Thursday, November 18, 2010

Lessons in my Cupboards


Six and a half years ago, I stood in front of our open kitchen cupboards and began unloading the precarious pile of clean, mismatched bowls and plates into open cardboard boxes. The remaining 10 pieces of breakable dishware were carefully wrapped so they would make it safely across the country and the rest of the plastic hodge-podge was piled around them. The green clearance bowls from Target (that had been microwaved so much they almost looked white), the two gigantic purple cups, the free little cups that came with a child's meal from Red Robin, the tiny blue juice cup... My life was simple, though I didn't know it at the time; I was happy and optimistic about the future; I had a bright, handsome husband and a new baby girl. I was excited that the new apartment we would be moving into had a dishwasher. (Our nice drinking glasses were on the verge of extinction because Brian's large hand was too much for the thin glass walls as he pushed the soapy rag to the bottom.) The thought of not having to wash sinks full of dirty, mismatched dishes by hand was liberating.

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A few nights ago, the phone rang at 10:10. A worried friend on the other end told me that her husband was four hours late and wasn't answering his cell phone. She was frightened that something had happened to him as he was riding his bike home through the shady part of town and asked if I could come sit at her apartment with the sleeping baby so she could go out looking for him. I arrived 25 minutes later, gave her a hug, and sent her out the door. I turned around to survey the apartment and actually smiled when I saw the sink full to the brim with dirty dishes. Dirty, mismatched dishes. It wasn't long before I plunged my hands into warm, soapy water and my mind filled with the memories of who I was six and a half years ago.

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The kitchen cupboards in my new apartment looked much like the cupboards in my old apartment. And the dishwasher was everything I had hoped for! I unloaded the cardboard boxes into the open kitchen cupboards and smiled as I placed the last mug with the other mugs, glasses, and plastic cups. Someday, I thought, maybe I'd like to get matching dishes.

Brian and I have been through much during these years in North Carolina. So much, in fact, that the number six and a half seems small and unrepresentative. Three pregnancies, friendships flourishing, our personalities and relationship solidifying, two newborns and the loss and burial of a third, the purchase and renovating of a house, friends leaving, changes in Brian's schedule from month to month, year to year... and all the while, learning more about ourselves and each other as we grow closer and closer to becoming one. I hardly remember the girl I was when I walked into our apartment that first Friday night in North Carolina.

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My friend called as I was drying the last of the dishes. She had found her husband, asleep in the library, surrounded by textbooks. We laughed in relief and she promised to be home in a few minutes. I stacked the last plastic bowl on top of the others and smiled at the precarious pile. And, as I slid the last glass onto the shelf with the other cups, mugs and glasses, I paused and thought fondly on the time in my life when my cupboards looked the same.

When I got home, I opened my own cupboard. Over the six and a half years, my stacks of dishes have been refined. The lonely cups have been replaced, and the microwaved plastic thrown away. Now, everything has a defined place. Now, everything fits. The children section of the cupboard is tidy, colorful and fun. The grown-up section is classic, white and glass.
I paused and thought fondly on this time in my life.


Of course, I'm not saying that a kitchen cupboard and it's contents are representative of one's progression. (In fact, I sometimes envy you whose personalities are unruffled by a bit of disorder, and have even tried to become one of you. But, alas, I must be honest and admit that I thrive much better when my world is stacked in nice rows and columns.) But, for me, the transition of my cupboards strangely parallels the transition of myself. I am growing. I am being refined.

It's just sometimes hard to see when it's only one plastic cup at a time...

10 comments:

  1. I have to say, I was sad when you came home from Thailand with all those new dishes...I still remember opening a cabinet in your old apartment and loving how you had all mismatched dishes crammed in there:). BUT, I am SO glad that you let go of that old couch you wanted to save for your someday basement!!

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  2. I haven't said "hi" before, but wanted to today after reading this post. I'm Tyler Young's wife and ran onto your blog from another family member's. You have beautifully articulated the growth that we all experience....I'm grateful for the hard grad school days, so that I can better appreciate the life that we have made for ourselves today. And I'm sure one day I will look back on today with the same feelings gratitue for our family's growth. Ironically, I've kept a few of those plastic cups which are some of my favorites because of the memories they hold :)

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  3. Beautifully written. You truly have a gift, Lindsay.

    On a dish related note, I'm a little sentimental about dishes. I've kept one of the mugs the set I got as a HS graduation gift, a couple of the mugs I bought at the DI when I was a poor and single college girl, one of the butterknives I accidentally stole when I worked at Los Hermanos during college (it found its way into my apron!), and a spoon from the ugly set of silverware we got as a wedding present. Your post made me feel a little less pack-ratty and a little more introspective! :)

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  4. Well, first of all, as I read this post, I was frightened that something happened to your friend's husband, so I'm glad that wasn't anything serious! And second, I love the picture of you and Brian; it's beautiful. And third, yes, I can relate, because we are definitely still in the mismatched cupboard stage. I recently realized how silly I was to register for the dishware set that we did when we got married--the plates and bowls are HUGE, and heavy, and so we rarely eat off them (seriously, the plates are the SAME size as the serving platter that came with the set!) So, we usually just eat off our children's IKEA plates that we have instead. And I am going crazy because my apt is drowning in disorganization! I can hardly make a dent in it before my two "helpers" dig it deeper! But amidst it all, I do know I will miss these days one day.

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  5. This is a beautiful and touching post. Wow to see things the way you do would be a gift indeed.

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  6. LOVE this, thank you for putting it so eloquently. What a process, don't you think?

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  7. I love this post. So sweet.

    I'm totally calling you when I'm in an emergency. You watch kids AND do dishes? Awesome. ;)

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  8. Oh I love how you write and think and who you are! If you are in Utah these holidays I would love to come see you if you have any free minutes.

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  9. congrats! keep up the good work/this is a great presentation.

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  10. I've been staring at my computer for quite a while now trying to think of something insightful to say, but... it just isn't going to happen. So... I'll just say that I love the way you think. Love reading your blog. :)

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