By Robin Schauffler
Nesting in damp beach sand, it’s a perfect round black stone, smooth and shining—a treasure. Once a jagged, broken chunk of black basalt, then polished for decades or centuries by sand and wind and sea.
I pick it from the beach, caress it with my thumb. Crumbs of sand fall away. My mother will love this stone. It has that almost-soft feel, so delicate on the fingers. The right size, smaller than a cupped palm. She’ll keep it in the woven basket on the front porch, carefully placed among other treasures; or on the low shelf in the living room where she displays pretty finds from the natural world—shells, feathers, pebbles, little pinecones. We have brought her gifts from beaches and forests all over the country, the world—from Maine and Minnesota, from India and Australia and Chile. But these are her favorites—the deep basalts of the Pacific Northwest, perfectly honed into shimmering velvet black.
All of this flashes through me as the stone lies cool in my hand, before I remember: she’s been gone two years, almost to the day. I will never bring her another smooth black stone.
I slip the stone back to its nest in the sand, to be worn and polished again.
Robin Schauffler is a writer, a watercolor artist, a retired teacher, a collector of rocks, and a lover of the outdoors, based in Portland, Oregon. She is on the board of Street Books, a bicycle-powered mobile library serving people living outside. In 1997 she and her husband moved to Morelia, Michoacán, Mexico, where they lived and worked for three years. She has recently completed a collection of essays reflecting on that time in Mexico, and several have been published. Her work has appeared in Street Roots, Hawaii Pacific Review, Ocotillo Review, The Fourth River, Sky Island Journal, Silk Road Review, About Place, and others—including in Beautiful Things, in 2015.
Image by Arina Krasnikova courtesy of Pexels
Well done.
Beautiful.
Thanks, Robin! Loved reading this. Compelling way to remember Verna.
Almost greater than the loss of a person significant to one’s life history i- a singular event no matter how often repeated as I get older- is the opportunity to reminisce.
A stone, a piece of coral, a plant that bloomed again is an aide to memory and reminiscing with out a conversation..
Lovely, poetic, piece of prose. Thank you.
A loving tribute.
So perfect and smooth, these words Robin. With my mother gone so recently they speak to me, as they must to you. All of us, even her 4 year-old great granddaughter will say when a treasure, a moment, a surprise is observed, “Joanie would love this.” You have captured that shared experience perfectly.
Your fearless eye sees more clearly. That stone will be battered and polished again for your mother, then for you, then….
really beautiful. Moving. I loved the bittersweet surprise at the end. Honoring your love.
Lovely memories that connect us to our histories. Many years after my dear mom died I found the sea shell I knew she’d left for me on her beach in Florida. It now lives among the many shells I’ve collected over the years, all reminding me of beautiful beach walls with her. Thanks for this precious reminder, Robyn.
Every description was so vivid, evoking memories or sensations. I could feel that stone; I was on that beach. Then I visualized the baskets of treasures and felt the warmth of knowing my mother would enjoy the newest one just as yours would. Then the lump in my throat for you and for me with the punch at the end.
Poignant and lovely, especially knowing the family
Vivid and sensual imagery! I too can rub the stone with my thumb and feel the sand slip away. Like basalt to sand, all things transform through time and are born and born again like waves in the sea. Thank you for this poignant reminder.
It reminds me of Verna’s buoyant expression and her love of the outdoors.
This is a beautiful and loving reflection, Robin. Beautiful seeing of the world and your Mother with a loving eye. Thank you! I think there is a sisterhood of rock collecting women. Please let me know next time your words are available.
I love it!
My heartfelt thanks and gratitude to everyone who posted one of these lovely comments.
Thank you, Robin. I am struck by the emotion I feel after reading this piece. The sense of loss with the attachment of a warm smile thinking of your mom’s collection of “pretty finds” feels personal and yet global. How lovely that you have been able to achieve that with such few words…..
This was really moving and beautiful, thank you Robin.
The way the writer (Robin) describes finding the smooth black stone on the beach is so cool. It’s like a hidden treasure! But then, they remember their mom, who loved collecting stones like this. It’s sad because their mom isn’t around anymore to enjoy it.