Missing Ring

On my 16th birthday my beloved grandmother gave me a ring.  It was a simple, and in todays standards, very inexpensive ring but to me it was worth EVERYTHING.  It was round with dainty scallops around the edges and my initials engraved in the center.  I slipped it on my finger and it stayed there for nearly 20 years.  I NEVER took this ring off.  Several years after her passing I spent Christmas with my parents.  While sitting in the living room one evening talking I reached to twirl the ring on my finger as I always did when I was thinking about grandma and it was GONE.  My family and I moved everything in their house trying to find it.  We drove back to their place of business (they owned a laundry mat) and looked in and behind all the washers/dryers, searched the parking lot, drove down streets I had been on that day... No Luck.  I was literally heart broken.  I felt as though I had lost her all over again.  For a Christmas gift my family bought me a beautiful birthstone necklace and a few years later had a ring special made to look similar but yet different for me so I could be reminded of my special gift from grandma and also from them.  I walked away from this experience understanding several things.  First, how much my family truly loved me and understood my pain.  Hours spent in the middle of the nite looking for something that really had no special attachment to them except that it meant so much to me.  Secondly, I have learned that the bond I had with my grandmother was not formed in the wearing of that ring but of the love, hugs, encouragement, support and oh yes the memories she gave me.  I will have those always, NEVER to be lost.  And last of all I learned to check that my rings have not become thin and weak from so much wear!!!

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Millard Don Carriker (website) on Thursday, 27 September 2012 20:47

Understood that "things" aren't necessary for our remembrance of loved ones who have died, but they definitely help us deal with our loss. At this moment, sitting at my computer desk (an armoire with doors), the door on the left side is held open by a "machinists jack" that was made by my Dad back when he was a machinist for Sinclair Oil Co. I think of Dad almost every time I see that little device. Thanks for sharing the love of your family for you.

Understood that "things" aren't necessary for our remembrance of loved ones who have died, but they definitely help us deal with our loss. At this moment, sitting at my computer desk (an armoire with doors), the door on the left side is held open by a "machinists jack" that was made by my Dad back when he was a machinist for Sinclair Oil Co. I think of Dad almost every time I see that little device. Thanks for sharing the love of your family for you.
Golden V. Adams Jr. (website) on Sunday, 30 September 2012 01:02

Isn't it great that the Memories never disappear when the "trigger" that helps us remember them may be lost? It is a wonderful thing to be able to have something tangible to remind us. But the most important word in the dictionary is REMEMBER! Thank you for sharing this special story and the lessons that you learned!

Isn't it great that the Memories never disappear when the "trigger" that helps us remember them may be lost? It is a wonderful thing to be able to have something tangible to remind us. But the most important word in the dictionary is REMEMBER! Thank you for sharing this special story and the lessons that you learned!