Posted on 08/16/2013 9:14:29 PM PDT by rlmorel
I was thinking of my mom today, and it brought me to something I periodically recall every few years: her Jade Elephants.
My mother had two jade elephants. Actually, they weren't jade, they were ceramic painted green. She got those when we lived in the Philippines. My mother told me they were flown into Clark AFB from Vietnam aboard a C-130.
They were big, 2-3 feet tall, 1-3 feet wide, with the trunk in the down position. We used to have a beautiful wooden, marble-topped coffee table that died at the hands of us children, and my mom saved that inch-thick slab of white marble that was four or five feet long, and when we got the elephants, that slab was laid across the tops with one elephant at each end. My parents also bought an nice Sansui stereo, and that elephant table held it quite comfortably, turntable and stuff on top, the amplifier and reel-to-reel on the floor between the elephants, and one big wooden speaker on the outside of each elephant.
My mom loved those elephants. In the movie "Risky Business", the mother of the character played by Tom Cruise had a fixation with a crystal egg on the mantle. He was terrified that she would notice if it had even been moved a fraction of an inch.
My mom was the same way with those elephants.
I must take a detour here and mention this, because it seems to fit together here. Previously, her favorite object had been a large, beautifully carved and polished mahogany statue of a negrito hunter. It was about three feet tall, wonderfully carved smooth and stained a dark, inky, black. It was also anatomically correct in all ways. Quite detailed, it was. This was modestly covered with a multicolored woven and fringed loincloth that never seemed to be on its wooden body where it should have been.
As we young kids regarded it from across the room, clothed only in that modest loincloth and holding a spear, it proved an irresistible target. Instead of ending up in the circular cork target on the wall, our brass-tipped darts became deeply embedded in his, er wood.
We outright ruined that statue. But oddly enough, I never remember her getting crazy about it and chewing us out.
But now, it suddenly comes to me. She thought it was hilarious she COULDN'T discipline us it fits so perfectly! The thought of us grinning pre-adolescent urchins winding up and throwing those darts as hard as we could from about five feet way in order to make them stick in that hard, mahogany, er wood was probably too much for her. She likely couldn't risk losing it in front of us.
But the elephants were different. I think those elephants meant more to her than ceramic furniture, they symbolized something for her. She told me late in life that she got one of the few undamaged pairs off of that C-130. All the other crates contained largely broken segments of elephants. But she got good ones.
So one day, when I was in college, I was vacuuming my room. I lived at home and commuted to college, held down a job and paid for much of my tuition with the GI Bill. (The old GI Bill ) I lived in the attic, which was the first thing my dad renovated in that old house that he grew up in.
I moved the elephants off to the side, about a foot apart, and stood the marble on end leaning up against one of them. I had it balanced just right, and figured I was only going to leave it that way for about 30 seconds while I vacuumed where the stereo had been set up.
As I began to vacuum, the stiff Electrolux hose tapped the marble slab.
As I watched, horrified, the marble rectangle's balance gave way, and it leaned in slow motion with increasing pressure against the elephant it rested against.
Gaping, I watched the elephant tip, and fall, slowly, inexorably towards the other elephant. When it hit, there was the sound of ceramic against ceramic, and bits of green flew outwards. They both came to rest as the marble slab continued down on top, and when it reached its limit, there was a loud crack, and the marble counter broke in two.
I stood there, astonished into speechlessness, mouth open. Three of my mother's most cherished symbols and memories of her life as a Navy wife lay broken on the floor in one, fell, swoop.
I was in panic. What on earth would I tell her? I walked numbly down to the kitchen, and she was doing something at the kitchen table, and had reading glasses on. When I walked in, the glanced up and did a double take. She froze said "Bob, what's wrong?" I said that I didn't know how to tell her, so I was just going to tell her: I broke her elephants.
She stared blankly at me, still frozen, then waved her hand and said "Ah. Those things." Hah, you could have knocked me over with a feather. I stammered, and she took off her glasses, looking at me and said: "How could I be upset? I think about those elephants, and I think of the broken ones on the plane, and all those young men serving and dying in Vietnam, and the elephants didn't seem as important anymore."
My mom was a wonderful woman, and did I ever love her at that moment. In one statement, she had not only absolved me of my carelessness, but took away even the smallest fragment of guilt that might have gnawed at me. What a beautiful thing to do.
And, my dear Mom who has been gone some years now. It is nice thing to be able to think of her and have a big grin on my face as I do so.
Nice story. I liked it.
Thanks, DManA. Just feeling in a retrospective mood tonight. It is nice.
It was a very good and interesting read.
I thank you for it.
Hope no one ruins it for you.
Priceless.
Thank you for the reflection.
LOL..I promise not to take it seriously...it IS Free Republic, after all...:)
Heck. I could see nearly anything, now that you mention it. Anything from The Hugh Manatee to The Attention Whore image!
I had an aunt who for a while lived in the Philippines. She had many elephants decorating her home. Must be a Filipino thing.
BUFE’s?
Great story..
our moms and dads....how we miss them...even when we get up there in age...
My parents had an Electrolux vacuum cleaner. I remember it very well.
Big Ugly Freakin’ Elephant?
What does that mean?
I don’t think it is a Filipino thing, although from what I saw, things with penises were a popular subject, ranging from a nearly naked negrito hunter to a grinning figure taking a bath in a removable wooden barrel which when removed, revealed a wooden replica to spring forth.
LOL, yes. Penises were a popular thing. I was living next to Olongapo City, and that is probably what sold there.
They were my parents.
LOL...was wondering too...what is “BUFE’s”?
Funny...my mom always wanted one. Got it when my dad retired.
Thanks, JJ
You bet.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.