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Wednesday, Sept. 29,
2004
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Dont put off celebrating your special occasions
By RONDA RICH I never knew my friends Aunt Elsie but still this woman, a stranger to me, will never be forgotten by me. Though I never saw her face or heard her voice, the parable she authored will always be vivid and deeply ingrained in my mind. Aunt Elsie died recently, having lived to be 81. Her grandest adventure happened over 30 years ago when she had gone to see a cousin in Memphis. They visited Graceland, had tea at the Peabody Hotel and shopped at the citys finest store. Passing by the lingerie department, Aunt Els: A long, flowing white peignoir set trimmed in matching lace and ribbons. It looked like something that Grace Kelly would have worn in a movie. Aunt Elsie was, according to her niece, a good Methodist woman who taught Sunday school and regularly baked goodwill cakes. She was a plain, salt-of-the-earth woman who preferred sensible shoes, support stockings and flannel gowns. But that fancy negligee caught her eye and, in a moment of unexplained weakness, she bought it. For the rest of her life, she adored that gown which she stored in a cedar chest at the foot of her bed. But she never wore it. Never took the tags off. Instead, she spent the next 30 years saving it for a special occasion. Sometimes, when she was feeling blue, she took the gown out of the cedar chest to admire it. When she died, her daughter realized that her mama had one last chance to wear her beloved peignoir set. Thats how Aunt Elsie, the practical Methodist, came to be buried in a white chiffon gown and robe fit for a Hollywood queen and stunned the other Methodists as well as the Baptists who came for the viewing. Somehow, I suspect that wasnt the special occasion she had been waiting for. Time just got away from her. No one will find anything beautiful in my closet that hasnt been worn. If I love it, I wear it. There have been times, though, that I havent bought something because it was impractical and I wondered, But where will I wear it? I wont do that again. If a beautiful item speaks to my heart, Ill buy it and then find a special occasion. Shortly after hearing this story, a pair of red patent leather boots caught my eye in a store. They glimmered like a ruby in the midst of black coal. They were so gorgeous that women stopped to admire them as I pranced around in them. They go perfectly with what youre wearing, one rightly pointed out. Ill wear them out, I declared as I paid. Im celebrating. I got a good parking place. Special occasions, you see, arent always divinely delivered. Sometimes, they have to be created. [Ronda Rich is the author of What Southern Women Know (That Every Woman Should) and My Life In The Pits. She lives in Gainesville, Ga.]
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Copyright
2004-Fayette Publishing, Inc.
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