Losing Things, Finding Things
As we grow older, we lose something almost every day.
It starts with the little things. Our glasses disappear. The
keys are nowhere to be found. We forget an appointment. We leave the laundry in
the washer overnight or can't remember whether we put it in the dryer. We walk
into a room and wonder why we went there in the first place.
It can be frustrating, even amusing. We joke about it
because, most of the time, we eventually find what we lost. The glasses were on
our head all along. The keys were in yesterday's jacket. If we never find them,
we buy another pair or discover we didn't really need the missing item after
all. Life compensates. We adapt. Somehow, we get around the loss.
The small losses teach us an important lesson: life has a
remarkable ability to restore its balance.
Then, as the years pass, the losses become much larger.
We lose friends. We lose brothers and sisters. We lose
husbands and wives. We lose neighbors, classmates, and companions. Every year
the list grows longer. Illness and death become unwelcome but familiar
visitors. Unlike misplaced glasses, these are losses that cannot be undone.
Or can they?
A person dies, but something unexpected happens. A memory,
long buried, suddenly surfaces. You remember the way your father laughed at his
own jokes. You hear your mother's voice telling you something you did not
appreciate until decades later. You recall a friend's kindness on an ordinary
afternoon that seemed insignificant at the time but now means everything.
The person is gone, but the memory is alive.
In fact, death often uncovers memories that had been hidden
beneath the routines of daily life. It is almost as though the mind, faced with
unbearable absence, searches through its vast library and brings forward
exactly what we need. Not every memory, just the right one. A smile. A phrase.
A habit. A lesson. A moment of grace.
We discover that we have not lost everything.
The memories become companions. They comfort us. They remind
us who we are, because so much of who we are was shaped by those who walked
beside us. Their influence survives in our choices, our values, our humor, our
compassion, and even in the stories we tell.
Perhaps that is why grief and gratitude often arrive
together. We grieve because someone is gone. We are grateful because they were
here at all.
As we age, life becomes a continual exchange. We lose the
tangible and discover the intangible. We lose possessions but gain perspective.
We lose people but find memories we had forgotten we possessed. We lose
certainty but gain appreciation.
Loss, then, is not always the end of something. Sometimes it
is the beginning of remembering.
I have come to believe that every loss asks us to find
something in return. Sometimes it is a replacement. Sometimes it is resilience.
And sometimes it is a precious memory that had been waiting patiently to be
found.
That does not erase the pain of loss. Nothing can.
But it reminds us that love leaves traces. The people who
mattered most are never reduced to a name on a gravestone. They continue to
live in the stories we remember, the lessons we carry, and the quiet moments
when, without warning, they return to us.
Perhaps that is one of the hidden gifts of growing old.
We spend our later years losing many things. Yet, if we pay
attention, we also spend them finding what matters most.
William James Spriggs