Lockdown Spoon

Today is both the Feast of the Conversion of Saint Paul, and the thirteenth anniversary of the day I wed my beautiful bride. It is, as I have said before, a “moment when everything changed, celebrated on a day when everything changed”. For reasons too long to go into here, thirteen has always been our “lucky number”, so it’s quite the auspicious day!

Roaring!

Francine and I have a funny tradition. When I proposed to her, I distracted her for a moment by the gift of a wooden Welsh love spoon. While she was oohing over it, I fell to one knee and took out the ring.

On our wedding day in 2008, I gave her another. Each anniversary since then, I’ve done the same. The wall is starting to fill up!

The Walls of Spoons, 2021

They are small tokens of a great love. In the Welsh tradition, the various carvings have different meanings. In addition, there are the meanings which we ourselves give them.

That spoon in the photo with the two spoon-y bits is the one I gave her when I proposed – two becoming one. The funny crooked one to its right was our wedding spoon. We’re both a little twisty!

This year’s spoon has a story. Both of my long-time readers may remember that I lost last year’s spoon and had to purchase a new one. The 2020 spoon (with our names engraved) is third from the right on the photo above. Well, once our COVID lockdown began, I was puttering around the house one day and discovered that the missing spoon had fallen into my filing cabinet somehow, and was underneath the bottom drawer.

The 13th Anniversary / Lockdown Spoon

So I fished it out, and now it’s our 2021 13th anniversary spoon. Notice the lock. While traditionally the meaning behind this is a sort of “key to my heart” kind of thing, it turns out to be a particularly delightful commemoration of the lockdown. The Lord certainly has a sense of humour.

These spoons are just one example of physical commemorations given on a chronological commemoration. So that in times both difficult and beautiful, we can look up at the wall and remember what it’s all about.

And when you think about it, this is also why we give gifts at Christmas. It’s why children still put their shoes (or socks!) out for Saint Nicholas.

In fact, this is why we celebrate feasts of the Lord and of the saints at all.

It’s the reason we have icons and statues as well. To remember. To be reminded, for instance, that on this day nearly two thousand years ago, the Pharisee enforcer Saul was driven to the ground by the voice of the Lord, to arise (in time) as the Apostle Saint Paul.

And having been reminded, to celebrate that person or that event, because these people are our family – the Communion of Saints – and these events are part of our family history and tradition.

The Conversion of Saint Paul by Blessed Fra Angelico, c. 1430
The Conversion of Saint Paul by Blessed Fra Angelico, c. 1430

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