by Laura Crum
I’ve
discovered something. Most of you may already know it. The greatest luxury in
the world is wanting what you’ve got.
I
spent a lot of my life wanting things—like most people, I guess. I wanted a
certain man, or a certain horse, or to compete at a certain event and do well,
or to own a horse property, or to be a published author, or have a certain rose
in my garden, or to be thinner, or to have a child. Things like that. Big
things and little things—I wanted things. Some of these things that I wanted, I
got. Most of them, actually.
There
came a point where I was married to a man I loved and we had a child and a
horse property and a lovely garden full of roses. I was a published author—I
had a few horses that I was very fond of. And I was happy.
Now
I could have found more things to want. A newer truck, a better horse, a bigger
house, to be a famous author and make more money—once again, to be thinner. But
somehow I knew that those things were pointless. And I was happy. I truly was.
For many, many years.
When
my much-loved husband died I was very sad. I still am very sad a lot of the
time. And I accept this sadness; I don’t fight it. But Andy has given me so
many signs that he is still with me that I am starting to trust in that. He
also arranged that I would have plenty of money (by my standards, anyway—it
wouldn’t be much money by a wealthy person’s standards). And at one point, I
wondered—what did I want to do with that money?
Many
of my friends thought I should buy a new car. I had to think about it. We have
a thirteen year old Ford diesel truck (the old Power Stroke engine) with one
hundred thousand miles on it and a thirty year old Porsche. Neither qualified
as a “reliable” vehicle according to some of the friends. Also, they knew I
could afford a new car. Why not? And this was the beginning of my recent
pondering along the lines of what do I want.
Because
after a bit of thought I realized that I did not want a new car or truck. There
are practical reasons for this. The particular sort of diesel truck that I have
has gone over three hundred thousand miles reliably for other friends who owned
the same model. The Porsche can probably run for the rest of my life if I take
care of it. Repairing and caring for these two solid, made-to-last vehicles
makes much financial sense, compared to dumping a bunch of money on a
not-made-to-last new car or truck. Not to mention the registration and
insurance on these two older vehicles is minuscule compared to what it would be
for a new car. But there’s more to it than that.
I
spent several months looking at cars and trucks going down the road, trying to
decide what ones I might like to have. I gave myself mental permission to
choose any car or truck. I looked at the practical vehicles that friends had
recommended and at the cute ones (like brand new Mini-Coopers). I looked at new
pickups. After awhile I began to notice something. The cars and trucks I was
drawn to were, guess what? Older Porsche Carreras and biggish Ford diesel
pickups—exactly the vehicles I already owned. I liked them better than anything
else that I saw. And it dawned on me that maybe I wanted the thing that I had.
Then
there was the “sentimental” factor. Our truck and the little red car had
carried my family on many, many adventures. Andy drove them both many hundreds
of times. They had been reliable; they were part of our lives. Andy and I had
meant to keep these vehicles and repair them as needed. We hadn’t meant to
replace them. And it came to me that I wanted to stay on our path.
So
I had both the car and the truck cleaned up and sorted out, and I firmly
resisted encouragement from friends to buy a newer “more reliable” vehicle.
Having discovered how I felt about this, I began to apply the same sort of
thinking to the rest of my life, and the results were interesting.
Of
course, the main thing that I wanted—to have Andy back in his physical form—no
money could buy. But I began to become open to the possibility that we could go
on together, just in a new way. And as I opened up to this the signs and
messages and dreams came more often and more clearly. My life, though still
filled with sadness, has become more magical in ways I never could have
imagined. I am beginning to grow in trust—slowly. Part of this has been based
on realizing that I want exactly the life I have—the same life I have had here
for many years with my family. The life that we still have together.
Some
people suggested I take my son on a trip. Neither my son nor I seemed too
motivated to do this, but I gave it some thought. I remembered all the lovely
places in the world I had been and the places where I thought I might like to
go. And then I looked at my two cozy little houses covered with rambling roses,
and the small pond and the veggie garden and greenhouse, with the barn and
horse corrals down the hill. All surrounded by the wild California woods
without a house visible from my porches—only that big blue California coastal
sky and the distant ridgeline. The Monterey Bay is ten minutes from my front
door and I know a beach that is almost always empty of people. I tried to think
of somewhere that I would like to go visit, but the thought of motels with
not-linen sheets washed by indifferent maids (let alone bedspreads that they
might not have washed at all) rather paled in comparison to my own very
comfortable bed in my bedroom filled with beautiful things that I love. Views
of pretty beaches were accompanied by thoughts of the people that would be
thronging them. Any sort of travel would involve busy highways, possibly hectic
airports and crowded planes, almost certainly cities…ack! I don’t like busy
highways or cities at all. And I hate airports. I realized that once again I
wanted the thing that I had. There was nowhere that I wanted to be more than
this place where I live.
The
same thinking has helped me to see that there really isn’t anything I want
other than to tend my little life here with love—and I have enough means to do
this tending. I can repair and maintain our home here, and replace what wears
out. I can buy an occasional embroidered blouse if I want, or a mocha at the
coffee shop, or golf lessons for my son. I can afford the vet bills that come
along…etc. This makes me happy—as happy as I can be right now. I am so grateful
to Andy for doing this for us. Also grateful that I have come to this
particular realization, which gives me some peace. And thus not wanting things
has come to seem the greatest gift I could have been given at this point in my
life.