May 2, 2001    Saratoga, California  Since 1955

Saratoga News
Classifieds Advertising Archives Search About us
Saratoga Style









    Family Daze

    Be careful about what you leave in a borrowed book

    By Debbie Farmer

    Call me strange, but have you ever noticed that when people are suddenly interrupted in the middle of reading a library book, they'll use almost anything as a bookmark to avoid turning down the page? Of course, we all do it at one time or another, but I've noticed that mothers of young children, like me, are particularly good at this. I've marked my place with such things as old gum wrappers and fast food napkins. Once I even used a piece of dental floss that I found in the bottom of my purse.

    But this column isn't really about bookmarks. It's about collections. I've never fully understood what motivated people to have collections. Oh, I don't mean collections of priceless art or antiques. I mean collections of things such as, say, miniature shot glasses and ceramic cows.

    Now, before you start yelling and writing letters, I must admit some of my favorite people are collectors. For example, my friend Cherry is a young, single, urban professional with a good day job. There is absolutely no way of knowing by her youthful, hip exterior that she has more than five dozen sets of salt and pepper shakers stored in her tiny, one-bedroom apartment. But, what's even more puzzling is that my father-in-law--an affluent, rational man who retired from a position of authority in the city government--has a secret collection of 37 manual cherry pitters.

    Of course, there's nothing really harmful in this, but I just don't understand why people would want to keep track of all these things when I have enough trouble keeping track of four matching dinner plates.

    That said, it came as no surprise to me that, when my family visited the county fair this year, my husband headed straight toward the Exposition building that housed, you guessed it, cases and cases of people's collections.

    For what seemed like a zillion hours, possibly more, he stared at various assortments of candy dishes, wooden figurines, terra cotta lighthouses, science fiction magazines and toothpicks with flags of different countries pasted on the ends.

    He was having the time of his life, while I was trying to nudge him toward the exit door before my teeth fell asleep. I didn't understand how he could be interested in looking at such old junk.

    Just as we were leaving, however, I glanced into the last display case containing a hodgepodge of old papers. The label along the top said, "A collection of items used as bookmarks in library books." I was shocked, I tell you. Shocked.

    There was a grocery bill from 1945 that came to a total of $1.50, directions for the milk man, an old traffic ticket, a straw wrapper, a tongue depressor with a doctor's phone number stamped on it, a yellowed newspaper article about a New York City débutante in 1937, several old photographs, a postcard from Paris and a crayoned note that said "I LOVE YOU MOMMY" with a backwards "L."

    I mean, you've got to respect a collection like that.

    "Come on," my husband said, "Let's go."

    "OK, but I just can't believe that people left all of these important papers in library books," I said as I scanned the case for my daughter's preschool diploma that had, come to think of it, mysteriously disappeared around the same time I was reading Gone With the Wind.

    I'm sure there's a message in here somewhere. Perhaps it's that collections are more than just arbitrary junk. Or, perhaps, it's that collecting is a natural way for us to pass on our history. Or it's "do not use a borrowed book as a catch-all drawer."


    Debbie Farmer is the author of Life in the Fast-Food Lane: Surviving the Chaos of Parenting. Questions or comments? Email her at paradigmnews@familydaze.com.



Cover Story
Local schools make greater efforts to stem the tide of campus violence

News
News Briefs

Saratoga will receive Proposition 12 funding for parks and wildlife

Chez Scherf Pony Farm thrives despite encroaching hillside developments

Tempers rise as opposing sides debate over local fire service

Fire commissioner Henry Clarke resigns

Damaged sidewalk on Big Basin Way repaired

Sheriff's Report

Letters & Opinions
Letters

Valley Homes
The Real Deal

Inspection should precede home purchase

Home sale listings

Saratoga Style
Village Briefs

West Valley College hosts the Fashion Design and Apparel Technology Program's annual spring fashion show

The National Charity League honors local teenage girls for their volunteer work

Family Daze

Engagements

Business
Teri Dahlbeck named one of 50 top-achieving women of the year in 'Feminine Fortunes' magazine

Columns
Point of View

Saratoga Sampler

Gardening
The Garden Conservancy's Open Days tours show off Bay Area landscapes and home gardens

Seniors
Seniors can experience an emotional loss when they no longer are able to drive

Dining
The Wine Cellar re-opens offering some old favorites and new specialties

Sports

Sports Briefs

High school baseball

High school track & field

Photo: Cupertino Educational Endowment Foundation Golf Tournament

Calendar
Lectures, readings, auditions, sports & recreation,announcements, theater & arts, kids' stuff, clubs, public meetings...

Feedback
Something to say?


Copyright © SVCN, Inc. Maintained by Boulevards New Media.