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Bear in a box. |
There's something about boxes. Any small container, really.
I remember asking my mother for the rectangular can the cocoa powder came in so I
could wash it out and put my treasures inside. I was constantly rescuing shoe
boxes for future dioramas and a long term home for pine cones. I spent weeks
one winter playing in several large boxes with windows cut out, taped together
to make a house, a town, a spaceship, an alternate reality.
I envied my mother's jewelry box, surely it was a magical
thing. A safe place for the earrings and necklaces I didn't have yet. A keeper
of diamond rings and gem-encrusted brooches. Tiny lapel pins from various
companies. And, in the bottom, an array of strange coins from other countries.
I kept the tin the baking powder came in to horde my nickels
for the candy store. A salvaged cardboard box slid under the bed could hold the
aging stuffed animals of a girl not ready to let go. Christmas boxes with their
shiny paper and fantastic bows hiding excitement within. Just the possibilities
of an unopened box, any box, were enough to fire my imagination. Anything could
be in there. Anything.
I still loathe to throw out containers and boxes to this
day. Amazon makes it easier – I know there will be a steady supply of boxes
coming my way. I baked a chocolate cake today, and finished off the cocoa
powder. It was hard to let go. I nestled the container in the trash, careful to
secure the plastic lid, so the cocoa box remained with its friend. It's the least I could do, for something so innocuous,
yet precious at the same time.
What about you? Any containers that make your life complete?
Plastic storage tubs just aren't the same. Any
Amazon box hoarders out there? You know who you are.
Image courtesy of Pixabay