One day as I
walked along, I noticed a fork on the street. I'm used to seeing paper
cups, sacks, plastic bottles and all the other common street-side discards
of a careless society. A metal fork was different enough for a second
look. I assumed it was intended for the dumpster at the other end of the
block, but somehow it landed at the corner, appropriately marking a fork
in the road.
The utensil
itself was a plain, ordinary table fork except that something must have
run over it. The tines were flat; the handle was flat. In every way, it
was as flat as flatware could be.
Most of the
so-called flatware in my kitchen drawer has arches and curves. Even the
knives aren't really flat. If I place one on a surface for an
eyeball-to-utensil view, I can see that, while the handle touches, there's
space between the blade and the surface. With spoons, of course, the
bowl-shaped parts are essential for holding food. I wouldn't be at all
happy about trying to eat soup, or milk and cereal, with a completely flat
spoon.
I could live
with a flattened fork. I think the tines would still work to pick up food,
but I didn't take the stray with me.
A week or
two after I passed it up, I noticed a potato on another street. That
surprised me more than the fork, especially since there was no trash
container nearby. The potato was a large, oblong variety, just right for
baking.
I recalled a
frugal friend telling about a similar find that helped make his garden one
spring. In this case, I had enough extra potatoes at home already. In
fact, plenty of them have already sprouted. I left the potato behind.
I realized,
though, that if I were living on the streets or living off what I could
find there, the potato and the fork would have been a perfect combination.
With a little cleanup for both and some way to cook, I would have had the
basics for a meal.
A poem I
first read in grade school makes a similar point with a story about a
discarded sword instead of a fork. In battle, a coward broke and threw
away his blade, complaining it was nothing compared to the one the king's
son had. "Then came the king's son," the poet says,
"wounded...And weaponless, and saw the broken sword...And ran and
snatched it...And saved a great cause that heroic day." The poem is
called "Opportunity."
A few pages
later, the often quoted and parodied "If—" commends the person
who has seen his accomplishments ruined but can "stoop and build ’em
up with worn-out tools."
Although I
had no need for the fork as a tool or for the potato as food, they were
reminders of the possibilities all around.
I’m not
saying that people should try to find a personal use for every piece of
junk on the streets. Most of it belongs in the trash or recycling bins.
In a more
general sense, though, what we find is a major part of our lives. I
remembered a note my dad left for me after a weekend visit. Passing along
advice from his reading, he said to keep finding things instead of merely
looking for something.
A
photographer with that outlook discovered enough photo opportunities
between regular assignments that his pictures of birds, prairie grasses
and other natural beauty filled a recent book.
The
discarded fork served its purpose for me by conveying a few lessons off
the street. There were four points, like the four tines of the fork.
Point 1 —
Names don't always mean what they say. True flatware is a rare find.
Point 2 —
Unexpected possibilities are right under your nose. Keep your eyes open.
Point 3 —
Don't miss an opportunity just because it isn't everything you want. With
later developments, it could prove to be a wise choice.
Point 4 —
You don't have to make use of every possibility.
I don't regret passing up the
flat fork and the potato that showed up later. There are some
opportunities I can do without.
[Mary
Krallmann]