesthenovel.blogspot.com. Her first two books,
Stitches and Brushes are available in soft cover and E-Book at Amazon.com,
BarnesandNoble.com, and KoboBooks.com. The final book of the trilogy, Riffs, is due
out in spring, 2014. She is currently working on a new mystery thriller for release in 2015.
1 comment:
So true, Courtney! Enjoyed this post that reminded me of how things change in my own life. Thanks for sharing! Best wishes on your books success!
Post a Comment