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No, I wanted something more. I asked for, and was sent, one of his ukeleles.
He'd once interviewed Jake Shimabukuro, and written a story on ukuleles for Islands magazine. It stuck with me because he had come away so amazed by Shimabukuro's skill.
Edward wrote a lot of stories about travel keeping him going in his last years. It's hard for me to NOT travel now, and a certain well-known comic book artist who happens to be one of my supervisors had a good laugh about this just yesterday--he knows too well it's hard for me to go to a desk every day instead of seeking out a curious adventure. He followed along on the original MariesWorldTour, the 2001 edition. (Of course, going to work in Los Angeles is its own adventure.)
So I have a ukelele now, one built by Edward's brother, Don, who is also in the Islands article. And oddly, to me, this uke doesn't represent music. It doesn't even represent travel, or my need to create mini-adventures when I can't tackle the whole world.
It represents this: Untarnished amazement.
If Edward could be blown away by someone's skill on a ukulele, that's a lesson.
It's okay to be amazed once in a while.
2 comments:
Marie,
I'm glad to see one of Ed's ukuleles in good hands. Ed left me his postcards:
http://www.dees-stribling.com/2016/07/27/the-postcard-bequest/
(I also wrote about Ed on July 25 and 26.)
Regards,
Dees Stribling
Dees, he spoke of you often. Lovely pieces.
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