Everyone knows you aren't real until you are loved
This weekend my Granddaughter Linda
and I rescued a doll. Anyone who has
read The Velveteen Rabbit knows how import the love of a child is for a toy. They
aren’t real until they are loved. We were shopping at the Goodwill in
Warrenton, OR when Linda saw a lot of collector dolls along the back wall.
“Do you
want to look?” I asked her.
Her blond
bob bounced as she nodded enthusiastically.
“Wow,”
she said as we stood in front of the dolls, “where did they all come from?”
”It was
popular for grown-up ladies to collect dolls.
They may have died and their families have given away their dolls.” We thought it was mean that Goodwill had put
a price tag on one doll’s face. We
looked and then did some more browsing.
Linda found a Spongebob Squarepants mug for her little sister who is
fresh off a tonsillectomy. As we browsed Linda casually mentioned that she
would like a “china doll” someday.
“Did
you see a doll you liked, honey?”
“Well,”
Linda said slowly, “there was one that caught my eye.
“Let’s
go look at her,” I said. The doll, in
Gay Nineties attire and a flourish of ringlets, was beyond her reach so I
brought her down. “Is this the one?” More nodding.
We couldn’t find a price on the doll, but many I had looked at were $14.99. “Let’s go pay for Lydia’s mug and ask how
much the doll is.” The doll was
sold. There was no way she was going to
leave Linda’s arms. She was
beaming. So was Linda. And it’s not like
she doesn’t have dolls. She loves
dolls. My daughter-in-law had no dolls
as a child. Her own mother died when she
was two and no one thought to give her dolls.
As far as I’m concerned there are a lot of dolls out there that missed out
on lovin’.
When we got to the cash register
the cashier couldn’t find the tag either so she called a manager who finally
found it under the dolls abundant ringlets.
“Six-ninety-nine,” the cashier
read aloud, “but it’s a red tag so you get half off.” Linda and I high fived on our good luck. A delighted granddaughter for $3.50. Such a deal.
As we
walked out the door of the store Linda said, “I know what I’m going to call
her. Molly.” Molly is one of Linda’s favorite American Girl
characters. GranDave and I gave her a
little Molly doll a year ago Christmas.
Molly
accompanied us the rest of the day running errands and was ooed and awed over
by Linda’s great-grandmother. After
dinner Molly’s shoes came off and she slept between Linda and me. Who knows where Molly came from. She still bore a tag that Linda
discarded. She isn’t interested in Molly’s
pedigree. She probably stood in some
woman’s room, a thing to be admired, but not loved the way an eight-year-old
can love a doll.
As an only child many of my toys
survived the decades and are still loved.
Now they receive from not just me, but from my grandchildren. Besides Linda’s new doll we slept with two
friends of mine who were delighted to have arms around them. Benjie Bear and Sleepy the Lamb were made
real again when Linda snuggled them in her arms two nights running. She didn’t care that their white “fur” is now
gray or that Benjie is missing an eye.
Normally Benjie gets to hold my cell phone at night just in case I hear
from Dave or, God forbid, my mother falls and the security company calls
me. This weekend the cell phone stayed
on the night stand and Benjie and Sleepy looked quite happy to have other
duties and to be real again.
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