Love and Three Tea Cups

sheet new manA woman came into my shop today looking for tea cups. Three tea cups, as a gift for a friend who was getting married.  Actually, remarried.  Years ago, there were three of them who lived on the same street and would get together at least once a week for cups of tea and good chocolate and talk about how horrible their marriages were.  They were all so unhappy and it helped to talk to each other and commiserate about their husbands.  Ultimately, all three of them divorced their husbands, within six months of each other.

This woman’s friend is the first of the three to find love again and since it is her second marriage she’s not doing a big celebration and has no need for all the normal gifts usually given at a first marriage.  So this customer wants to give her a special gift and is putting together a gift basket with tea, three tea cups, and some wonderful chocolate, as a reminder of their special friendship and how they helped each other through a very challenging period in their lives.

And now they can drink tea together, in peace, and happy.

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Rueful Courage Against Enormous Odds

stock utensils

 

“In the dim light the shape of her face seemed unaltered; for all her cooking she had remained thin.  Her smile was, as always, one of rueful courage against enormous odds.  Fred thought that what he had loved was her unhappiness, although it was a quality which made him feel uneasily inferior to her.  He had thought she knew of great cosmic causes for discontent of which he, in his mundane way, was cheerfully unaware.  This unhappiness, which she gave off like a rich and potent smell, had been, for the years, the decades he had known her, the secret of her sexual attraction.”

John Mortimer, Paradise Postponed

I have often pondered what draws some men to woefully damaged, neurotic women…and this quote made some sense of it to me.

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Gone, Baby, Gone-Two More Antique Shops Close

closed signIt’s January 2013 and two more charming small shops have closed their doors in Beaverton/Raleigh Hills, Oregon.  Robin & Wren Antiques & Gifts was a wonderful antique mall just a few blocks from my shop, Penelope’s Hope Chest.  They had a fabulous selection of vintage clothing and jewelry, as well as many booths filled with treasures.  I really enjoyed having them right down the street…we sent each other many customers.  They closed their doors December 1st, 2012 after several years of business.

Tea Thyme & Lavender Vintage Antiques & Tea House is the other shop closing their doors.  Their last day is January 31, 2013.  Claire, the charming french shopkeeper, had a wonderful little shop, chock full of vintage treasures and a vast collection of teas you could sip while you shopped.  She was open 4.5 years before she had to close her doors.  It’s a true shame.

I have had several customers ask me how I am doing…since it seems like so many little shops aren’t able to make it.  I answer honestly, and say that while we are holding our own, thanks to our strong, unique inventory and extremely reasonable prices, we had a rough Christmas season.  I am fortunate that I have really good online sales to back up my brick & mortar shop.  What I find extremely frustrating is to have customers express concern…and then leave without buying anything.  While I appreciate concern…it doesn’t pay the rent.

I found it very interesting this past Christmas season, in my pop-up shop Katie’s Christmas Cottage…that a friend and I opened for the month before Christmas in the empty storefront right next to my shop.  There were quite a few people who wandered in…looking for the paper shop that had closed a year and a half before.  One of them acted quite upset that the shop wasn’t there anymore.  Bottom line?  If you haven’t visited a shop in 18+ months, you didn’t support them and you have no right to be upset that they are gone.

Here’s my personal opinion on the whole thing.  People need to open their eyes and realize that thousands of small shops and restaurants are going away.  If this trend continues…soon there will only be big-box stores to shop in and national chain restaurants.  Is this what you want?  Are you willing to let this happen?  Think of a cool little shop or two in your town.  How often do you visit?  How often do you actually buy anything?  If you don’t visit at least 5 or 6 times a year, say every other month, and spend 20 bucks or more, you aren’t supporting that business.  It’s not enough to buy a $3 card every six months.  Think about it…how many $3 cards does a business need to sell to just pay their rent for one month?  I know I probably am not politically correct for being so upfront about this subject, but I am tired of more and more small businesses going away forever.  Small businesses are the backbone of our country and the money you spend in a small business mostly stays in the community, unlike the money you spend at a national chain.

Bottom Line?  Actions speak louder than words.  Please support the small shops you care about….or risk having them close their doors too.

Update June 2013:  Just got the news two days ago that yet another shop is closing its doors forever.  Union Block Marketplace in Newberg, Oregon.  It was a wonderful mix of antique mall and gift shop and it too wasn’t able to make it.  Another empty storefront soon on the main street in Newberg.

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Elegance is the art of being astonishing without creating astonishment

young-jean-cocteau

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Boys Think Girls Are Like Books

marilyn reading

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So Far We May Be Willing To Go

helen macinnes“For there were limits around our minds which sometimes we chose to set, not because we could not see but because we preferred not to see.  So far we may be willing to go: we know what to expect.  But no further; for beyond that boundary we are afraid.  Our experience makes cowards of us; we want its’ security even if it limits us.  We know that many who strike out beyond this boundary are lost.  But not all.  Some manage it.  And when we envy them, we forget the risks they took.  We think their boundaries have always been so broad and limitless.  We forget they took the effort of pushing them outwards.  Effort and risk.  Instead we talk of luck…”

-Helen MacInnes, Friends and Lovers

For Milt-  a New Year thought

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21 Things I Believe

21 things I believe

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30 Years Later-The life & Death of Brad Koehly

Today marks the 30th Anniversary of the death of someone I loved very dearly. His name was Brad Koehly and we were both 21, madly in love, and students at Chico State University, California.  On this date in 1982, he was riding his bike home after classes, down a country highway, when a truck swerved onto the shoulder and hit him.  He was taken off life support 20 hours later.

Brad was funny and sweet and just cocky enough to be endearing.  He had a smile that would light up a room.  He was an athlete-he loved to run and had a tall slim build with just gorgeous legs.  He was extremely intelligent and was majoring in computer programming-trying to be in the 1st wave of computer technology.  He was extremely passionate about it, as well as everything else he did.

I was Brad’s first serious girlfriend and he had planned to give me a ring for Christmas.  His family gave it to me after his death.  Was he planning to ask me to marry him?  Or was it a promise ring?  We’ll never know for sure.  It’s all the unknowns that haunt-what kind of man would he have become?  What would he have done with his life?  Would he be working at Intel or Microsoft or would he have built his own company or invented something wonderful?  Would we have made it as a couple?  Would he have had children?

His death ended up being a defining point in my life.  When you are forced to face such a painful loss at an early age it redefines your life in so many ways.  When you know that a big part of life is LOSS–you can react in one of two ways.  You can choose to hide from love and live in fear of getting hurt.  There was a period in my life where I only dated men I knew I wouldn’t fall in love with, so they were safe.  Over the years I have met quite a few men who suffer from this–they keep a huge wall up around their emotions–for fear of letting someone in who could hurt them, and they don’t let themselves feel too much.  They want love and they fear love.

The second way to live is reflected in one of my favorite quotes from one of the best movies out there–Strictly Ballroom.

A LIFE LIVED IN FEAR IS A LIFE HALF LIVED.

I figured out that I had to face my fears  so that I could allow love in my life and I have lived that way ever since.  I have several friends who have lost their husbands–the true loves of their lives–and each one will tell you it’s worth it, the agonizing pain over their loss is well worth the love and joy they had with their wonderful husbands.

When you know the abyss is there–when you know that inevitably you will lose people you love–it adds a certain poignant richness to life.  A depth and clarity to everyday life.  You appreciate small moments and work to create them.  You express your love well and often.  You forgive easier and you try to find much joy and laughter even when life gets challenging.

Brad’s death affected my family deeply, as well.  We were not a demonstrative family, although we always knew we were loved.  The evening of his death I called each of my three brothers and told them that I loved them.  I had never told any of them this before.  And from that day forward, we reached out to each other and we are a much closer family as a result.  We hug, tell each other we love each other, and work to stay in touch.  It’s been a wonderful gift.

Brad–on this 30th anniversary, I want to thank you for your many wonderful gifts and for your love.  You touched many lives in your 21 short years–and it’s a lesson all of us…about HOW MANY LIVES WE TOUCH, as well.

With love and gratitude,

Lynette

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It Had Been Said That She Was A Little Off Her Head

Jurij Moskvitin (middle) acompaning Karen Blix...

Jurij Moskvitin (middle) acompaning Karen Blixen/Isak Dinesen (right) meeting composer Igor Stravinskij (left) at the City Hall of Copenhagen (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

“It had been said that she was a little off her head. Still, to the people who knew her well, it sometimes seemed open to doubt whether she was mad by her own choice, or from some caprice of hers, for she was a capricious woman.  Neither had she always been mad.  She had even been a woman of great sense, who studied philosophy, and held human passions in scorn.  If Miss Malin had now been given the choice of returning to her former reasonable state, and had been capable of realizing the meaning of the offer, she might have declined it on the ground that you have in reality more fun out of life when a little off your head.”

-Isak Dinesen, Seven Gothic Tales, 1934

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1964 Baseball Schedule

In honor of my beloved Giants and their incredible win at the 2012 World Series here is this fun vintage booklet that was tucked inside one of my vintage books.  A handout from the National Distillers Products Company and it was inside an old book about Mark Twain.  Very appropriate, I thought.

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