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Thursday, 16 August 2012

On Razor-Blade Millionaires and the Moon on a Chain

 
I am listening to Gustave Flaubert’s A Sentimental Education on my iPod as I walk. It’s 15 hours, so I should be done in a fortnight.

It opens with a steamboat journey from Paris:

The hill on the right bank of the Seine dropped out of sight, and another one loomed closer on the opposite side.

This hill was topped by trees dotted between bungalows with hipped roofs. They had sloping gardens separated by newly built walls, iron gates, lawns, greenhouses, and puts of geraniums set at regular intervals on terraces with parapets to lean on and enjoy the view.

As they caught glimpses of these small country villas, so charming and peaceful, more than one of the passengers thought longingly of owning one, and living out the rest of his days up there, with a nice billiard-room, their own motor launch, a wife, or some such dream.”
* * *

Have you ever dreamed such a dream? I sure have. We have been to Scandinavia for the last three summers—Norway first, then Sweden, then Denmark.

Scandinavians take summer very seriously, because it is so brief. Whenever there is a lake or a river or a fjord, you see these red-roofed houses, with a canoe tied to the mooring pad.

Roy and I look at each other, and we each know we are thinking, “I’d like a little summer house on a large lake, or by the ocean, or by a mountain tarn, and a little canoe to mess about in.”
* * *

When Roy retired early, two summers ago, we got some counselling so two intense people living together 24/7 would not provoke each other to distraction.


One issue which came up was that now that my gifted husband was home, I wanted him to do, well, simply everything.

I had a dream of living near a stream. “Roy, please could you get a water pump, and rocks and concrete, and construct a waterfall,  which will lead to a stream which will go around the garden.” Our garden is 1.5 acre, so this was no small task.

But no, I wasn’t joking, and I bought a whole pile of books which showed how one could construct an artificial waterfall and stream.

Roy got very stressed. He had his own list of Must-Dos, and Would-Love-To-Dos, and could not give me a date for when construction would commence on my waterfall and stream.

I got frustrated. I sulked. I felt a bit outraged. Roy had endless free hours. Why was he saying No, to this small matter of a waterfall and stream which he wanted as much as I?

So I brought up his unreasonableness with the counsellor.
* * *

In reply, he told us two stories, which I thought were very foolish, and at which I did not smile.

But I often think of them, and so, I guess, they were not that foolish after all. More like koan.
* * *

One was a story of man who wanted to be a millionaire. But alas, he realised that he lacked the intelligence, talent, education, drive and resources to become one.

So he thought, “Well, what do millionaires have that I might be able to afford?”

And he thought, “Ah, I bet a millionaire could afford to change his razor blade every day.”

And he resolved, “Well, I realize I am never going to be a millionaire, but I can afford a new razor blade every day. So I am going to be a razor-blade millionaire.”

The moral, I suppose, is that if you cannot have your dream, find a fragment of your dream, and rejoice in and relish that.
             * * *

Story Two. There was a spoiled princess, and her father, the King says, “Give her whatever she asks, or I will cut off your heads.”

And the princess said, “I want the moon.”

And the terrified courtiers said, “Oh no. What should we do? We will lose our heads.”

And one said, “Your Royal Highness, give us a week, and we will get you the moon.”

The next week, it was the new moon. “Your Royal Highness, we have captured the moon. Here it is.” And they gave her a chain, with a moon pendant, which she wore very happily.

But at the time of the gibbous moon, she walked in her garden, and the courtiers said, “Oh no, she will see the moon, and we will lose our heads.”

And a trouble-causing courtier said, “Oh, your little Highness, what is that in the sky? Isn’t that the moon?”

And holding up her pendant, she said, “Silly! That isn’t the moon. See, the moon is round my neck.”

And the moral of that was, I suppose, if you can’t give your princess the moon, give her other things to make her happy. Distract her. Once she’s happy with the moon around her neck, that’s it.

Yeah, unfeminist! Shouldn’t have shared it. Though, of course, it cuts both ways! Be happy with what you can have, the moon around your neck, and admire the real thing peacefully.

(A blog reader pointed out that the story is Many Moons by James Thurber. Read it, see how well he writes--the luscious magical detail, the incantatory quality, the quiet humour.)
                       * * *

The homes I saw on the Bosphorus Cruise we went on in April, winding between Europe and Asia, beach homes, mountain homes, lake houses. I sometimes want these for the dream or illusion of peace they represent.

But heck, two houses to be furnished, kitted out, made comfortable, and kept clean. One is time-consuming enough.

So, while I have not totally given up the dream of the beach house, I have put on a very distant back-burner. I can be perfectly happy without it, which is, of course, the most persuasive reason not to save up to buy it.

One of the many brilliant sentences from Richard Foster’s brilliant book   Celebration of Discipline which have lingered with me is this, We don’t need to possess things to enjoy them.

And now, when material temptation assails, I decide instead to be a razor-blade millionaire, revelling in the sea, and mountains and lakes from the large picture windows of my camper van, and renting the occasional idyllic cottage for a week, wearing the moon on a chain, being contented with all the goodness life offers me, sharp razor-blades, peace around my neck, and eternity in my heart!


6 comments:

  1. Ah, yes, content in all things is the secret to life. My mother had that in her last four years when she was down to one room. She enjoyed her TV, winning us gifts from bingo, and the visitors that graced her door. That was a true blessing.

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  2. The original moon story is Many Moons by James Thurber, Caldecott winner, rather more nuanced than this retelling (even if the original has some suspect illustrations), and worth a read.

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  3. Ah, thank you, Marcy. What a beautiful story and so well written. I love his luscious, evocative detail, his quiet humour, the incantatory, magical quality to the story. Fab.

    Still don't get the point though. I think I missed the point of half the counsellor's stories. That was his main method of counselling--telling stories!

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  4. You found and read it already?!!

    The point? I think it's listening -- and going with instead of against. The jester is the hero.

    It still has some aspects of frothy preciousness (surfeit of raspberry tarts? give her whatever she asks for and she will be well?!) common to some older children's books -- Peter Pan, Oz, even Pooh.

    But I love the jester.

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  5. Marcy, exactly. So the razor-blade was for me, and the moon for Roy.

    Interestingly, for a writer, I am quite plain-spoken, and this counsellors way of telling stories drove me nuts. But he is very well-known here, and i have a friend who was rapidly changed and delivered from guilt by a story he told her. Interesting way of counselling!!

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  6. Being a writer doesn't mean you like flowery and poetic language all the time or even at all. In certain moods or situations I much prefer straightforward, plain speaking.

    It would take a special kind of counselor to make a pointed didactic story-telling not rub me the wrong way.

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