Taking Things Seriously III
When I was seven I lived next door to an exotic old woman and she gave me this Santa. In hindsight, the woman was old and probably a cardiologist — only exotic in the sense that she was very educated and lived next door to us, the unruly Catholics with seven kids. One year she invited the bunch of us over for a little Christmas party, which seemed incredibly fancy to me. There was a long table with a white tablecloth, and cookies that were unlike any I’d ever had, flat with a sickening licorice taste.
After the party the woman gave me and my brother identical Santas, except that mine had a gimpy leg and it wobbled, which seemed right at the time because I saw myself as a victim.
This short essay is excerpted from Taking Things Seriously: 75 Objects with Unexpected Significance, a book by Joshua Glenn and Carol Hayes in which they and other writers discuss the importance of objects in their lives. This is the third essay in a series to appear on Design Observer.
Observed
View all
Observed
By Greg Klee
Related Posts
Business
Kim Devall|Essays
The most disruptive thing a brand can do is be human
AI Observer
Lee Moreau|Critique
The Wizards of AI are sad and lonely men
Business
Louisa Eunice|Essays
The afterlife of souvenirs: what survives between culture and commerce?
Architecture
Bruce Miller|Essays
A haunting on the prairie
Related Posts
Business
Kim Devall|Essays
The most disruptive thing a brand can do is be human
AI Observer
Lee Moreau|Critique
The Wizards of AI are sad and lonely men
Business
Louisa Eunice|Essays
The afterlife of souvenirs: what survives between culture and commerce?
Architecture
Bruce Miller|Essays