My elderly neighbor, Mr. Dalen, once asked me to pick up a few of those old-fashioned plastic patio chairs—the ones with the round holes in the seat. When I couldn’t find that exact kind, I brought home the newer version. He thanked me politely, but something in his eyes tightened.
It bothered me more than I expected. This man never complained. He was in his late seventies, still wore his faded fishing hat even though he hadn’t cast a line in years. Since his wife, Nadine, passed, I’d been helping him with small chores. So his reaction sat heavy with me.
When I finally offered to return them, he sighed, then asked, “Do you know what the holes are for?”
I guessed. I was wrong.
“Rain,” he said softly.
He explained that he and Nadine used to sit outside under an umbrella, listening to the rain come down. The holes kept water from pooling so they could stay out there longer—just the two of them, sharing quiet moments that had become priceless memories.
A few days later, his mailbox overflowed. His lawn went untouched. He didn’t answer the door. Worried, I called for a wellness check. They found him collapsed from dehydration. He survived, but the scare rattled me.
While he was recovering in the hospital, I hunted down those exact chairs—same model, same shape, same small round holes. When he returned home and saw them waiting in his yard, he sat down, closed his eyes, and let a light drizzle fall through the plastic—just like before.
That’s when I understood: it was never about chairs. It was about holding on to the last pieces of someone you’ve loved and lost, even when the world forgets how much those small things matter.