Bedtime Buddy
As a very young child, I can remember a stuffed corduroy doll that was 12 or 13 inches tall with stubby outstretched arms with a span of nearly 9 inches. Its chalky-white, hard plastic face smiled with an almost clownish smile. The doll’s chubby cheeks caused its wide open painted eyes to have the least bit of crinkle as if he was about to laugh. His body and cap were shaped in a Harlequin jester manner with green and brown corduroy material on alternating sides. His name was Andy. Could this be the reason I have a penchant for that name and called my son Andrew? Not really. I had no recollection of the name until my memory opened and I sat to write this piece.
Andy was my constant companion and not just my bedtime buddy. I carried him through the house throughout the day. From my continual abuse that a child like me gave a toy, the hard plastic eventually cracked and Andy lost his engaging smile. His distorted countenance didn’t lessen my love for him and he remained my faithful companion.
My mother Sybil Miner Beck decided that if I wouldn’t give Andy up, she would modify him and make him more presentable. With his distorted face cracking ever wider, Andy looked grotesque like the scary clowns of today. You know the ones that lure souls into the sewers. I am not sure what Mom thought, but Andy’s broken plastic face disappeared. She replaced it by creating a soft cloth one. My mom embroidered a new and different face on a piece of white muslin and used it to fill the hole left by the mangled original jester face that she removed.
It was a nice gesture but I can’t seem to remember exactly what the replacement face looked like. I know it had a mouth, a nose, and eyes but the image blurs when I try to recall the new features. It saddens me that I can’t remember them. Out of her love for me my mom took the time to repair my beloved Andy and yet I have no recollection of it.
I suppose there are some who will
ask, “Do I still have Andy?” or “What happened to Andy?” I don’t know. I have
no have no idea where Andy went. I can only remember that some of the cotton
filling eventually poked out through the seams of his overstuffed body. I
suppose that I outgrew the need for him. Obviously he was thrown away. Looking
back, I can still see him as a sweet memory of childhood and not recall the
tattered creature that he became. Perhaps that’s better for me.
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