The Perfect Gift
By Bobby Neal Winters
I’ve finished the chess set.
Let me take that back. I may put a coat of wax on the pieces, but, to outside observers, I have finished the chess set.
They are carved. I’ve stained the hillbilly farmers and have oiled the dairy farmers. I’ve made a box to keep them in. I’ve put dividers in to keep the pieces in order.
I am only lacking a hook latch to keep the box closed, and that is in the mail.
But, were I to die today. If I had a coronary between this paragraph and the next one, there would be a tearful moment on Christmas morning when Jean shakily handed one present to my grandsons saying, “Your grandpa loved you. This was the last thing he made. It was for you boys.”
Kind of makes you want to see the movie, doesn’t it?
This was an incredibly satisfying project.
Those of you who are of a certain age, know what I have in mind with it. Fifty, sixty, one-hundred years from now, some child yet unborn will be rifling through a closet looking for games to play,come upon this box, and open it.
“What’s this?” the child will ask.
“Your grandfather’s grandfather carved it,” the mother will answer.
We just have to hope that things are going well enough that they don’t decide to use it as firewood. But if they must, they must, and they have my blessing.
This is the nature of a gift. You give it, and you let go with hope.
I am now in a pleasant period of a good life. In the 16th Psalm it is written:
Lord, you alone are my portion and my cup;
you make my lot secure./
The boundary lines have fallen for me in pleasant places;
surely I have a delightful inheritance./
I will praise the Lord, who counsels me;
even at night my heart instructs me.
I don’t have to worry financially. I have time to do things. I’ve got as much health as a 62-year-old could hope for. In other words, the boundary lines have fallen for me in pleasant places.
In addition to all of this, I’ve discovered the things that make me happiest, the things that give me the most satisfaction: Giving in secret to those who can’t repay.
If they know it’s me, if they thank me, it makes me uncomfortable. I am an introvert at the end of the day.
It’s nice if they actually appreciate it and if I can see that they do, but that is not necessary.
As much as I support giving money to institutions (the University, the Salvation Army, the Lord’s Diner), the feeling is strongest when whatever I am giving goes to individual people.
The chess set provides a nice metaphor for this. It provides a connection between me and some people who won’t even know me one-hundred years from now. (Again, barring termites, fire, a family dog that likes to chew, etc.) I can think about the person taking it out, setting it up, and using it without the awkward discomfort of them coming to thank me.
My vision of this is somehow better for me than actually seeing it. That says something about me that I might need to think about, but let’s move on.
I’ve made clear the trouble with giving something like the chess set: These earthly treasures can be destroyed by moths and vermin. We can give things that are harder to destroy.
When you teach someone how to do something, that can’t be destroyed. Here I am talking about small, tiny things. Like how to wash a sharp knife. You keep it out of the sink until last, and you never let go of it. My father taught me this; his mother-in-law taught him this. There might be a chain of learning that goes back to the invention of washing cutlery.
Acts of kindness work in the same way. If you treat someone with kindness, you are teaching them how to be kind. We are monkeys after all and monkey-see, monkey-do.
As in the sense of giving a gift, you have no control on what happens next; you have no control on what the person you give it to does with it. There is just this vision in your mind that, maybe, somewhere down the line someone will get just a tiny bit of happiness out of something you’ve given, something you’ve done.
And they won’t even know it was you, so no awkward discomfort of thanks.
How perfect.
Bobby Winters, a native of Harden City, Oklahoma, blogs at redneckmath.blogspot.com and okieinexile.blogspot.com. He invites you to “like” the National Association of Lawn Mowers on Facebook. Search for him by name on YouTube.