• The Everlasting Charm of Cardboard Boxes

    I’ve never met a cardboard box I didn’t like. As a result, I have a dedicated box closet in my basement. This humble, unfinished space is not just for storing boxes; instead, it’s a testament to being able to find the perfect box only a flight of stairs away.

    Each one I’ve saved tells a story and invites me to recall a package delivered, an appliance purchased, a gift received. Each one also awaits its turn as the perfect box in which to return a book, send a present or hold my recycling.  

    There’s also a practical reason why I save so many boxes.

    Two decades ago, a neighborhood punk broke into my house and stole two TVs, a couple of kitchen appliances, my monitor and a number of other things. In filling out the police report, I was asked to provide pictures of the items as well as their serial numbers. Alas, with the items gone—as well as the boxes they came in—so was proof of my ownership. (And yes, I could start snapping pictures, writing down serial numbers and recycling boxes, but I like seeing visual proof of things I purchased and gifts I received. When shipping a package, I also like knowing I have a closet full of boxes of various dimensions from which I can choose.

    Yes, cardboard boxes hold an undeniable magic for me that transcends their seemingly mundane nature. This is especially true since the start of COVID, when I, like many others, opted to order everything from groceries and office supplies to pet food and electronics, rather than test fate by going out to shop.

    In a world sometimes obsessed with grandeur and complexity, the cardboard box stands strong in its corrugated simplicity, a reminder of the importance of both form and function and how, when combined, even the ubiquitous cardboard box can be a thing of beauty, a way to do what I’m trying to do more of: celebrate the seemingly mundane.

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    4 responses to “The Everlasting Charm of Cardboard Boxes”

    1. Ann Coleman Avatar

      I agree, there is something so satisfying about a cardboard box. You can also use them as toys for kids. When I was young, we could use the big ones to “make” houses (cutting out doors and windows, and I distinctly remember being taught to use them to make cars as well. I think that idea actually came from Romper Room.

      1. Ellen Shriner Avatar

        OMG! I remember Romper Room!

    2. Amanda Le Rougetel Avatar

      Count me in the collector’s club on this. So hard to decide between keeping and recycling, that I simply keep. Simple.

    3. Eliza Waters Avatar

      I, too, am a box collector and it drives my spouse nuts! He just doesn’t get it, does he? 😉

  • Unmasking

    In May, I stopped wearing my KN95 mask. The last time I’d worn masks in earnest was in April at the airport, in museums, and on public transportation in Amsterdam. I was definitely a minority, but I didn’t mind. My goal was to avoid COVID while we vacationed in Europe. For three years I wore or carried a mask with me. Now discontinuing masks feels odd. COVID was a harsh teacher and the early days of the pandemic are still vivid.

    Like everyone else, I’d heard healthcare and other frontline workers didn’t have enough PPE. Even cloth masks would help. The whole mask-making enterprise felt ludicrous and desperate. I struggled to understand: the government had no coherent plan for a pandemic? We were on our own for protection? The world seemed out of control. Anything could happen.

    A Facebook friend, who’s a physician and quilter, posted a mask pattern and later I found another design online. I had lots of quilt fabric remnants and was willing to sew masks if it would help.

    When Abbott Northwestern Hospital put out a call for homemade masks, I sewed floral fabrics women might like and abstract patterns men wouldn’t mind. I flannel-lined a few for softness before I realized they would be hot.

    On a dark wintery day, the streets and hospital parking lot were eerie and empty when I delivered the masks. I texted the contact and rolled down the passenger window as instructed. A hospital employee took the bagful and thanked me profusely.

    My sister (a respiratory therapist in a respiratory pandemic) asked for some. My homemade masks were a talisman that made her feel loved. At first, she wore a cloth mask over her one and only N95. She was expected to store the N95 in a brown paper bag so she could re-use it. Later she gave the extra cloth masks to her Ohio hospital’s Housekeeping staff, who didn’t have any protection.

    I sent some to my son and future daughter-in-law, a medical resident who treated COVID patients in a Bay area ICU. She had an N95, but she could wear cloth masks away from work.

    My sister suggested I give some to younger relatives who worked at a psychiatric hospital in Illinois. Although the local hospital and my sister had appreciated the homemade masks, I felt self-conscious about sending them. I worried the masks would be cringeworthy (Crazy Aunt Ellen made us these useless masks and she expects us to wear them?) but my relatives were gracious—they understood the sentiment.

    Masking began with a jolt of fear, but unmasking happened gradually. I’d grown accustomed to eating out. My interactions in stores, clinics, and the pottery studio were even more distanced. The CDC’s decision to call off the emergency didn’t really figure into my thoughts. I’d concluded my risk was manageable although COVID is still out there. One day I’ll get it, but I probably won’t be seriously ill and die. Long COVID concerns me, but three years after the pandemic began, that fear no longer haunts my days. 

    A KN95 mask is in my purse, but I think I’ll be OK without it. 

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    13 responses to “Unmasking”

    1. Luanne Avatar

      Love this meditation on masks. Those early days when the call went out for homemade masks made us feel as like in the days when women knitted socks for the soldiers, I think. My best friend made tons of them. We all have one or more from her.

    2. Ann Coleman Avatar

      I found that my masks came in handy during this year’s allergy season. I have to be outside for several hours on most days (walking shelter dogs) and the mask did a great job of protecting me from pollen.

    3. Suzanne Earls Avatar

      We received homemade masks from friends and also at our church gym. They helped us get thru that period before vaccines were available.

      I recall we did outdoor Zumba with our homemade masks off but wore them b4 and after each session. So appreciated as we got out with friends.

      1. Ellen Shriner Avatar

        I appreciate hearing your experience. I’m glad you had donated masks. Your outdoor Zumba reminds me of the many outdoor activities we did even when the weather wasn’t great.

    4. Eliza Waters Avatar

      In crowds, I still mask. And interestingly, on a recent trip to NYC during that smoky siege, they were suggesting masking and many people complied. Asians have been wearing them for years to reduce contamination, which makes sense to me. I don’t mind wearing one if I feel there is a need.

      1. Ellen Shriner Avatar

        Agreed! Now I consider the situation. We had terrible air quality last week and I gave serious thought to masking for that.

        1. Eliza Waters Avatar

          They say N95s work for particulates which are pretty serious lung irritants.

        2. Ellen Shriner Avatar

          Thanks. I may have to take up masking again if I want to walk, garden, etc. We have got to stop wrecking our planet.

        3. Eliza Waters Avatar

          I couldn’t agree more. 🙁

    5. Ellen Shriner Avatar

      People evolve too. Or various dimensions come to the fore and other parts recede. COVID has changed all of us!

    6. Bev Bachel Avatar
      Bev Bachel

      Appreciate your post. Up until just a few weeks ago, I pretty much wore a mask no matter where I went. But I realized just the other day that I no longer feel the need, in large part because I’m still not venturing out all that often. Instead, remain turned inward. I miss the outgoing me I used to be, but trust (hope?) she will return before long.

    7. Sally Showalter Avatar
      Sally Showalter

      I agree with all your sentiments. Recently I slowed down on wearing masks in stores, or certain public places although I always have one on my person. If standing in a line at the grocery store, or anywhere with several other people, I pull the mask out and put it on. It is a freedom, but sadly it is not. Thank you.

      1. Ellen Shriner Avatar

        Now the decision to mask/unmask puts all the responsibility on the individual to assess risk. Thanks for reading!

  • Sandwich Party!

    Before surgery I read up on painkillers. Bottom line, I was grateful that options existed and realistic about accepting possible reactions. Jimmy John’s sandwiches were never mentioned in that patient information.

    My first night post-operative I looked around my room, stared into what I thought was a giant security television screen (aka a dark window), pulled together all the visual clues available, and determined that there was a sizeable Jimmy John’s sandwich party happening across the hall. Giant carts of food appeared to be going into a room with people following. I thought I saw, or heard, that the party was in honor of my surgeon. 

    Not eating in the prior thirty hours made a sandwich appealing. I think I’ve only eaten a Jimmy John’s tuna salad special at a corporate lunch meeting. I remember because I was the last person choosing a box. Tuna salad, tuna salad, tuna salad. Three boxes of the same choice. The only decision was if I was hungry enough to eat a Jimmy John’s tuna salad sandwich.

    According to hospital people watching me that night, I decided I needed to freshen up before heading to the party and attempted to get out of bed dragging tubes and lines and monitors. I asked for a clean gown, something less revealing, and my personal bag so I could brush my hair, wash my face, and find my undies. I was ready to socialize. Maybe celebrate that surgery was over, chat about the joy of warm blankets, or share escape plans.

    What’s fascinating is how in a somewhat dark situation, something deep in my mind took stock of what it could observe and found the potential for a few minutes of joy as well as the possibility of grabbing a sandwich, maybe a cold soda, and a little time to chit chat with absolute strangers. I am an introvert, and not fond of fast foot sandwiches on small loaves of bread. In normal times I would need a serious reason to head into a room of strangers, especially if wearing a lousy hospital gown. But that night a party sounded awesome.

    Physicians have known since Plato that there is a direct correlation between the mind, body and health. The psychological and physical are not separate but are vitally linked in healing the body. When the painkillers were not taking care of what my body was experiencing, my simple belief is that my mind accepted responsibility for creating a happier framework. In the absence of other stimuli to distract focus from what was hurting, I planned that party room. I made decisions about whether I was ready to have chips (not), if a diet cola or a lemon-lime soft drink would taste better (lemon-lime), how to blend in with all the people in uniforms or street clothes (unresolved). My problem solving and creativity pulled me through a night that could have been worse. 

    This is the power of human vitality. We can live, grow, develop in many situations, not only on sunny days but also during threatening storms. Be gentle with your expectations if this is not a time to go for the stars. Share a Jimmy John’s with a friend. Enjoy a mini party, if only in your mind. Wear a robe if your gown hangs open in the back.

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    2 responses to “Sandwich Party!”

    1. Ellen Shriner Avatar

      I love the idea of the mind’s ability cope by using imagination!

      1. cmkraack Avatar
        cmkraack

        We creative types might have an extra tool!


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