Lately my life has been
marked with yellow circles and squares.
On the way to and from
work, I see dandelions all around. Sometimes they’re wide open to
the sun and sometimes closed into tighter, smaller circles with
yellow peeking out. Each one is unique.
When
I arrive at work, I see familiar stacks of yellow squares waiting on
my desk. The little papers with adhesive on the back often come in
packages with 100 sheets all alike. I use mostly 2⅞-inch
squares from the 3M company or similar kinds in other brands.
Actually, 3M has
related products in 27 sizes, 56 shapes and around 30 color choices,
from pastels to neons, from grass green to periwinkle. By contrast,
I haven’t yet seen a dandelion in millennium blue or even orange.
If yellow is enough color choice for dandelions, I can get along
with ordinary yellow note squares, too.
I often bring a few
yellow notes from home to work and vice versa. They’re scrawled
with reminders about things I need to do. If my mind is cluttered
with many tasks, I sometimes need more than one square to write
everything down, so I use the adhesive on the back to stick notes
together like links in a chain.
I’ve made chains with
dandelion stems, too. It’s been awhile, though. One of these days
I might have to practice. I’ll have to watch for promising stems
on my walks back and forth. Maybe I should make a note of that on
one of my yellow squares.
Once in a while I do
put a yellow note into my pocket before I leave for lunch. There
might be a phone call to make, an errand to do or an item to bring
back to work in the afternoon.
I like to finish the
lists on the squares before I go home, but during a busy spell they
sometimes lie around for several days, simultaneously annoying me
and freeing my mind to focus on other matters.
With all the scrap
paper available at no extra cost, I wouldn’t need to use special
pre-cut squares with adhesive on the back, but they’re handy. At
about a penny apiece, or even half a penny for brands other than
Post-it®, they’re not a major extravagance. Sometimes my
frugality raises an eyebrow if I write only one item per square or
when I don’t use the back. Still, there are plenty more empty
squares for times to come.
The
dandelions are like that, too, with enough and many to spare. I like
them best as they are now – yellow among the green grass of
spring. To me, it’s entirely appropriate for them to be there.
However, my encyclopedia says that dandelions are usually considered
to be a “troublesome weed, difficult to control.”
Yellow squares can be
hard to control, too. I make a note of an address, a phone number, a
computer code, a correction; and before long, I have yellow papers
all around. I try to arrange them in groups sometimes, but I don’t
necessarily know how or when I’m going to handle them anyway. I
don’t want my desk to look as though I can’t remember anything
without a yellow square.
I began to wonder
recently if my proliferating notes were a danger signal. After all,
if I turn a yellow square 45 degrees, it’s a yellow diamond,
similar to traffic warning signs for curves and intersections ahead.
I thought maybe all my notes indicated things were getting out of
control in my life, but perhaps the yellow papers are a solution
instead of a problem.
Curious about the
squares themselves, I took time to read about how they were
developed. I noticed a comment that yellow is a color of hope. That
spoiled the whole philosophical angle I’d been working on. I
remarked to myself that the only hopefulness I’d connect with
yellow note squares would be along the lines of “I hope I get all
these things done someday.”
I like yellow note squares well enough, but yellow dandelions have a
stronger symbolism for me. They’re a bright example of the
hopefulness of spring, blossoming with as much success through a
crack in the sidewalk as from a fertile lawn. With their taproots
deep in the soil, dandelions can be stepped on, mowed over, have
their leaves pulled off and still keep coming back. Now that’s an
example to inspire hope and strength and persistence. Anyone who has
tugged away at a dandelion will understand. The experience sticks
with you. You can remember it without writing it down on a little
square of yellow paper.
[Mary
Krallmann]
Note: Readers who want to learn more about the
development of removable, self-stick notes can find interesting
accounts at these sites:
http://www.3m.ns.ca/Post-it/artslab
http://mustang.coled.umn.edu/inventing/Postit.html
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