Boston Herald

Play the ‘If I only had a ...’ game

- By GINA BARRECA Gina Barreca is an English professor at the University of Connecticu­t and the author of “If You Lean In, Will Men Just Look Down Your Blouse?”

Imagine yourself in “The Wizard of Oz” having been asked to sing right after the Scarecrow, Tin Man and Lion. They belt out songs about how they want a brain, a heart and some courage, respective­ly. With wit, courage and heart, you’re suddenly under the spotlight, ready to launch into your own song. Naturally it begins with the signature phrase, “If I only had a ... ”

Decide what word comes next. What is the “it” you believe will make you complete?

What object, connection, accomplish­ment, physical attribute, personalit­y trait or guarantee would make you feel as though the Wizard had heard your request? If you clicked your ruby slippers together, what’s the one thing that you’d make sure happened to you?

No “world peace,” by the way. This one has to be entirely personal even if it might have global implicatio­ns. It can be a wish to be a mathematic­al genius allowing you to work on projects leading to treatments for disease or disaster, but you have to want something personally.

There was one lonely moment in my childhood when I was desperate for an unsuitable plastic parrot.

When we moved from Brooklyn to Long Island, I left all my friends behind, as if they’d been packed in box we forgot to bring with us. When I was about 7, during a long silent walk with my mother, I became fixated on a plastic parrot sitting askew on a branch in the window arrangemen­t of a florist’s shop.

This was no toy. Blood red and army green, fitted with marbles for eyes, it stood about three feet tall. But in a flash, I was absolutely certain that if I owned that thing, I’d never be lonesome again.

For two weeks, I did extra household chores. I counted all the change in my bank. I walked the neighbor’s dachshund — even when it wanted to stay inside.

I finally convinced my shy mother to talk to the man behind the counter. After a long pause, he said, “Ma’am, that bird is for display only.”

I started to cry. “Please, I have five dollars.” That was a lot of cash and the guy was no fool. Mom and I went home with the plastic parrot.

And my life did not change. Eventually my circumstan­ces did, but it wasn’t because of what I imagined.

You always remain you — and the plastic parrot of success often turns out to be a prop, and a pretty shabby one at that, as you realize once you get it home. You probably overpaid and you might have talked yourself into believing it would magically transform your universe, when all you needed was to look more carefully at the real world.

Like Dorothy, many of us already possess what we need to be content. But for those who are financiall­y insecure, who worry about their health and who never found true friends, the need for security, safety and community are real.

Maybe the rest of us can not only click our heels together, but also put our heads together — and make compassion, not magic, part of our “If I only .... ”

For those of us who are financiall­y insecure, who worry about their health and who never found true friends, the need for security, safety and community are real.

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