Wind Chimes

  • LenH
    Wisconsin
    Posts: 2385
    #1358110

    I purchased two nice wind chimes this spring for the deck. Neither my wife nor daughter was a fan of them. The first two weeks they were out there my daughter went out in the middle of the night and took them down because she couldn’t sleep with them going.

    I visit my elderly mother on Wednesdays every week. I told her about the dilemma. She volunteered to take both of them off my hands. I took both of them to her yesterday.

    We talked for a while and I learned from her that my father loved wind chimes. I didn’t know this fact. It didn’t surprise me because my dad was a nature guy and he considered wind chimes an extension of the outdoors.

    Mom picked the one she liked and told me the other one my dad would like and I should take them to him. I thought this was an odd request because he had passed away in 1967. She told me there was a metal stand with a hook on the grave and the wind chimes would look and sound beautiful there.

    Through the years I have visited his grave typically a couple days before Memorial Day. My dad has a purple lilac bush on his grave and it was in full bloom. It was his request to have such a bush on his grave.

    My wife and I put the wind chime up last night. It began to sound immediately. There was no wind. It really freaked me out. Ever since I have been little it has freaked me out to visit my dad’s grave. Something about seeing your own name on a grave stone has always bothered me. I am a junior.

    We stood there and listened to the chimes toll and smelled the lilacs for quite a while. My mind was racing. I have never been comfortable being in the cemetery ever. The sound and smell made me linger there and think.

    I dropped off my wife at her mother’s and went to the dam in Gays Mills to fish. I stood there a while before I fished and pondered. Many a day in my youth I had sat on the banks of the Kickapoo River and fished with my father. I was the most happy as a kid when I was out in nature with my dad.

    The cemetery was about two miles away but I swear I could hear those wind chimes singing. It finally came to me why I am so driven to fish. I wanted to be with my dad. He was taken from me when I was 10 years old.

    Being on stream was like being with him. Every change of the wind was like he was speaking to me. I could see his smile as I landed a big trout or pike. He never really died. He is part of the outdoors.

    This was the real reason I escaped in to the outdoors every chance I could throughout my life. His body was at the cemetery but his spirit was with me on stream and he had never left.

    Tom Sawvell
    Inactive
    Posts: 9559
    #1411850

    What a tribute Len.

    This story really makes a person think. We are a lot alike except I have never been uncomfortable in a cemetery and in fact find great peace there.

    Wind chimes….we have them on every side of our house.

    FlambeauVista
    Park Falls, WI
    Posts: 264
    #1411867

    Nice. Thank you for sharing this.

    Brian Klawitter
    Keymaster
    Minnesota/Wisconsin Mississippi River
    Posts: 59992
    #1411870

    Quote:


    His body was at the cemetery but his spirit was with me on stream and he had never left.


    My boat holds 3, but there’s always 4 in it.

    Nice one Len.

    690reece
    Hutchinson,Minnesota
    Posts: 351
    #1411881

    Thank You for sharing!

    LimpFish
    Lino Lakes, Minnesota
    Posts: 232
    #1411935

    Len,

    Thanks for sharing…one of the coolest reads I’ve seen in a long time Your story hits home with me on a couple of levels…

    About 10 years ago or so, the kids got my wife a wind chime for Mother’s Day and said they wanted her to think of them every time she heard it. At the time, we weren’t all that far removed from our oldest being a toddler and our twins when they were infants. The first couple of nights it was really windy and kept us both awake, to which my wife replied “that sounds about right…keeping us up all night” (unlike the oldest that slept through the night right from the get go, it took 21 months before BOTH twins completely slept through the night That said, we gave it a few more nights, got used to it and I’m happy to say it’s still hanging there.

    My first exposure to cemeteries came when I suddenly lost my dad when he was 46. When trying decide where specifically we should lay him to rest, we got our sign on a bitterly cold day in February, after aimlessly walking around a snow covered cemetery, when a rooster pheasant decided to make his voice heard. Right then, we knew that was the spot. For that first month or so, the cemetery seemed just like I would have expected…cold and uninviting. Then a couple of events changed that…

    First, winter gave way to spring and I went to visit on a warm sunny day, only to find the apple tree in full bloom and it, along with the neighboring spruce tree teaming with birds singing away. Among them, I heard what I’m pretty sure was that same rooster speak his voice one more time as if to say “this is why you were supposed to pick this spot”. To this day and among my countless visits over the last 26 years, I’ve never heard him again.

    A month or two later, I had a totally different experience. Our last “big” fishing trip together was right before going back to college the previous fall to Sturgeon Bay in Door County, in which we pounded the magnum salmon. Dad decided to commemorate the trip by getting the biggest one mounted. Sadly, he never got to see it before it was finished. When I picked up the fish from the taxidermist on my way to work that evening, I decided I would head to the cemetery that after I got off work. A pretty good thunderstorm rolled in about the time I got there, but I so wanted him to see his fish, I sat graveside in the thunder & lightning and the pouring rain. After the storm had passed and the rain finally stopped, I finally got the fish out of the car and sat there to show him his trophy, reflect on that trip and the countless trips before that. Eventually, it starting breaking daylight, the birds started singing and the clouds gave way to a beautiful sunrise. Ever since then, I’ve come to find the cemetery a very peaceful place to be. And oh yeah, lots of wind chimes there to help those souls before us keep their memories alive.

    Thanks again for sharing, let us remember those loved ones who have gone before us and be especially grateful to those who gave the ultimate sacrifice, as we approach Memorial Day

    ><(((>

    DIRTBALL2
    WARROAD,MN.USA
    Posts: 99
    #1412036

    LimpFish, You can tell a story almost as well as Len can! Thank you for sharing your’s! DIRTBALL2

    mxskeeter
    SW Wisconsin
    Posts: 3782
    #1412303

    Those were 2 great reads Len & Limpfish. My hat is off to you both. My wife and I have wind chimes at both parents graves that we received at their funeral services.

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