Times-Call (Longmont)

Recent dis-pursal shakes up life

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Reality has been shaken.

OK, I know that’s nothing new. After all, we’re still grappling with an evershifti­ng pandemic. UFOS and artificial­ly intelligen­t chatbots have made this year’s headlines look like a science fiction blockbuste­r. And the Broncos haven’t been to the playoffs since 2015. But this is big.

Missy’s purse has left the storyline. A sign of the apocalypse, indeed. You may be new here. If so, suffice to say that for our disabled ward Missy — my age physically, but much younger inside — a Big Red Purse has been her constant companion since before Heather and I were married. It’s a pairing on the level of Han Solo and Chewbacca, Don Quixote and Sancho Panza, or even Taylor Swift and breakup songs. That serious.

But the world shifted on its axis a couple of months ago when a weekend cleanup uncovered an ancient treasure — a forgotten bottle of pop beads, a little larger than a football. We dusted it off and passed it over, figuring the rediscover­y would fill a quiet afternoon.

Click.

That Bottle O’ Beads™ has become Missy’s new sidekick. At any given moment, her hands are likely to be busily screwing the lid on or off (or at least attempting to) and then quietly assembling and breaking down a new string of beads. Her need to fidget and her love of arts and crafts seems to have found its natural crossroads. Pop. Pop. Pop.

It has its advantages. The old purses attracted material like a black hole — stuffed animals, small books, acres of Kleenex and the proverbial partridge in a pear tree — eventually reaching a level of density that weighed down her shoulder and wore out the strap. (Any rumors that we occasional­ly helped the strap along will be officially denied at the next press conference.) Missy’s new friend is a

lot lighter, even if it does sometimes need an Official Sherpa to carry it up and down the stairs for her while she holds on to the bannisters.

For a while, I kept looking

for The Purse Returned to make a reappearan­ce, chosen from among the many in her closet. Missy’s habits tend to set themselves pretty firmly, after all. But this seems to be a lasting shift. For now, anyway.

A contradict­ion? Not really. All “lasting” things have a way of being temporary,

depending on where you set the scale.

But it always shakes us a little, doesn’t it? Maybe even more than a little.

Sometimes it’s just an annoyance, like a style that shifted or a tech that moved on. (“I have a cabinet full of VHS tapes, what do you mean I can’t find a VCR anymore?”) Other

times, it touches us a little more deeply. New discoverie­s, for better or worse, about a friend we thought we knew. Changes in work, in life or in the world that force us to redefine who we are. We grapple with unexpected concepts, including one that should be no surprise at all: that “normal” is just what we’re

used to. And that’s a very, very fragile thing indeed.

That doesn’t mean we can’t try to preserve the things worth keeping. But it does mean we can’t set our feet in concrete. However appealing consistenc­y may sound (and I’m right there with you), we have to be ready to adapt. Kids grow up. Worlds change.

And yes, even purses come and go.

Funny thing about pop beads. There’s always a new way to assemble them. No matter what pieces happen to come to your hand.

Maybe Missy’s on to something.

I’ll just have to see what pops up next.

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