As I was driving down our street on a recent
Saturday morning I came upon a very interesting sale. The neighbor kids across from
us were out on their driveway in front of a hand painted sign that read, “Rocks
for Sale.” Naturally, I had to investigate. The kids had painted some rocks and
added glitter to create what they considered works of art. These sub-precious
stones were for sale at the bargain rate of only 25 cents each. Now I’m a
sucker for anything that kids sell. In fact, we have a family policy that no
matter how much of a hurry you’re in you have to stop at every lemonade stand
and make a purchase. And I had to admit that a rock sale, while clearly
unconventional, conformed to at least the spirit of the aforementioned lemonade
policy. Needless to say, I stopped to peruse the geologic curiosities of the
neighborhood rock barons.
Clearly these preschool kids were onto something
because their creations were interesting, to say the least. They thought they
had some truly marketable treasures and who was I to dispute the unbiased
artistic wisdom of children. This gave me pause to consider some of the things
that grownups assign value to. In fact, we seem to fill our lives with trinkets
and conveniences that have little more intrinsic value than those glitter rocks
did. Our stores, art galleries and even art museums are brimming with items that
have no more utility than a rock, and are often far less appealing … at least
in my opinion. Not to mention that you’d be hard pressed to derive a greater
joy-per-dollar benefit than these particular 25 cent rocks promised. I’m
clearly not an art critic, but you would have to concede that throughout our
culture there are countless items, art and otherwise, for which the assigned value
is often unrelated to the intrinsic value or the utility value. This merely
confirms the old adage that beauty truly is in the eye of the beholder.
Consequently, I would challenge each of you to
survey your own life and consider what things are truly precious. If you’re
anything like me, you may discover that you have assigned value to many things
that are actually worthless in the long run. What is more, we often work
ourselves to death so that we can own all these things. Perhaps they even own
us. As it turns out the most priceless things in our lives are probably the ones
that don’t cost anything; like people, happiness, laughter, faith and the like.
So those are the things in which to invest our precious and limited resources.
Pebbles
I watched a little girlSitting on the beach today
Sorting through the stones and pebbles
Which she kept or tossed away
To me, they all looked worthless
Yet, her childish eyes could see
A value hidden in them
Which, somehow, eluded me
For out of countless thousands
She chose a special few
Based on shape or size or texture
Or some unusual hue
Proclaiming they were priceless
That she must have them for her own
She found value, even beauty
Where I saw only cold, grey stone
Tomorrow they’d be stones once more
Which she would cast away
To be polished by the ocean
And found again another day
And it occurs that she’s no different
Than most grownups I have known
Who spend their lives pursuing
What they consider precious stone
Which they pile up in heaps
Around their children and their wives
With the goal that all their treasure
Would bring value to their lives
Until, one day, they wake up
And discover, to their shock
That what they spent their lives on
Amounts to but a pile of rock
When we search for things of value
We must choose most carefully
So we only keep the real gems
And toss the pebbles back in the sea
By Frank Carpenter ©
1 comments:
Great post Frank! We love the poem too. I will read it to our rock designers tomorrow as we embark on our first real family road trip. Hopefully, we find some more beautiful rocks! Thanks for sharing.
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